Radiation
oncologist Jeremy Long writes in his article, "Evidence
for Survival of Consciousness in
Near-Death Experiences: Decades of Science and New Insights" - Near-death experiences, by their very
definition, occur at a time of unconsciousness and even clinical death with an
absent heartbeat. Speaking both medically and logically, having a highly lucid
experience while unconscious or clinically dead should be impossible. However,
thousands of NDEs describe lucid conscious perceptions even while comatose.
Near-death experiences often occur in
association with a cardiac arrest, which means the heart stops beating. This
condition is popularly known by the phrase “heart attack”. To understand how
remarkable it is to have an NDE at a time of clinical death, it is essential to
know what happens when the heart stops beating. After the heart stops, blood
immediately ceases flowing to the brain. About ten to twenty seconds later, the
electroencephalogram (EEG), a measurement of brain electrical activity, is flat.
At this time there is no significant
measurable electrical activity in the cortex, which is the outer part of the
brain. Multiple studies show that patients are usually amnesic or confused
about events that took place before or after the cardiac arrest.
Consequently, almost immediately after
cardiac arrest, it should be impossible to have a lucid, organized, and
conscious experience. But when a near-death experience occurs, a lucid
experience happens even while physical brain function is shut down. The NDERF
website has hundreds of examples of NDEs that happened during a cardiac arrest.
The typical high lucidity in NDEs following cardiac arrest defies any possible
medical explanation. Here are two examples of NDEs that occurred at the time of
a cardiac arrest:
Joan had a spinal anesthetic for
surgery on her ankle. There were complications, and she coded, which means her
heart stopped. Joan describes her near-death experience:
I went from being in my body to being in a place of absolute
love. I can only describe it like being in a swimming pool, but even my body
was filled with this loving. I was one with this place, but also apart from it.
I was still me, but I was far more than me. I was one with everything - and it
was ALL good. I did hear beautiful music, but it wasn't like our music. The
music itself was part of me, but I don't think I was singing. It was more like
it was just part of me, and I was part of it, but it was much more than just
me. I felt weightless and free - absolutely free. I was enfolded in this loving
and was part of it too. There was not one single part of me or part of anything
else that was not love. Individuals did not exist in the same way as we do
here. I was still me, but I was also part of the loving.
I KNEW things without
hearing a single spoken word. I WAS love. I KNEW that all religions had it
wrong. There is no way rules and judgment could flow from this place. Earthly
religions made it complicated when it was very easy. There is only love, and
all of us are part of it. There is NO way that we cannot be loved. We ARE love.
Time did not exist. I have always loved my family on earth, but I did not miss
them. I did not think of them. I was more joyful than I ever have been. I felt
utterly connected to everything and everyone. We ARE inter-connected as one.
There is no such thing as 'death'. This experience has changed me.
Another example of a near-death
experience occurring at the time of a cardiac arrest is from Yazmine. Her heart
stopped for six minutes. She received cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR),
which brought her back to life. After recovering, she shared her remarkable
NDE:
Then
suddenly I was above my body, which was lying on a stretcher bed and wearing a
white hospital gown. I looked at my body and knew it wasn't the real me. It was
the thing I had been caught inside. Now I was free! I felt such happiness! The
joy was all- pervading. We like to get knotted up about the real-world pain,
suffering, and loss, but they are all illusory experiences.
Everything
became clear to me. The nurses were calling my name. One nurse was crying, and
another was saying, ''Oh my God, we've lost her!" I was above them
thinking how silly it was that they were making all that fuss. I wondered why they
couldn't see me. I just knew that all was perfectly fabulous! Then I saw an
open window about 6 inches wide. I thought, ''Wow, I wonder if I can fit
through there?" Then instantly I was in another state.
Near-death experiencers (NDErs) are
unconscious, comatose, or clinically dead. However, the lucidity they
experience is usually a state of supernormal consciousness. The most recent
NDERF survey asked 834 NDErs, “How did your highest level of consciousness and
alertness during the experience compare to your normal everyday consciousness
and alertness?”
654 NDErs (78%) confirmed they experienced:
“More consciousness and alertness than normal.” 142 (17%) experienced: “Normal
consciousness and alertness.” And 38 (5%) experienced: “Less consciousness and
alertness than normal.”
Jeffrey Long, MD, "Evidence
for Survival of Consciousness in
Near-Death Experiences: Decades of Science and New Insights." In the
next several posts I will share excerpts from Long's 2021 article.
Footnotes
have been deleted. The complete text is available as a pdf at
https://www.nderf.org.