When Elizabeth G. Krohn got out of her car with her two young sons in the parking lot
of her synagogue on a late afternoon in September 1988, she couldn't have
anticipated she would within seconds be struck by lightning and have a
near-death experience. She felt herself transported to a garden and engaging in
a revelatory conversation with a spiritual being. When she recovered, her most
fundamental understandings of what the world is and how it works had been
completely transformed. She was “changed in a flash,” suddenly able to interact
with those who had died and have prescient dreams predicting news events. She
came to believe that some early traumatic and abusive experiences had played a
part in preparing her for this experience.
Told in matter-of-fact language, the first half of this book is the story of
Krohn’s journey, and the second is an interpretation and analysis by Jeffrey J.
Kripal, Associate Dean of the School of Humanities at Rice University who holds
the J. Newton Rayzor Chair in Philosophy and Religious Thought. Kirpal is also
Associate Director of the Center for Theory and Research at the Esalen
Institute in Big Sur, California and served as the Editor in Chief of the
Macmillan Handbook Series on Religion. He places Krohn's experience in the
context of religious traditions and proposes the groundbreaking idea that we
are shaping our own experiences in the future by how we engage with near-death
experiences in the present. Changed in a Flash is not about proving a
story, but about carving out space for serious discussion of this phenomenon.
Krohn
writes: The NDE changed me in ways I never could have imagined. On September 1,
1988 I was a skeptic. Nothing could have dissuaded me from believing that when
a person dies, that’s the end—that they are gone and nothing of them remains.
But a bolt of lightning literally jolted me into reality.
On
September 2, 1988, that lightning bolt bestowed upon me a gift, the power and
profundity of which remain unmatched more than three decades later. That gift
was knowledge that death isn’t the end; knowledge that where we are now is a
temporary place, and where we go when we die is home; knowledge that what we do
with our time here matters and affects our afterlife; knowledge that our souls,
the vessels that carry our consciousness, continue on after bodily death and
actually become keenly aware, awake, and all-knowing once unencumbered by our
bodies.
One of the things I learned in the
afterlife is that no two souls have identical afterlife experiences. Each
experience in the afterlife is tailored to each individual soul, their
expectations, and their needs. Each soul perceives the afterlife, and
everything about it, differently.
"When you find yourself dead, in a
place of otherworldly love and beauty, with a sudden understanding of everything,
and you hear your beloved deceased grandfather tell you to sit on the most
elaborately crafted bench you have ever seen, you sit. I took a seat on the
ornately carved bench and found that it conformed to whatever my individual
'body' had become as soon as I sat down. The bench morphed around me. As I sat,
cradled in the most comfortable seat imaginable, I began to look around. I saw
that I was surrounded by a Garden of foreign plants, the likes of which I had
never seen before, or even imagined.
My grandfather’s soft familiar voice, complete with the
French accent that made it so distinct during his life, was a soothing
presence. He said that audible speech would disrupt my absorption of the surroundings,
so he was going to give me information, knowledge, and answers to my questions
silently. I believe that this voice was actually not my grandfather speaking to
me, but was God using my grandfather’s voice to put me at ease. This was a
strange reckoning for me, given that in life I had been such a non-religious
and non-spiritual person who gave very little, if any, thought to the existence
of God. And yet, here I was, sitting on a bench with someone I thought was God
in a place that I knew was Heaven.
The
calming voice shared things with me about our family that only my grandfather,
and of course God, would know. This presence gave me information that showed a
total knowledge of where I was and what choices I would need to make if I chose
to go back to my life on Earth. He relayed the clear impression that the choice
to remain in the Garden or to reoccupy my burned body was mine to make. I
understood that I could take as long as I needed to make the decision to either
stay in the Garden or return to my life on Earth, and that I would be given
information that would help me make that decision.
I
was dead, but I was more alive, conscious, and aware than when I had been that
twenty-eight year old woman with the children and the umbrella in the synagogue
parking lot a mere second earlier. I was surrounded by and suffused with an
unutterable feeling of unconditional love. The love was all-encompassing and
embraced me in every possible way. Everything in the Garden emanated love. The
lull of a gently babbling brook, the cadence of the soothing otherworldly music
surrounding me, and the resplendent, fragrant visual feast of constantly
blooming flowers and hypnotic colors I had never seen before, all reinforced
the knowledge that I now had: that I was safe, protected, and unconditionally
loved by God. I was home.
The
glow that I had followed into the Garden initially had moved away from me. It
seemed to be a living energy, a conscious entity that moved with purpose. It
was still to my upper right, but it had now shifted behind a mountain range,
whose outline in the distance was backlit with the glow’s shimmering light from
behind the mountains. I resisted the impulse to follow the living glow to the
mountains, since the peace, comfort, beauty, and ineffable love that surrounded
me where I was sitting were all that I could ever want. The sound of the brook
nearby, the music in the air, the sweet scents of the otherworldly vegetative
oasis, and the vivid backdrop of the sky and mountains lulled me to depths that
I had never known my soul to possess.
Regardless
of whether my companion on the ornate bench was actually my grandfather or, as
I suspected, God, I knew that I was not alone in the Garden, and I knew that
the feeling of abundant unconditional love that this presence communicated to
me would never leave me. Still today, I can draw on that memory of unwavering
acceptance and love when I need to do so. I could have gratefully and willingly
remained there for eternity. That love, that place, that afterlife was a
gift, tailored to me, from a higher being that loved me unconditionally.
The
landscape was clearly meant to comfort me and put me at ease. The sound of
flowing water, be it a gentle brook or crashing ocean waves, is something I
have always found to be soothing. A view of any landscape has always been
enhanced for me if there is a body of water in the scenery. I think that is why
it was so prominent and noticeable to me among the other sweet sounds that
permeated the Garden. What I understood is that all who arrive in this place
encounter and perceive whatever is most comforting and beautiful to them. My
source of comfort was the all-embracing feeling of unconditional perpetual love
and the unmatched beauty of my surroundings all captured in the Garden. This
was my personal Heaven.
I
understood that all who come to this wondrous place are soothed and welcomed by
whatever they find soothing, comforting, and pleasurable in life.
Therefore, it made sense that my Heaven looked like a perfectly
manicured garden. I love gardens and find peace and joy in spending time in a
well tended garden. During my time in my heavenly Garden, I saw people in the
distance. I instinctively knew that those people perhaps had visions of
something other than a garden as their perfect Heaven. People I saw in
the distance may have expected their Heaven to be a thickly wooded forest.
Others may have seen a boundless field of wildflowers, or a quiet beach with
gently rolling waves. Yet we were all in exactly the same place. We were each
in a Heaven tailored specifically for each individual soul there. Understanding
this loving kindness added to my ease during my visit to the Garden.
I
also understood that one’s own appearance there projects the best of each
person’s soul in their most recent Earthly life. The type of person you are
here on Earth colors the experience you will have in the afterlife. What we do
with our time here on Earth matters. A lot. Learning this was surprising
to me as I never thought that my actions or thought processes during life would
have any bearing at all on my death. I couldn’t have been more wrong. I learned
in the Garden that not only the acts I performed during my life but even my
very thoughts and feelings had woven together to create the tapestry that was
my afterlife—my Garden. The fact that I had been a good person in life mattered
in the Garden. The fact that I had not been religious did not.
I
feel so inadequate in my attempt to convey the overwhelming totality of the
Garden. Time there is perpetual. Its events and sensations all occur at once.
This idea of simultaneous time, the physics of it, is something I understood
while I was in the Garden but have difficulty explaining, or even
understanding, now. I do understand, however, that it is possible to return
from another realm or dimension and be completely unable to help those who have
not seen it to understand that it even exists at all. Something can be
perfectly true yet completely unbelievable and impossible to scientifically
prove.
This
knowledge that I was absorbing while on the ornate bench in the presence of the
loving being who spoke in the voice of my beloved grandfather was also shared
with the other humans (or souls) whose forms I saw in the distance. Everyone
was in pairs, and no one was alone. Everyone was dressed in what I knew as
street clothes. And they were all perfectly beautiful, youthful, and healthy. I
wondered: If they were all so perfect, was I?
I
looked at my left hand, curious as to how the burn from the lightning strike
had affected it. My hand looked as if it belonged to a younger woman. There
were no chipped nails or imperfections on the skin, and certainly no burn from
the lightning. I noticed that there was also no wedding ring. All I saw was the
pristine skin of myself at eighteen or so. The skin on my hand was flawless.
As
soon as I thought of questions, I had the answers. I saw people in the
distance, although no one approached me. Why were they all paired up? Did I
appear to them to be alone? My companion explained that I was also part of a
pair, and that he was the other half of the pair. We must have appeared to the
distant human forms as they did to me—as a pair, and as beautiful as I ever was
at my best.
As
quickly as I was receiving answers to my seemingly unlimited stream of
questions, I had more questions. There was only one question for which I never
received an answer: What did my companion in the Garden look like? Did this
partner of mine look like my grandfather at age ninety when he died, or did he
look as he did at age eighteen, as everyone else there seemed to? Or did he
have an entirely different appearance? I don’t know because I never looked at
him. I now think I was not supposed to see him because I would have been
overwhelmed at the sight of my beloved grandfather.
Or
by the beauty of God.
Elizabeth G.
Krohn is the author with Jeffrey J. Kripal of Changed in a Flash: One
Woman's Near-Death Experience and Why a Scholar Thinks It Empowers Us All (North
Atlantic Books, 2018). Krohn received an award from the Bigelow Institute for
Consciousness Studies for her essay “The Eternal Life of Consciousness.”