Later,
mid-morning. You are at Group Health on Five Mile Road waiting for Carol who is
having allergy tests. It is raining but this is better than snow from your
perspective. – Amorella
1042
hours. I have been waiting for about an hour and have another hour or two to
go. It is not really cold but I am having trouble keeping awake. I spent thirty
minutes looking at Facebook friends (scrolling is something I very rarely do). It
would help if I had my nap.
Why don’t you just lie back and nap?
Amorella
A stop at Kroger’s on Mason-Montgomery Road
on the way home then a return to Panera on Mason-Montgomery for a late lunch. –
Amorella
1412
hours. We forgot to stop at Graeter’s for dessert.
It rained most of the day and tomorrow night
you are predicted to have been four and eight inches of new snow. You had a
snack supper (cold left over baked beans and saltless soda crackers with peanut
butter). The Internet has been down for several hours, you both watched “Battle
Creek”, “Suits” and NBC News before shutting the TV down for the evening. You
also just saw an interesting BBC article on near death experiences but you have
your usual doubts. Drop it in the blog anyway to show you had the open mind to
consider the concept before mentally ridiculing it for the sole reason that
such ‘experiences’ are not real science. – Amorella
2103
hours. One cannot have a scientific investigation on ‘death’ experiences. One
cannot prove such matters one-way or the other.
You certain wrap a lot of fiction around the
subject. – Amorella
2105
hours. I am having trouble coming up with the right words here.
And, why is that, boy? – Amorella
2107
hours. Because death is out of my domain. I substitute story laced with
imagination and some hope though I am realistic enough to realize the hope is
really no more than a dream. – rho
You do not know this. – Amorella
2110
hours. Why do you pen me down to my bottommost level of heartansoulanmind? I
know nothing. I admit this here and now. I cannot argue something I do not
know. It is a fool’s errand to do so. Stubbornness. I’m done for the night.
You still find the subject intriguing and to
keep your honest curiosity afloat drop the article in. – Amorella
2114
hours. I find the article embarrassing – that is, I find myself embarrassed by
the fact I was curious enough to read it through.
Now, this little problem is resolved. Add
and post. – Amorella
** **
BBC Future --
3
March 2015
The
seven ways to have a near-death experience
Rachel Nuwer
In 2011, Mr A, a
57-year-old social worker from England, was admitted to Southampton General
Hospital after collapsing at work. Medical personnel were in the middle of
inserting a catheter into his groin when he went into cardiac arrest. With
oxygen cut off, his brain immediately flat-lined. Mr A died.
Despite this, he remembers
what happened next. The staff grabbed an automated external defibrillator
(AED), a shock-delivery machine used to try to reactivate the heart. Mr A heard
a mechanical voice twice say, “Shock the patient.” In between those orders, he
looked up to see a strange woman beckoning to him from the back corner of the
room, near the ceiling. He joined her, leaving his inert body behind. “I felt
that she knew me, I felt that I could trust her, and I felt she was there for a
reason [but] I didn’t know what that was,” Mr A later recalled. “The next
second, I was up there, looking down at me, the nurse and another man who had a
bald head.”
Hospital records later verified the AED’s two verbal commands. Mr A’s
descriptions of the people in the room – people he had not seen before he lost
consciousness – and their actions were also accurate. He was describing things
that happened during a three-minute window of time that, according to what we
know about biology, he should not have had any awareness of.
Mr A’s story – described
in a paper in the journal Resuscitation – is one
of a number of reports that challenge accepted wisdom on near-death
experiences. Until now, researchers assumed that when the heart ceases to beat
and stops sending vital blood to a person’s brain, all awareness immediately
ends. At this point, the person is technically dead – although as we learn more
about the science of death, we are beginning to understand that, in some cases,
the condition can be reversible. For years, those who have come back from that
inscrutable place have often reported memories of the event. Doctors mostly
dismissed such anecdotal evidence as hallucinations, and researchers have been
reluctant to delve into the study of near-death experiences, predominantly
because it was viewed as something outside of the reach of scientific
exploration.
But Sam Parnia, a critical
care physician and director of resuscitation research at Stony Brook University
School of Medicine in New York, along with colleagues from 17 institutions in
the US and UK, wanted to do away with assumptions about what people did or did
not experience on their deathbeds. It is possible, they believe, to collect
scientific data about those would-be final moments. So for four years, they
analysed more than 2,000 cardiac arrest events – moments when a patient’s heart
stops and they are officially dead.
Of those patients, doctors
were able to bring 16% back from the dead, and Parnia and his colleagues were
able to interview 101 of them, or about a third. “The goal was to try to
understand, first of all, what is the mental and cognitive experience of
death?” Parnia says. “And then, if we got people who claimed auditory and
visual awareness at the time of death, to see if we are able to determine if
they really were aware.”
Seven flavours of death
Mr A, it turned out, was not the only patient who had some memory of his
death. Nearly 50% of the study participants could recall something, but unlike
Mr A and just one other woman whose out-of-body account could not be verified
externally, the other patients’ experiences did not seem to be tied to actual
events that took place during their death.
Instead, they reported
dream-like or hallucinatory scenarios that Parnia and his co-authors
categorised into seven major themes. “Most of these were not consistent to
what’s called ‘near-death’ experiences,” Parnia says. “It seems like the mental
experience of death is much broader than what’s been assumed in the past.”
Those seven themes were:
Fear
Seeing animals or plants
Bright light
Violence and persecution
Deja-vu
Seeing family
Recalling events
post-cardiac arrest
These mental experiences
ranged from terrifying to blissful. There were those who reported feeling
afraid or suffering persecution, for example. “I had to get through a ceremony
… and the ceremony was to get burned,” one patient recalled. “There were four
men with me, and whichever lied would die … I saw men in coffins being buried
upright.” Another remembered being “dragged through deep water”, and still
another was “told I was going to die and the quickest way was to say the last short
word I could remember”.
Others, however,
experienced the opposite sensation, with 22% reporting “a feeling of peace or
pleasantness”. Some saw living things: “All plants, no flowers” or “lions and
tigers”; while others basked in the glow of “a brilliant light” or were
reunited with family. Some, meanwhile, reported a strong sense of deja-vu: “I
felt like I knew what people were going to do before they did it”. Heightened
senses, a distorted perception of the passage of time and a feeling of disconnection
from the body were also common sensations that survivors reported.
While it is “definitely
clear that people do have experience at the time that they’re dead”, Parnia
says, how individuals actually choose to interpret those experiences depends
entirely on their background and pre-existing beliefs. Someone from India might
return from the dead and say they saw Krishna, whereas someone from the Midwest
of the US could experience the same thing but claim to have seen God. “If the
father of a child from the Midwest says, ‘When you die, you’ll see Jesus and
he’ll be full of love and compassion,’ then of course he’ll see that,” Parnia
says. “He’ll come back and say, ‘Oh dad, you’re right, I definitely saw Jesus!’
But would any of us actually recognise Jesus or God? You don’t know what God
is. I don’t know what God is. Besides a man with a white beard, which is just a
picture.
“All of these things –
what’s the soul, what is heaven and hell – I have no idea what they mean, and
there’s probably thousands and thousands of interpretations based on where
you’re born and what your background is,” he continues. “It’s important to move
this out of the realm of religious teaching and into objectivity.”
Common cases
So far, the team has
uncovered no predictor for who is most likely to remember something from their
death, and explanations are lacking for why some people experience terrifying
scenarios while others report euphoric ones. Parnia also points out that it’s
very likely that more people have near-death experiences than the study numbers
reflect. For many people, memories are almost certainly wiped away by the
massive brain swelling that occurs following cardiac arrest, or by strong
sedatives administered at the hospital. Even if people do not explicitly recall
their experience of death, however, it could affect them on a subconscious
level. Parnia hypothesises that this might help explain the wildly different
reactions cardiac arrest patients often have following their recovery: some
become unafraid of death and adopt a more altruistic approach to life, whereas
others develop PTSD.
Parnia and his colleagues
are already planning follow-up studies to try to address some of these
questions. They also hope their work will help broaden the traditionally
diametric conversation about death, breaking it free from the confines of
either a religious or sceptical stance. Instead, they think, death should be
treated as a scientific subject just like any other. “Anyone with a relatively
objective mind will agree that this is something that should be investigated
further,” Parnia says. “We have the means and the technology. Now it’s time to
do it.”
From - http://wwwDOTbbcDOTcom/future/story/20150303-what-its-really-like-to-die
** **
No comments:
Post a Comment