Are we more than these fleshy bodies of molecules? What happens to us when we die?
Philosophers, theologians, sages, and saints have offered their answers, as have atheists and materialists. Some scientists have also investigated the question, usually indirectly because of strange phenomena around the border of life and death.
More than one medical doctor has stumbled into this question and made it an area of specific research, like Dr. Christopher Kerr. While attending to his hospital patients, he encountered a pattern long-known to medical staff around the world: The dying often report very meaningful dreams or lucid visions of loved ones who have already passed.
He and his research team recorded the end-of-life experiences of 1,400 patients and families over the course of 10 years. They found some 80 percent of people reported such experiences, especially as they neared death. These vivid and meaningful visions were transformative, bringing the patient to forgiveness, acceptance, and peace.
“A 1982 Gallup poll found that 15 percent of all Americans who had almost died (under widely varying circumstances) reported an NDE. About 9 percent reported the ‘classic out-of-body experience,’ 11 percent said they entered another realm, 8 percent encountered spiritual beings, and only 1 percent had negative experiences,” my colleague Tara MacIsaac reported.
The findings were also published in the book “Adventures in Immortality” by pollsters George Gallup Jr. and William Proctor.
The study of NDEs really began in 1975, continuing ever since with organizations like International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS) focused on documenting and finding patterns in these experiences.
In an NDE, the experiencer typically finds their consciousness functioning apart from their body, writes Janice Miner Holden, president of IANDS.
But the more transcendental experiences seem harder for many people to accept. Ms. Holden says many people seemingly visit places beyond the material world we know.
“Environments include preternatural scenes similar to those on Earth, except for unusual features, such as colors not seen on Earth, and plants emanating consciousness. Beings include deceased loved ones and other humans, as well as spiritual or religious figures—some identifiable, others not—with whom the experiencer communicates mind-to-mind.”
Have you or has anyone you know ever experienced an NDE? Do you know a loved one who had visions before they left his world? Please share your experience with us!







