VIDEO: This Is Exactly What DYING Feels Like! Who Would’ve Though?!
Dying is something that scares all people but at the same time we find it really interesting and would love to know all about it. This is because no one can tell for sure what awaits us when we die. Do we dissolve into nothingness, is there an afterlife, Hell and Heaven and such things?
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We can’t know for sure until we get there. But people who have been in clinical death seem to know some more about what happens after we die so maybe they are right. The problem is that not everyone comes back from the dead saying the same thing.
According to metro.co.uk, when you die, you shouldn’t expect to see people on clouds with harps, or some kindly old guy with a beard welcoming you to heaven.
People who have been clinically dead and then revived have shared some insights into what it actually feels like to die on question-and-answer site Quora. Most of these people ended up hospitalized – and were revived either at the brink of death, or after the moment of clinical death.
Megan: ‘I’ve had a near-death experience, so I can only say how dying feels – blissful, serene, exciting, peaceful, relaxing. I feel there isn’t an accurate word (in English) that describes how truly wonderful it feels.
Barbara: ‘Although I could hear perfectly – the beeping of the monitor as I flatlined, the code on the PA, the squeak-squeak of the crash cart wheels, everyone talking at once – I had no other sensation.
‘As I was sinking into unconsciousness, I felt very cool, relaxed, no need to breathe, no cause for alarm, no pain of any kind, totally peaceful. Everything grew dark around the edges until there was only blackness.
Vera: ‘It felt like rising up, with a definite sense of direction, and inhaling and expanding. I tried to look at myself, but I was not there.
‘That shocked me, but did not scare me. Also, I did not feel alone. There were “others” whom I could not see, but only knew that they were there because they “talked” to me.
‘It was as if they were encouraging and welcoming me. I felt this infinite vastness, but also the absence of time, like everything was collapsed into a zero and happened at the same time.
‘The last thing I remember is wanting to be somewhere else and being instantly there, and that surprised me and delighted me. I was so infinitely happy.’
Emmanuel. There was no pain, just darkness, extreme vulnerability, extreme fragility and nothing else. It wasn’t even revolting or scary. Just infinite sadness and nothingness. After a while in intensive care, my life came back to me.
Dea: After a few minutes, my cousin sort of popped right in front of me and told me, ‘Deanne, go back’. I haven’t been called Deanne since I was a kid. When I turned round to see what she meant by ‘back’, I Was slammed into the bed at the hospital.
Aaron: Several years ago, I flat lined at the emergency room. My senses left me one by one. First thing I noticed gone was my sense of touch. Followed by hearing. The last thing to go was my sight, leaving me with a field of whiteness, and thoughts which seemed to be further and further apart.
Terrance: I had an experience. There’s no bright light. Jesus didn’t appear through the fog. It’s just an acceptance of reality, a definite end, like finishing a book. I just felt life slipping away, getting really tired, and all I could think of wha the things I didn’t accomplish.