Showing posts with label Near Death Experiences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Near Death Experiences. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 December 2014

Debunking the Pseudoskeptics of Near-Death Experiences



Out-of-Body graphic.


 
Many people who refer to themselves as "skeptics" of near-death experiences are actually pseudoskeptics. A true skeptic, as defined by philosophers of ancient Greece, is a nonbeliever - a person who does not make conclusions based on inconclusive evidence.

Critics of near-death experiences who assert negative claims but call themselves skeptics often think they have no burden of proof. Such critics take this position thinking it is only necessary to present a case for a counter-claim based upon the plausibility of evidence rather than empirical evidence. Such pseudoskeptics are actually believers that survival of consciousness after death is impossible. This article examines some of the tactics such critics use to "debunk" NDEs.
1. What Pseudoskeptics Do
Pseudoskeptics of near-death experiences have done the following:
1. Pseudoskeptics claim that science already knows everything, and since it doesn't include the reality of an afterlife, it can't exist. This is referred to as scientism.
2. Pseudoskeptics claim that the assumptions underlying consciousness and death are empirical facts that science has already proven.
3. Pseudoskeptics have already decided that an afterlife is impossible, even though evidence has not ruled it out, and they are not interested in participating in a debate anyway.
4. Pseudoskeptics make claims such as, "Consciousness cannot survive death" base upon scientific expertise they don't have.
5. Pseudoskeptics make negative claims about near-death experiences but do not apply their own critical analysis equally to their own criticism.
6. Pseudoskeptics respond to claims which were not made such as, "Since near-death experiences have a brain chemical connection, this means there is no afterlife."
7. Pseudoskeptics argue that an afterlife contradicts established theories of nature, and because all other alternative explanations of near-death experiences have been exhausted, claims of the existence of an afterlife are fraudulent.
8. Pseudoskeptics firmly believe an afterlife is impossible regardless of any evidence suggesting otherwise.
9. Pseudoskeptics refuse to examine the entire body of circumstantial and anecdotal evidence supporting the existence of an afterlife by claiming near-death experiences are merely hallucinations.
10. Pseudoskeptics debunk near-death experiences by associating them with something else such as, "If we suppose an afterlife exists, then we might just as well suppose werewolves exist."
11. Pseudoskeptics resort to personal attacks, such as, "These people are nuts!" instead of focusing on the issue at hand.
 
By this definition, pseudoskeptics are not true skeptics because they have already made up their minds that near-death experiences are nothing more than chemical reactions producing hallucinations from a dying brain. Such pseudoskeptics rule out claims otherwise without a shred scientific evidence.

A true skeptic of the afterlife hypothesis keeps an open mind and does not take a position in favor of one side of the argument or the other until the evidence proves it either true or false.

Examples of how pseudoskeptics attack unconventional paradigms such as the near-death experience are:
 
1. Pseudoskeptics attempted to discredit the research of a researcher, who yielded evidence that certain astrological signs, especially the planet Mars are associated with champion athletes. Although the pseudoskeptics' research actually confirmed the findings, they distorted their own data when they published it and caused their statistician to go public stating that the science establishment covered up evidence for the occult.
2. A researcher published a study showing that ultrahigh dilutions of LgE effected white cells in the lab. There were 10 authors on the study and pseudoskeptics investigated and "debunked" the study. The researcher complained they made no effort to replicate his study, but only came and accused him of fraud, without reviewing the evidence.
3. One particular pseudoskeptic offers a one million dollar challenge to prove the reality of paranormal claims such as proving psychic abilities are real. Concerning his challenge, critics of the pseudoskeptic's million dollar challenge claim the offer is insincere and that the pseudoskeptic has ensured he will never have to pay out. He was quoted in a well-known magazine as allegedly saying, "I always have an out."
4. A study was done to understand to what extent psychic mediumship works (not how it works). The study was led by a university professor with impeccable credentials. Using five of the most credible psychic mediums in the country, a test subject underwent a reading by all five mediums. The test subject was selected by the researchers and known only to them. The controls used in the study are the following:
 
a. The mediums have never met the test subject.
b. 10 to 15 minutes are allowed per reading.
c. The medium and test subject would be separated by a wall so that no eye contact is possible.
d. The test subject is to give only yes or no answers.
e. No information can to be shared between the medium and the subject.
  The result of the study were as follows:
 
a. All the mediums identified the same six deceased loved ones of the subject including information about them and their passing. These include a son who committed suicide, a father with lung cancer, a mother with lung cancer, and a little dog. Eight other individuals were identified by various mediums.
b. All the mediums were identical in average performance (in the 90 percentile).
c. The study didn't reveal how it works, but suggests it is a phenomenon which can be replicated.
d. The study launched an ongoing debate between the research and a high-profile pseudo-skeptic on this study. You can read about it at this website: http://survivalscience.50megs.com/torandi.htm
e. One of the mediums involved in the study is John Edward who performed readings before a live audience on television. His impressive abilities suggested he may actually be communicating with the dead. Pseudoskeptics claim Edward is a master of reading body language to elicit information despite the fact he often does readings by phone and sometimes readings where he cannot see the subject.

Pseudoskeptics also claimed Edward manipulates people into supplying answers which he then builds on. However, Edward comes up with symbols in his head which are "hits" that sometimes even the subject doesn't know about until they have more time to reflect about it. Edward states he receives symbols that the subject ultimately identifies with.

Pseudoskeptics also claimed there were set-ups planted in the audience even though none have come forward.

Pseudoskeptics claimed that questionnaires and bugging devices help producers learn about deceased family members; but the show's producer revealed that viewers only fill out a standard release form.

Concerning bugging devices, the show's producer replied, "Of course there's microphones, but are they being fed anywhere? No. And John doesn't see any of this."
2. Links and Resources on Pseudoskepticism
•  Skeptiko: Science at the Tipping Point with Alex Tsakiris - www.skeptiko.com
•  Near-Death Experience Skeptics Running Out of Excuses - www.skeptiko.com
•  Skeptical of Skeptics, Chris Carter Tackles Near Death Experience Science - www.skeptiko.com
•  Victor Zammit Grills Skeptics with Lawyer’s Evidence for NDEs - www.skeptiko.com
•  Atheist Debates Existence of Soul with Near Death Experience Believer - www.skeptiko.com
•  Dr. Jeffrey Long Takes On Critics of, Evidence of the Afterlife - www.skeptiko.com
•  Skeptical Investigations: Skeptical About Skeptics - www.skepticalinvestigations.org
•  A Field Guide to Skepticism article by Dean Radin - www.skepticalinvestigations.org
•  Skeptical Fallacies: Pseudoskeptical Fallacies - sites.google.com/site/chs4o8pt/
•  SCEPCOP: Scientific Committee to Evaluate Pseudoskeptical Criticism of the Paranormal - www.debunkingskeptics.com
•  CSICOP and the Skeptics: An Overview: Article by George P. Hansen - www.tricksterbook.com
•  The Myth of the Randi Challenge - www.dailygrail.com
•  Problems with Magicians as Professional Skeptics: Also: [1] - www.cfpf.org.uk
•  On Pseudo-Skepticism: A Commentary by Marcello Truzzi - www.anomalist.com
•  New Dualism: Pseudoskepticism Links - www.newdualism.org
•  Twenty-Five Ways To Suppress Truth: The Rules of Disinformation - www.drjudywood.com
•  The Science Delusion: An Interview with Rupert Sheldrake - www.forteantimes.com
 
"Probably a dozen times since their death I've heard my mother or father, in an ordinary conversational tone of voice, call my name. They had called my name often during my life with them ... It doesn't seem strange to me." - Carl Sagan

Saturday, 29 November 2014

P. M. H. Atwater

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia/Blogger Ref http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Multi-Dimensional_Science
 
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P. M. H. Atwater (born Phyllis Marie DeKeyser, September 19, 1937) is a North American writer and researcher on subjects related to Idaho, life and death issues, and spirituality from a New Thought point of view.


Early life[edit]

Atwater was born in Twin Falls, Idaho[1] and was later adopted by Kenneth L. Johnston. She married John Bernard Huffman in 1956 (divorced in 1976) and had three children: Kelly, Natalie, and Pauline. She became a secretary, and a prize-winning cook at the Twin Falls County Fair.

Idaho life[edit]

It was because of a hand-writing analysis in the mid-60s that Atwater ever became a writer. She was hired as staff writer for the Idaho Department of Commerce and Development (1969–1971), a free-lance writer of assignments for Sunset magazine, and staff writer for Incredible Idaho magazine. She was awarded "Most Influential Newspaper Columnist in the State of Idaho" by the Idaho Statesman, and received the Governor's Meritorious Wage Increase for Outstanding Service to Idaho.
She developed the statewide program for Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts to give tours of the Idaho Capitol Building and Supreme Court as points for badge awards, and wrote their scripts. As President of the Boise Chapter of the Idaho Writers League, and later as First Vice-President and then President of the Idaho Writers League, she was named "Prose Writer of the Year." A member of Idaho Press Women, she won numerous awards and commendations. She later excelled in Shopping Center Promotions and won "Most Outstanding Low-Budget Shopping Center Promotion in the Nation" award. She has worked as Director, Legislative Public Information Center, for the House of Representatives, Idaho Capitol Building. She has been a Forms Analyst for the Idaho First National Bank (central management), later as their Technical Manuals Writer.
She created and incorporated Inner Forum, Idaho's first metaphysical non-profit organization, edited the Inner Forum magazine, and launched the Northwest's first speaker's bureau on metaphysical topics. She helped to initiate and produce Idaho's first conference on The Arts and Governor's Bi-Annual Awards for the Arts. Since 1966, she has been an active investigator and researcher of psychic phenomena and altered states of consciousness, was a hypnotist for six years, taught practical numerology for several decades, and became a member of the American Federation of Astrologers. She is also a long-time professional member of the Authors Guild and the Authors League of America.
Because of extreme health reversals, Atwater left Idaho and moved to Virginia. Atwater married Terry Young Atwater in 1980.

Career[edit]

Atwater is one of the original researchers in the field of near-death studies, having begun her work in 1978 (shortly after moving to Virginia), and is a pioneer in subjects like near-death experiences, the after effects of spiritual experiences, transformations of consciousness, reality shifts, future memory, and modern generations of children and how they differ from previous generations. Atwater did free-lance assignments for many periodicals nationwide, including Sunset magazine. She wrote the column "Coming Back" for the Vital Signs magazine 1981 - 1985. She earned her Letters of the Humanities (L.H.D.) doctorate from the International College of Spiritual and Psychic Studies in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, May 19, 1992; and was awarded an honorary Ph.D. in Therapeutic Counseling in March 2005, from Medicina Alternativa Institute, The Open International University for Complementary Medicines, in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Also in 2005, the International Association for Near-death Studies (IANDS) presented her with an Outstanding Service Award and the National Association of Transpersonal Hypnotherapists awarded her a Lifetime Achievement Award.[2] She has been a Prayer Chaplain since 2004.
Atwater retired as an active fieldworker in near-death studies in 2010, calling for the entire field to recognize near-death states as part of the larger genre of transformations of consciousness and how they change people. Her last book on this subject, which gives her summation, is Near-Death Experiences: The Rest of The Story (Hampton/Red Wheel, March, 2011). For the first time, she also wrote the entire story of her own three near-death experiences (I Died Three Times in 1977 - The Complete Story), which was published as an e-book in August, 2010.

Writing[edit]

Atwater is a noted authority on near-death experiences (NDEs), especially on the after-effects of NDEs,[3] on NDEs in children[4][5] and on hellish NDEs.[6] She has experienced three NDEs herself[7] and has interviewed over 4,000 adult and child near-death experiencers.[2] In 2001, her work on NDE after-effects was cited in The Lancet.[8] As a result of her writings, she has been invited to speak around the world.[2][9][10]
In Future Memory (1999), Atwater proposed a new theory of reality that describes the way in which we are able to envision the future in a way that is like a memory, where people can live life in advance. Atwater described how these rehearsals for future events differ from other modes of futuristic awareness such as clairvoyance, precognition, and déjà vu. In this book, Atwater was the first to use the term "reality shift."

Works published[edit]

  • P.M.H. Atwater, Children of the Fifth World: A Guide to the Coming Changes in Human Consciousness", Bear & Company, 2012. ISBN 978-1-59143-153-4. Ebook ISBN 978-1-59143-800-7
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Near-Death Experiences: The Rest of The Story, Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-1-57174-651-1.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, I Died Three Times in 1977 - The Complete Story [Kindle Edition], Albany, NY: Cinema of the Mind/Starving Artists Workshop, 2010. ASIN: B003WQBIM8.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, The Big Book of Near-Death Experiences: the ultimate guide to what happens when we die, Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-1-57174-547-7.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Beyond the Indigo Children: the new children and the coming of the fifth world, Rochester, VT: Bear & Company, 2005. ISBN 1-59143-051-8.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, We Live Forever: the real truth about death, Virginia Beach, VA: A.R.E. Press, 2004. ISBN 0-87604-492-5.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, The New Children and Near-Death Experiences, Rochester, VT: Bear & Company, 2003. ISBN 1-59143-020-8.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Coming Back to Life: The After-Effects of the Near-Death Experience, New York: Citadel, 2001. ISBN 0-8065-2303-4.
  • P.M.H. Atwater and David H. Morgan, Complete Idiot's Guide to Near-Death Experiences, Indianapolis, IN: Alpha Books, 2000. ISBN 0-02-863234-6.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Children of the New Millennium: children's near-death experiences and the evolution of humankind, New York: Three Rivers Press, 1999. ISBN 0-609-80309-3.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Future Memory, Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1-57174-135-6.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Goddess Runes: a comprehensive guide to casting and divination with one of the oldest known rune sets, New York: Avon Books, 1996. ISBN 0-380-78292-8.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, Beyond the Light: what isn't being said about near-death experience, New York: Carol Publishing Group, 1994. ISBN 1-55972-229-0.
  • P.M.H. Atwater, The Magical Language of Runes, Sante Fe, NM: Bear & Company, 1990. ISBN 0-939680-70-X.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up ^ "P(hyllis) M. H. Atwater". Contemporary Authors Online. Gale. 2003. Retrieved on December 1, 2008.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c PMH Atwater, LHD
  3. Jump up ^ P.M.H. Atwater, Coming Back to Life: The After-Effects of the Near-Death Experience, New York: Citadel, 2001.
  4. Jump up ^ P.M.H. Atwater (1999). Children of the New Millennium: children's near-death experiences and the evolution of humankind, New York: Three Rivers Press.
  5. Jump up ^ P.M.H. Atwater (2003). The New Children and Near-Death Experiences, Rochester, VT: Bear & Company.
  6. Jump up ^ Atwater, P.M.H. (1992). Is There a Hell? Surprising Observations About the Near-Death Experience. Journal of Near-Death Studies, 10(3). Reprint, accessed 2008-12-04.
  7. Jump up ^ Excerpts from PMH Atwater's 3 NDEs, IANDS. Accessed 2008-12-04.
  8. Jump up ^ van Lommel, P., van Wees, R., Meyers, V., and Elfferich, I. (2001). Near-death experience in survivors of cardiac arrest: A prospective study in the Netherlands. Lancet, 358, 2039–2045. [1], accessed 2008-12-04.
  9. Jump up ^ P.M.H. Atwater (2008). Is the afterlife what we think it is? A challenge from near-death studies, presented at Beyond the veil: Evidence for life after death, 33rd Annual Conference of the Academy of Spirituality and Paranormal Studies, May 30 – June 2, 2008. Accessed 2008-12-04.
  10. Jump up ^ Porto discute experiências de quase-morte (Porto discusses near-death experiences), IOL Diário Portugal (Portuguese). Accessed 2008-12-04.

External links[edit]

Friday, 7 March 2014

A Lawyer Presents the Evidence for the Afterlife

Blogger Ref Link http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Multi-Dimensional_Science



A Lawyer Presents the Evidence for the Afterlife
by Victor Zammit (Author) , Wendy Zammit (Author)


http://www.amazon.com/A-Lawyer-Presents-Evidence-Afterlife/product-reviews/1908733225/ref=cm_cr_pr_top_helpful?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=0


There could be many reasons why you are interested in this book. Perhaps you are just curious about the afterlife. Or perhaps you have experienced the death of a loved one. It may be that you have had an out of body experience or a near death experience or another mystical experience. Or you may be realizing that we all inevitably have to make the journey to the afterlife one day. If you have been trained to respect scientific method you will not just accept tradition or wishful thinking. You want something that can be supported by evidence. You want highly reliable information as to whether or not we continue to live in the afterlife. And you want to know whether it is possible to get a message from your loved ones. You want to know that the things people report about the afterlife are real and can be validated. You want hard, repeatable evidence that no one can rebut. You want witnesses, scientists, professionals and others with the highest credibility. You want to feel that the information you are receiving about the afterlife is the truth, the whole truth. And you may want something that you can share with friends and family members to show that there are good scientific reasons for accepting that there is more to life than the materialists claim. This book presents highly convincing evidence amounting to proof for the existence of the afterlife. It shows that after investigating the evidence some of the most brilliant men and women⎯scientists and others⎯came to the conclusion that we all survive death. The mediums and psychics studied by scientists were of course exceptional. They were the best of the best. People should be aware that not all psychics and mediums are developed to this degree and people take care in choosing a medium. Over the last ten years an earlier version of this book has been accessed on our website free of charge by more than a million people from all over the world. Volunteers who loved the earlier book translated it into Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Dutch, German, French and Russian. Every day we receive emails from people who say that the material in this book has changed their lives. After so many years we have decided that it is time to take the Evidence for the Afterlife to a wider audience. This new and expanded version includes important new research and the latest discoveries. But once again it concentrates on evidence that is credible, repeatable and admissible in a court of law. The book gives an introduction to more than twenty different areas of evidence for the afterlife giving you the key facts and references. The chapters can be read in any order. We have tried to make it accessible to as many people as possible by writing in plain English, using short sentences and familiar vocabulary. We realize that many people reading it will not have English as their first language. Links to videos, audio interviews, pictures and excellent books for each chapter are contained on our website www.victorzammit.com. There you can also sign up for our free weekly Friday Afterlife Report. We are now in the thirteenth year of sending out these highly researched and informative weekly reports. Victor and Wendy Zammit, February 2013






Friday, 31 January 2014

Is this proof near-death experiences ARE real? Extraordinary new book by intensive care nurse reveals dramatic evidence she says should banish our fear of dying

The Ascent of the Blessed, detail from a panel of an alterpiece of the Last Judgement. Historic texts are filled with accounts of near-death visions. Are they to be ignored so readily?
The Ascent of the Blessed, detail from a panel of an alterpiece of the Last Judgement. Historic texts are filled with accounts of near-death visions.Are they to be ignored so readily?


Fear: Is death so terrible that we need to mute it and delay it with drugs and machines?
Fear: Is death so terrible that we need to mute it and delay it with drugs and machines?

All the time this was happening, I felt fine: full of joy, peaceful, gently floating towards brilliant light.
Penny Sartori began her eight-year study as a cynic. But by the time it  ended, she was convinced that near-death experiences are a genuine phenomenon
Penny Sartori began her eight-year study as a cynic. But by the time it ended, she was convinced that near-death experiences are a genuine phenomenon

As oxygen levels reduce in the blood, the brain becomes increasingly disorientated, confused and disorganised.
Researchers agree each vision will contain at least one of several recognised components, such as travelling down a tunnel towards a bright light, meeting dead relatives, or having an out-of-body experience
Researchers agree each vision will contain at least one of several recognised components, such as travelling down a tunnel towards a bright light, meeting dead relatives, or having an out-of-body experience

Well-meaning doctors who over-sedate dying patients may be denying them a natural and comforting final vision
One woman has stopped wearing watches because they no longer work on her wrist. Another 'blows' light bulbs regularly
One woman has stopped wearing watches because they no longer work on her wrist. Another 'blows' light bulbs regularly


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2545668/Is-proof-near-death-experiences-ARE-real-Extraordinary-new-book-intensive-care-nurse-reveals-dramatic-evidence-says-banish-fear-dying.html#ixzz2rz5Ajcqv
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook




The Ascent of the Blessed, detail from a panel of an alterpiece of the Last Judgement. Historic texts are filled with accounts of near-death visions. Are they to be ignored so readily?


A "Deluge" of Anecdotal Evidence

Blogger Ref Link http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Multi-Dimensional_Science


I had contact with Penny Sartori in connection with her near death research, and she found my above project of interest. By chance, I was pleased to see in the Daily Mail about the huge "deluge" of anecdotal evidence.


R.Searle








This week the Daily Mail (Jan 2014) serialised intensive care nurse Penny Sartori's new book on Near Death Experiences.
The response from readers has been unprecedented, with thousands of you writing in with your own remarkable stories, some of which we published yesterday. Here we share more readers' gripping tales of premonitions and visions.
Ghostly visions: Readers say they have seen relatives appear before them at the moment they passed away
Ghostly visions: Readers say they have seen relatives appear before them at the moment they passed away

Carol Kingston
Carol Kingston

Carol Kingston, 67, a retired store manager, lives in Milton Keynes with her husband John and has two grown-up children. She says:
It was one o'clock in the morning in May 1982 when the ring of the doorbell woke us up. My husband John went downstairs to answer the door then returned to the bedroom looking miffed, saying nobody was there.
For some unknown reason I had a strong sense it was my 25-year-old younger brother Steve. He was in the SAS and based nearby.
A few seconds later it rang again and John traipsed back down the stairs. Again, there was nobody there. It buzzed a few more times after that, but we decided to ignore it.
At 10am the next morning my father phoned with devastating news. Some officers had arrived to inform him that Steve had been killed in a helicopter crash in the Falklands.
At that stage we knew very few details of how he had died but that night my oldest son, Robin, who was then eight, had a dream that his Uncle Steve had risen up out of the water with his arms up and said: 'Don’t worry about me. I'm OK now.' Incredibly, I too had experienced the exact same dream.
We later learnt that the helicopter had crashed into the South Atlantic Ocean and Steve had drowned.
Juliet Rudkin
Juliet Rudkin

Juliet Rudkin, 43, a divorced police officer, lives in Buckinghamshire with her five children: Daniel, 23, Georgina, 19, Andrew, 17, Alex, 13 and David, ten. She says:
In April 2003 I gave birth to a beautiful healthy baby boy who I called David. My then husband Bill and I were over the moon. But when David was just a few months old a horrible, dark feeling crept over me, day and night. I can't explain why but I felt a hideous dread that my son was going to die.
I didn't tell anyone because I worried they would think it was postnatal depression, but the feeling persisted.
A few months later when my mother, Geraldine, a super-fit 60-year-old, came to my house to take my eldest children to school, I had the strangest experience. 
As she stood in the hallway waiting to leave I found myself staring at her, unable to look away. She met my gaze and it's hard to explain but it was as though I was looking straight through her eyes and into her soul. She asked me why I was staring at her so strangely and I had to mumble an excuse and look away.
After she left, just a few hours later, I received a phone call from Ian, her husband, telling me she had collapsed at home and had been taken to hospital. She died a couple of hours later of a dissecting thoracic aneurysm.
I heard myself telling doctors: 'Thank God, I thought it was my baby that was going to die.'
Ruth Sheard
Ruth Sheard

Ruth Sheard, 67, a retired mathematics lecturer, lives in Wakefield, West Yorkshire. She says:
I was lying in bed in my home in Wakefield one night in 1991 when I felt a presence in the room. I woke and 'saw' my long dead grandmother Adelaide standing at the foot of my bed. She said: 'The gun fired at this time' and I looked at the bedside clock and noticed it was exactly three o'clock. Then she added: 'It was in the afternoon, not morning. Tell your father.'
When I woke the next morning I discovered three small blisters on the outer surface of the bathroom radiator out of which water was seeping. I called a plumber and thought little of it.
I visited my 78-year-old father and told him what had happened the night before and his face turned pale. I had always known my grandfather Arthur, his father, had died in the famous naval Battle of Jutland in 1916 but I had failed to recall the date. 'Today is May 31st, 1991,' said my father, his face losing all its colour, 'The 75th anniversary of his death.'
Intrigued by my grandmother’s reference to the time, I started to do some research.
My grandfather's ship, the Indefatigable, had come under fire from the Germans and after a first volley of three shots hit the deck the ship blew up. The time it happened? Three in the afternoon.
When I think of the vision and the number of holes in the radiator, a shiver goes down my spine.
Judy Smith
Judy Smith

Judy Smith, 66, lives with her husband Alan, in Maldon, Essex. The retired fishmongers have two grown-up children and four grandchildren. She says:
In 1969, when I was 22, I worked in a local branch of a bank in Chelmsford. It was an old building and had a fireplace opposite the tills.
It was early afternoon when I looked up and to my great surprise saw my great auntie Lil sitting in a chair 'in' the fireplace.
She was looking as she always did, wearing a green dress that I often saw her in and looking content and comfortable. I don’t remember feeling any other emotion other than faint surprise.
I wasn't scared but I just thought, 'Oh there's auntie Lil'. She wasn't in solid, human form and I knew somehow I wouldn't be able to touch her.
I had worked at the bank for a couple of years already and knew better than to get up from my cashier's desk when I had a queue of people standing in front of me, so I didn't get up.
Auntie Lil lived above our family's fishmongers and was still fit and well, despite being in her 80s. I remember she used to pinch our cheeks when she saw us; I was dearly fond of her.
I watched my great aunt sitting completely still in the fireplace for a few minutes before she disappeared. She never waved, nor even smiled at me. I just remember her looking in my direction quite serenely.
I didn't tell anyone because I was worried they would laugh but minutes later I received a phone call from my mother to tell me Lil had just passed away from old age. I said, 'I know, I have just seen her.'
Susan Radwell
Susan Radwell

Susan Radwell, 60, a psychotherapist, lives with her husband in Oxford. She says:
Because of my job I am used to trying to analyse rationally what goes on in people’s minds. In 1999, however, I had an experience which challenged my view of how the mind works and its capabilities.
One night that summer I was lying next to my husband fast asleep at home when at about 2am I was woken by a hand that wasn't my husband’s gently tapping my right shoulder. Sleepily, I opened my eyes and saw Jack, a friend from work, standing in front of me.
Days earlier Jack had gone on holiday to Cairo, so I knew it couldn't be him, really. But there he was nonetheless, shimmering, surrounded by a hazy light and wearing a white gown from the neck to the floor. He was smiling at me and looked relaxed and well.
By now I was wide awake, my eyes straining to take it all in. I wasn't scared, I just felt reassured and strangely comforted. It's hard to explain, but it was an entirely good, peaceful sensation. He leant forward, gave me a bunch of lilies and left.
I calmly fell asleep, not wanting to wake up my husband or share it with him as it had felt like a very personal experience.
The next day at lunchtime I got a call from another mutual work friend. She told me Jack had died following a sudden heart attack while on holiday in Cairo.
It had happened just hours before he appeared to me.
It's hard to explain why he visited me as we had only known each other for three years, and only ever in a work context, but it made me feel more at peace with death.
Alan Greaves
Alan Greaves

Alan Greaves, 62, is a retired senior sales manager who lives in Manchester with his partner Jean, a retired business owner. He has two grown-up sons. He says:
One night in 1983 I woke up having had a nightmare that my neighbour had fallen off my roof and died. I woke up with my heart pounding and my skin covered in sweat, then moments later heard a man's voice that I didn't recognise telling me to lie back down and he would explain the dream.
Confused, but keen to find out the meaning, I lay back down and heard the same voice explain slowly and deliberately that it was actually my mother Rachel who was going to die, and that she wasn't going to fall off a roof but give in to illness while surrounded by her family.
I asked the voice when, and it said, quite precisely, in three months at 1.30pm. It then told me to go to sleep. I wasn’t scared at all and drifted off straight after.
The next day I told my wife Elaine and rang up both my sisters to tell them what I'd heard.
Our mother had been ill with Parkinson's disease for four years already but was coping relatively well on her own still. Over the next three months, though, her condition spiralled downhill.
The night before the day the dream had told me she would die, I was at her bedside with my three sisters and their husbands and my elder brother.
I was crying in the corridor when my brother-in-law put his arm around me. I said it was no good and that I knew she was going to die tomorrow.
The next day at 1.15pm her breathing suddenly worsened and she passed away at 1.30pm - the exact time and date that I had predicted three months earlier.
Interviews: India Sturgis  and Lauren Libbert


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Another link on the above subject can be found here http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2547714/Our-astonishing-near-death-stories-thousands-touched-thought-provoking-series-intensive-care-nurse.html




Also, one more link http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2547133/The-children-near-death-experiences-lead-charmed-lives-Study-reveals-youngsters-young-six-months-lucid-visions.html

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