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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2018 22:29:19 GMT -5
A man videoed his dad's dying moments, and shortly after the old guy died, we see an orb of light rising from his lower body, followed by several more around the room. This occurs beginning at about the 4:30 mark.
For the expected naysayers out there, there are NO unexplained "flying lights" in the 4 1/2 minutes of video before that point.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2018 23:16:29 GMT -5
Here's the original collection of patient narratives about near death experiences, published by psychiatrist, Dr. Raymond Moody, in Charlottesville, Virginia back in the 1970s. Interesting read.
I've heard some fascinating near death stories from a few of my own patients during the past 35 years.
One of these stories from a former patient of mine was so unusual that it first caused me to start questioning my own atheism about 27 years ago.
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Post by Walter on Aug 10, 2018 9:38:19 GMT -5
A man videoed his dad's dying moments, and shortly after the old guy died, we see an orb of light rising from his lower body, followed by several more around the room. This occurs beginning at about the 4:30 mark.
For the expected naysayers out there, there are NO unexplained "flying lights" in the 4 1/2 minutes of video before that point.
Hate to bust up what is a fun idea, and I could be wrong of course, but that looks like the autofocus beam from the camera. Nevertheless, it is a cool video that illustrates how we humans deal with such things.
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Woah, this is a default personal text! Edit your profile to change this to what you like!
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Post by Deleted on Aug 10, 2018 10:23:29 GMT -5
A man videoed his dad's dying moments, and shortly after the old guy died, we see an orb of light rising from his lower body, followed by several more around the room. This occurs beginning at about the 4:30 mark.
For the expected naysayers out there, there are NO unexplained "flying lights" in the 4 1/2 minutes of video before that point.
Hate to bust up what is a fun idea, and I could be wrong of course, but that looks like the autofocus beam from the camera. Nevertheless, it is a cool video that illustrates how we humans deal with such things. So where were all those "autofocus beams" BEFORE the death? The camera never moves; it never goes OUT of focus.
Yes, you ARE wrong.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 10, 2018 12:24:59 GMT -5
I'm underwhelmed by the video, but what is fascinating about some of these near death narratives are details that aren't adequately explained by the "hallucination"/dream-state theories of near death experiences-- like subjects (including a few of my own patients) who described looking down on hospital rooms or their neighborhoods (including a battlefield in Vietnam) and witnessing things that were actually happening while they were unconscious.
Here's another interesting book on the subject that I read several years ago, by the British writer Ian Wilson.
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