The Independent
14 hrs ago Adam Withnall
What
happens to us when we die? It’s a question that has exercised
humanity’s finest minds since those humans have been around to have
them – and has been recently the subject of a number of
groundbreaking scientific studies.
Now, a Reddit thread
has posed the question specifically to those who have been
clinically dead and then revived, and has received hundreds of
responses.
Though the veracity
of the answers has to be taken with a small pinch of salt, the
answers from what essentially amounts to a large survey on the
subject can be broken down into three categories.
There are those who
felt nothing at all; those who had an experience of light and some
interaction with another person/being; and those who felt they
could watch what was happening while they were “dead” without being
able to do anything.
The first group
corresponds closely with the answers of a single Redditor who
officially died twice and recently invited questions on the topic
from other users.
The latter group,
meanwhile, appears to agree with the work of Dr Sam Parnia, who
sought out cardiac arrest patients and found that almost 40 per
cent described having some form of “awareness” at a time when they
were clinically dead.
Here is a taster of
some of the Reddit users’ responses – which don’t seem to have
produced a consensus on the topic just yet:
"I was getting an
angiogram done, wide awake watching the screen and talking to the
doctor. Alarms started to go off and everyone became panicked. My
world became soft and foggy and everything faded to black. Next
thing I remember was opening my eyes and hearing a Dr say "we got
him back". It was really a peaceful feeling more than
anything."
"I collapsed during
a class presentation one day. All breathing and blood circulation
stopped. I felt as if I was plummeting down an endless hole while
my peers cried for help. I was revived and still have no
memory of the little bit of time before and after my
death."
"Overdosed on
heroin, EMTs said my heart stopped. Didn't see anything,
just like sleeping with no dreams."
"I collapsed at a
work meeting in February 2014 and had no pulse or cardiac rhythm
for about five minutes. My last memory was from about an
hour prior to the incident, and my next memory was from two days
later, when I emerged from a medically-induced
coma."
"I flatlined for
around 40 seconds. It was like falling asleep without
dreaming, no sense of self."
"Pure,
perfect, uninterrupted sleep, no dreams."
"I do remember a
little bit of the ambulance ride, but not from my own body. It was
seriously the strangest thing I have ever experienced. It could
have been a dream, but I saw my own unconscious body,
completely flatlined, in the ambulance. I remember the EMT
who was in the ambulance with me (whom I did not see before I
passed out) had mint green hair and I couldn't remember his name,
but I asked for him when I regained consciousness about three days
later."
"I was
standing in front of a giant wall of
light. It stretched up, down, left
and right as far as I could see. Kind of like putting your eyes 6"
from a fluorescent lightbulb. The next memory I have is waking up
in the hospital."
"I was standing
somewhere. There was a fog all around me, and I saw my best friend
(who at the time I'd been fighting with and he'd stopped talking to
me) come out of the mist. He told me that I couldn't go
yet, that I have to keep trying, and if I promised not to
give up, he'd see me back on Earth. I wordlessly agreed, and I was
instantly pushed (into?) my body."
"I see a vivid
"flashback" of myself in the ambulance being taken to the hospital
and I am stood in the ambulance looking down on
myself / others in the ambulance."
"When I coded, I
don't remember a sensation of floating, but I was able to
recall things in detail that happened while I was 'dead'
on the other side of the room. No white lights, no dead relatives,
nobody telling me to go back, but I was definitely able to see
things that were in no way visible from where my body was. I
remember speaking and being angry because nobody would answer me.
My mother told me 'you didn't say anything, you were
dead'."
"I saw
nothingness. Black, long empty, but
I had a feeling like everything was great and nothing was wrong at
all. Imagine how preexistence felt, much the same as post
existence."