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Frequently Asked Questions about the
Near-Death Experience
1) What is a Near-Death Experience (NDE)?
The Near-Death Experience is a type of forced
out-of-body experience (OBE) caused by organic traumas, and/or physical,
chemical or psychological agents. It commonly occurs in cases of
terminal illnesses, or situations which involve moments of great
risk to the physical body, such as accidents, electrocutions, surgery,
suffocations, drownings, etc. This phenomenon is very common, and
researchers around the world are spending much effort, money and
time to try and explain its occurrence more fully.
2) What kinds of reports are given by those
who have experienced an NDE?
Usually people relate a number of common
experiences such as: a feeling of inner peace; floating above their
physical body; perception of the presence of people around them;
360º vision; amplification of various senses; traveling through
a tunnel intensely lit at its far end (tunnel effect). In this atemporal
region, the person experiencing the NDE (NDEer) perceives the presence
of what most people describe as a "being of light", although
this description varies depending on cultural archetypes and personal
philosophies.
The boundary between the two dimensions
is also that of life or death. Sometimes the NDEers have to decide
if they want to come back to physical life or not, often reporting
a field, door, fence or lake as a type of barrier that if they were
to cross, they would not return to their physical body. These are
some of the characteristics of near-death experiences.
3) What psychological and behavioral changes
occur in those who have an NDE?
Most of those who have a near-death experience
exhibit positive behavioral changes. The great majority of them
change their lives for the better in that they lose the fear of
death (thanatophobia); value their life and the lives of others
more; re-evaluate their current values, ethics and priorities; become
more serene and confident; increase psychic perceptions; and take
advantage of a greater understanding of the purpose of life in order
to evolve faster.
4) How does the medical field explain the NDE?
The NDE is a traumatic experience, which
should be well examined by all areas of medicine without any mystical
or obscuring preconceptions. Ever since researchers worldwide began
discussing and analyzing this phenomenon more openly, the medical
field has been forced to consider death and the survival of the
consciousness in a new light. Yet, there are physicians who still
deny scientific explanations and attribute the phenomenon to God
or some supernatural source, resort to superficial explanations
like genetic memory, lack of oxygen in the brain (cerebral hypoxia),
or associate the experience with biological birth.
5) How does projectiology view this phenomenon?
Because the Near-Death Experience is a type
of OBE which is induced by external factors, it falls under the
scope encompassed by Projectiology and as such is one of the phenomena
studied.
The same positive life changes that occur
with people who undergo a NDE can be derived by those who have a
totally lucid and recalled OBE, be it spontaneous or provoked by
will.
This is one of the reasons why courses at
the International Academy of Consciousness focus on providing
information and techniques to enable people to have OBEs at will.
According to projectiology and conscientiology, there is only one
type of healing, namely self-healing, which is achieved through
heightened lucidity. These sciences encourage individuals to have
their own multidimensional experiences as a means of gaining greater
self-awareness.
6) Is there any literature available on the
NDE?
Raymond Moody Jr., Ian Stevenson, Kenneth
Ring, van Lommel, and Peter Fenwick are some of the authors who
have published works on this subject and are considered to be part
of essential reading in projectiology studies.
Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross is an expert
on the phenomenon and founded an institution bearing her name which
assists terminally ill patients and their families. In addition,
the International Association for Near-Death Studies publishes the
"Journal of Near-Death Studies", which is devoted to the
subject.
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