Have you seen this recent video of Mary Rodwell giving a presentation at an Avebury conference? She's received information and communicaitons from thousands of people around the world talking about their experiences with ET's, Crop Circles, ADHD and Autism, Children at many ages describing entities and drawing them, and also by interviewing various indigenous cultures. She talks of the rising human consciousness and quotes many many scientists. She also shows many drawings and works of art. While I was watching it I was lying in the bed kind of half ass looking at my monitor. Suddenly my eyes focused on one drawing of a dark blue being with an insect like head and I sat up in amazement. I have been seeing a shape like that slowly phase and out of view in my mind's eye. I think I've been in communication with a Mantid Being. Isn't that cool!!! :tongue:

[video=youtube;1WJ8-2UZnms]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WJ8-2UZnms[/video]
 
Have you seen this recent video of Mary Rodwell giving a presentation at an Avebury conference? She's received information and communicaitons from thousands of people around the world talking about their experiences with ET's, Crop Circles, ADHD and Autism, Children at many ages describing entities and drawing them, and also by interviewing various indigenous cultures. She talks of the rising human consciousness and quotes many many scientists. She also shows many drawings and works of art. While I was watching it I was lying in the bed kind of half ass looking at my monitor. Suddenly my eyes focused on one drawing of a dark blue being with an insect like head and I sat up in amazement. I have been seeing a shape like that slowly phase and out of view in my mind's eye. I think I've been in communication with a Mantid Being. Isn't that cool!!! :tongue:

[video=youtube;1WJ8-2UZnms]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WJ8-2UZnms[/video]

Mantids are new ones on me…haha.
I will have to watch the whole thing (halfway) later, but so far it is very interesting and certain things just make sense that probably shouldn’t…if that makes sense?
Ha!
 

The Primacy of Consciousness

Peter Russell


[video=youtube;-d4ugppcRUE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=-d4ugppcRUE[/video]

Peter Russell proposes that mind is more fundamental than matter.

He explores the problems science has explaining consciousness and argues that consciousness is not created by the brain, but is inherent in all beings.


A recent talk from SAND conference updates this material and takes it further.

[video=youtube_share;g04RHQ1ysb4]http://youtu.be/g04RHQ1ysb4[/video]​
 
Mantids are new ones on me…haha.
I will have to watch the whole thing (halfway) later, but so far it is very interesting and certain things just make sense that probably shouldn’t…if that makes sense?
Ha!

Yep. Mantids are new one on me as well.... :nod:

Have you heard one perspective about the alien abductions where the people brought up in to the ships to contribute dna had made contracts to do this before incarnating in these times? And it's viewed from a fearful perspective because they haven't woken up to their higher conscious self yet?

This one particular aspect of the game is going to be very interesting once the truth comes out....whatever that is. Hahahahahaha....
 
Yep. Mantids are new one on me as well.... :nod:

Have you heard one perspective about the alien abductions where the people brought up in to the ships to contribute dna had made contracts to do this before incarnating in these times? And it's viewed from a fearful perspective because they haven't woken up to their higher conscious self yet?

This one particular aspect of the game is going to be very interesting once the truth comes out....whatever that is. Hahahahahaha....
Hmmm…well I would like to see the fine print on THAT contract.
 
Dan Dennett:
The illusion of consciousness


[video=youtube;fjbWr3ODbAo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=fjbWr3ODbAo[/video]

Philosopher Dan Dennett makes a compelling argument that not only don't we understand our own consciousness, but that half the time our brains are actively fooling us.
 
Hmmm…well I would like to see the fine print on THAT contract.

There's this whole back story involving one group of Greys where they're losing their entire race because of not enough diverse dna. So they came here and made a deal with "i forget who" to somehow get dna. This involved some of them incarnating into human bodies so they themselves could contribute to saving their race. One of the problems the Grey beings have is they don't have emotions or - at least not the depth of fear and all of those aspects of survival - and scared the crap out of the humans they brought up to their ships for samples. Also - due to their lack of emotions they never dreamed how bad it would get being a human down here.

Please remember this is an extremely difficult incarnation time here on this planet and it's the toughest place in the galaxy.

Anyway....due to their lack of emotional expressions their incarnates are having a hard time remembering why they came here in the first place and being scared when they go home to their families. What a conundrum....you send your brother down to the planet so he can bring you back the goods and then he gets down there - starts partying and having sex - and totally forgets about saving their world. Heh heh heh ....

This is one story line I've been hearing from a few sources and I find it completely fascinating. I even saw where a doctor kindly removed implants from people. ?!?!? That blew my mind.

Who knows what's what....but I tell you it's no more insane than people dreaming up shit so they can kill each other.....and whole lot more fun. :tongue:
 
Wanted to share this excerpt of an interview with Swami Chidananda about self-realization that I hope you find interesting (http://www.dlshq.org/messages/self-realisation.htm):


Q. How does the world appear to such a Self-realised person?

The world appears just as it is. But he realises that the fabric of the world is not what he thought it was before. He realises that it is nothing but the Brahman principle.

Q. And how does his own body and mind appear to him?

Same thing. He sees it as part of Brahman. He is completely objective.

Q. Is Self-realisation within the reach of every human being?

It is birthright of every human being. Because he has been born as a human being. It is not within the reach of any other creature in creation. The moment you reach the status of a human being, the goal of Self-realisation becomes open.

Q. Since a Self-realised person is one with the Infinite and eternal, does he have supernatural powers?

You see, from your relative point of view, these powers are something special, something very fascinating. But from the Self-realised person’s point of view, they mean nothing. They are a natural part of him. I have got five fingers. I don’t crow about it–"I’ve got five fingers! I’ve got five fingers!" These supernatural powers are as natural to the supreme being as having five fingers.

Theoretically, of course, Self-realised people have all powers. There is nothing that they cannot do. But they are generally not interested in doing all these things because they know that the whole world is a myth, a dream. From myth, they have been awakened. So why would they be interested in doing anything in a dream world? You see, when a person has dreamt a number of dreams one night and woken up in the morning–what value has the dream got for him? Similarly, once the Self-realised person has woken up to the supreme Reality, this mortal world is a dream, a myth.

Q. But looking at it from our point of view–if a Self-realised person has all powers, why can’t he use those powers to solve all the problems in the world?
Why should he solve all the problems in a world that does not exist in his state of Consciousness?

Q. No, but from the human being’s stand point?

But he is in that standpoint. You are referring him to a world to which he would say where is this world where you want me to solve the problems?

Okay, if you oblige him to come to your state of consciousness and ask him this question, he will say that the world is God’s creation. It has been here thousands of years before I came here and he has been looking after the world in His own way and the world has been going on. And if I leave the scene tomorrow and go away, the world will continue to go on. My being there or not being there will not even be noticed.

See, if somebody gets diarrhoea the doctor says, "I ‘won’t give you any medicine because some inedible things have gone into your intestines and so nature is flushing your system clean. So let us not come in the way of nature. Just eat light things and don’t come back to a normal diet until your system has come back to its normal state." You see, the point is that you see things in a fragmentary, segmented way–but He sees the whole thing.

Q. Can a Self-realised person change another person’s destiny?

He can mitigate another’s destiny. But he will not change it because that destiny has been ordained by God and the Self-realised person has no interest in contradicting God. He would rather try to be in harmony with God.

Q. How does he mitigate another person’s destiny? What is this power to mitigate?

Read the life of Shirdi Sai Baba. He had an ardent devotee who had completely surrendered at Shirdi Sai Baba’s feet. But due to some past karma, the devotee was destined to be executed by impalement with a spear-like object. But this man had completely transformed himself. So one day when this man went into the fields, a very sharp thorn went very deeply into his foot. He suffered terrible, agonising pain and became unconscious. Half of the thorn in fact broke inside and other people had to put a sharp instrument inside to remove the thorn. The man underwent terrible agony. But by going through this, he was saved from the impalement that was due to him. His destiny had been mitigated.

Q. How does one recognise a Self-realised person?

When you are beside a Self-realised person–no matter how bothered, troubled or worried you are–you will, for the time being, experience peace. Your mind will be serene and it will be directed towards the person before whom you are sitting and not towards the other people who may also be sitting there.

Q. So in general, how do Self-realised people benefit the world?

A lot. They are fragrance where there is bad. Vibrations of goodwill emanate from them because Self-realised people have nothing in their heart except that all should be happy, all should be free from suffering. Day after day, they wish the well-being of all living creatures. That is the only thing they have in them–they have no other desire. This thought and this feeling goes out in waves from them all over the world. And thoughts have power. Evil thoughts sent to someone can disturb the mind of the person to whom they are sent. In the same way, thoughts of cosmic love and peace have the effect of mitigating the sorrow, suffering and negative thought currents in the world.

Q. There is a stage referred to as the ‘dark night of the soul’, which a Sadhaka (spiritual seeker) goes through during his inward journey towards Self-realisation. What is this?

John Bunyan has written a book called "Pilgrim’s Progress", where he traces the seeker’s path until he attains God. Along the way, there is a stage where the seeker falls into the quagmire of despondency. At another place, he is caught by despair. So he goes through despondency, despair, doubt and confusion. He feels he won’t attain it at all. He thinks his life has been a waste. St. John of the Cross has also talked about this stage.

Q. Do most Sadhakas go through this?

Yes. Most people go through this.

Q. And is this despondency spiritually related or can it be to do with other things in life?

Spiritually. All are connected with spiritual life.

Q. How much before Self-realisation does this happen?

Only when one is mature and advanced in one’s Sadhana (spiritual practice), these things begin to happen. Otherwise a person is not worthy of going through all these various deep emotions. You don’t know all these things.

Q. When one eventually does attain Self-realisation–can one slip out of it?

Once you get full Self-realisation, there is no coming out of it. You will always be in that state. There is no coming in and out.

Q. But isn’t there a stage where one slips in and out of that state until one gets established in it?

There comes a time when the Sadhaka, in a state of very deep, intense, continuous meditation, gets this Atma jnana (Self-knowledge). The deep, intense, continuous meditation suddenly stops and one goes into a stage where there is no more meditation, one just is in a certain state. He is in Samadhi. The Sadhaka has reached there by dint of great perseverance and effort, reached this height of being. But he may not be able to remain in it for a long time. After sometime, he may come back.

Then starts again. Again he may go into Samadhi–and come back. Then, from that stage onwards, he is no longer practicing meditation–he’s practising Samadhi. You get the difference? He’s practising samadhi. He’s practising to remain continuously abiding in that same state of Consciousness, into which he is currently going in and coming out.

Eventually, he gets well established in that state. The state becomes natural to him both during meditation and in the time of normal activities. It becomes a spontaneous, natural state for him. This is called Sahaja-samadhi. ‘Sahaja’ means it becomes part of his natural, effortless, spontaneous being. Until then, he has to keep on trying. But once this stage is attained, it is Self-realisation.

Q. That is Self-realisation?

That is Self-realisation. No more rebirths after that. No more slipping in and out of that state.

Q. So that means Self-realisation doesn’t happen in one specific moment?

It can, in some cases. Sometimes people get illumination. Ramana Maharshi never did any Sadhana. One day suddenly, when he was around 16 or 17 years old, through no effort of his, suddenly he felt that he was not the body, that he was the deathless Self.

Effort is necessary in the vast amount of cases. But there are a few such people to whom there has been this spontaneous Self-realisation.

It has been explained that someone could have done all the effort in his previous life. He was almost ripe. But just before he could attain Self-realisation, his body’s Prarabdha was finished and he passed away. So when this birth happens, he takes up from where he left off in the previous life and there you are.

Q. So such a person, in his previous life, was already at a stage where he was perhaps practising Samadhi and was slipping in and out, but hadn’t quite reached Sahaja-samadhi?

He was almost there. Maybe he was slipping in and out or maybe he was just about to get into that state for the first time.

Q. In one. of Swami Sivanandaji’s books, there is a mention of a void before Self-realisation. What is this void?

You see, until the point where you attain Self-realisation, there is still a trace of the human personality–human personality identity consciousness. One still feels that I am so and so. Even though he says God, God, God, God–there is also a little bit of I with God. There is 95% divinity and 5% this I. And this I is a myth. You are actually a part and parcel of God. You are 100% divine. So this "I" has to go. As long as it is there, that Consciousness is not complete and perfect.

Let me give you an analogy. A river flows, flows, flows, flows. At last, it approaches the sea. And then it enters into the sea. But even after having entered into the sea, till quite some distance, the water still tastes sweet. Because the river has not left its river-ness completely. It still retains its river-ness, although its two banks are finished. Bank-less, it is already in the sea. But after it goes further into the sea, a time comes when the water is no longer sweet. It is the salt water of the sea alone. That stage when the river is gone, but the vastness of the sea has not yet been attained, that interim period when it is neither the river nor the sea–that is the void.

Let me give you another example. You come to a point where there is nothing but the edge of a precipice and yawning chasm. And the actual experience is on the other side of the chasm. Unless you leave this precipice, you cannot go to the other side. So there is a point where ultimately he takes the leap. When he takes the leap, he is lifted up into the air. But he has not yet landed there. So there is a point where he has left this precipice, but not yet landed on the other side. In between, where is he? Nowhere. That nowhere is the spiritual void. At that time, neither is the human ego there nor has the divine Consciousness come. At that time, they say there is a void. But, of course, in the spiritual context, the duration of the void may be a little longer.

Q. When he lands on the other side, is that Sahaja-samadhi or is he at a stage where he can still slip in and out?

It is the ultimate state, the ultimate Samadhi. Until that stage there is still duality, a trace of duality. Once you are there, there is absolute non-duality. You are one with Brahman.
 
Wanted to share this excerpt of an interview with Swami Chidananda about self-realization that I hope you find interesting (http://www.dlshq.org/messages/self-realisation.htm):
That was a great set of questions and answers!
Very enlightening!
We know that when a person reaches “Samadhi” that their brain waves reach Delta level and also sync up so to speak…

[video=youtube;p_Z89LTprJA]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=p_Z89LTprJA[/video]

Anyhow, thanks for sharing…good one!
 
There's this whole back story involving one group of Greys where they're losing their entire race because of not enough diverse dna. So they came here and made a deal with "i forget who" to somehow get dna. This involved some of them incarnating into human bodies so they themselves could contribute to saving their race. One of the problems the Grey beings have is they don't have emotions or - at least not the depth of fear and all of those aspects of survival - and scared the crap out of the humans they brought up to their ships for samples. Also - due to their lack of emotions they never dreamed how bad it would get being a human down here.

Please remember this is an extremely difficult incarnation time here on this planet and it's the toughest place in the galaxy.

Anyway....due to their lack of emotional expressions their incarnates are having a hard time remembering why they came here in the first place and being scared when they go home to their families. What a conundrum....you send your brother down to the planet so he can bring you back the goods and then he gets down there - starts partying and having sex - and totally forgets about saving their world. Heh heh heh ....

This is one story line I've been hearing from a few sources and I find it completely fascinating. I even saw where a doctor kindly removed implants from people. ?!?!? That blew my mind.

Who knows what's what....but I tell you it's no more insane than people dreaming up shit so they can kill each other.....and whole lot more fun. :tongue:
I guess I still don’t know how I feel about aliens…I mean, I do actually believe that it’s totally feasible that they could exist. It just seems like it would be harder to conceal than it has been.
IDK…that makes it even wilder of a story to seemingly incarnate to be a lab rat only to be carried away by the sheer madness and ecstasy we call the human experience.
Crazy!
 
shared_death_title_sm.png


Some people not only share their life but their moment of death with loved ones.
Are these 'shared-death experiences' real or a mirage?


shared_death_sm.jpg



W
illiam Peters was working as a volunteer in a hospice when he had a strange encounter with a dying man that changed his life.

The man’s name was Ron, and he was a former Merchant Marine who was afflicted with stomach cancer.

Peters says he would spend up to three hours a day at Ron’s bedside, talking to and reading adventure stories to him because few family or friends visited.

When Peters plopped by Ron’s beside around lunch one day, the frail man was semi-conscious.
Peters read passages from Jack London’s “Call of the Wild” as the frail man struggled to hang on.

What happened next, Peters says, was inexplicable.

Peters says he felt a force jerk his spirit upward, out of his body.

He floated above Ron’s bedside, looking down at the dying man.
Then he glanced next to him to discover Ron floating alongside him, looking at the same scene below.

“He looked at me and he gave me this happy, contented look as if he was telling me, ‘Check this out. Here we are,’ ’’ Peters says.
Peters says he then felt his spirit drop into his body again.

The experience was over in a flash. Ron died soon afterward, but Peters’ questions about that day lingered. He didn’t know what to call that moment but he eventually learned that it wasn’t unique. Peters had a “shared-death experience.”

Most of us have heard of near-death experiences.
The stories of people who died and returned to life with tales of floating through a tunnel to a distant light have become a part of popular culture.

Yet there is another category of near-death experiences that are, in some ways, even more puzzling.

Stories about shared-death experiences have been circulating since the late 19th century, say those who study the phenomenon.

The twist in shared-death stories is that it’s not just the people at the edge of death that get a glimpse of the afterlife.
Those near them, either physically or emotionally, also experience the sensations of dying.

These shared-death accounts come from assorted sources: soldiers watching comrades die on the battlefield, hospice nurses, people holding death vigils at the bedside of their loved ones.

All tell similar stories with the same message: People don’t die alone.

Some somehow find a way to share their passage to the other side.



141211155356-moody-sharedeath-story-top.jpg

Raymond Moody coined the concept, "shared-death experiences" after spending over 20 years collecting stories about the afterlife.


Raymond Moody introduced the concept of the shared-death experience in his 2009 book “Glimpses of Eternity.”
He first started collecting stories of people who died and returned to life while he was in medical school.

Skeptics have dismissed tales of the afterlife as hallucinations triggered by anesthesia or “anoxia,” a loss of oxygen to the brain that some people experience when they’re near death.

But Moody says you can’t explain away shared-death experiences by citing anoxia or anesthesia.
“We don’t have that option in shared-death experiences because the bystanders aren’t ill or injured, and yet they experience the same kind of things,” Moody says.

Skeptics, though, say people reporting shared-death experiences are not impartial observers.
Their perceptions are distorted by grief.

Joe Nickell, a noted investigator into the paranormal, says people who’ve watched others die sometimes experience their own form of trauma.

They don’t intend to, but some reinvent the moment of their loss to make it more acceptable.

“If you’re having a death vigil and your loved one dies, wouldn’t it be great to have a great story to tell that would make everyone happy and tell them that ‘Uncle John’ went to heaven, and I saw his soul leave and I saw him smile,” says Nickell, who is also an investigative writer for the journal Skeptical Inquirer, which offers scientific evaluations of extraordinary claims.

Nickell says shared-death experiences are not proof of an afterlife, but of a psychological truism.
“If you’re looking for something hard enough you’ll find it,” Nickell says. “This is well known to any psychologist or psychiatrist.”

Symptoms of a near-death experience

The term shared-death experience may be new, but it went by different names centuries ago.
The Society for Psychical Research in London documented shared-death experiences in the late 1800s, dubbing them “death-bed visions” or “death-bed coincidences,” researchers say.


One of the first shared-death experiences to gain attention came during World War I from Karl Skala, a German poet. Skala was a soldier huddled in a foxhole with his best friend when an artillery shell exploded, killing his comrade.

He felt his friend slump into his arms and die, according to one early book on shared-death experiences.

In the book, “Parting Visions,” the author Melvin Morse described what happened next to Skala, who had somehow escaped injury:


“He felt himself being drawn up with his friend, above their bodies and then above the battlefield.
Skala could look down and see himself holding his friend.
Then he looked up and saw a bright light and felt himself going toward it with his friend.
Then he stopped and returned to his body.
He was uninjured except for a hearing loss that resulted from the artillery blast."


Moody, who coined the term shared-death experience, has arguably done more than any contemporary figure to rekindle secular interest in the afterlife.
He’s been dubbed “the father of near-death experiences.“ He introduced the concept of the near-death experience in his popular 1975 book “Life after Life.”

He says he kept hearing stories about shared-death experiences during his research for “Life after Life.”
A genial, chatty man, Moody says he revealed these stories in books and lectures but shared-death experiences don’t get the attention that near-death experiences get because they are more disturbing.

Few people want to think about what it’s like to die; a shared-death experience forces them to do so, he says.
“[Sigmund] Freud made the statement that we can’t imagine our own deaths,” Moody says. “In the case of a near-death experience, that happens to someone else. That is somehow more comfortable to think about.”

He says people who claim to have a shared-death experience tell similar stories.
They recount the sensation of their consciousness being pulled upward out of their body, seeing beings of light, co-living a life review of the dying person, and seeing dead relatives of the dying person.

Some health care workers at the bedside of dying patients report seeing a light exit from the top of a person’s body at the moment of death and other surreal effects, Moody says.

“They say it’s like the room changes dimensions.
It’s like a port opens up to some other framework of reality.”

Penny Sartori, who was a nurse for 21 years, says she had a deathbed vision that left her shaken.
One night, she was preparing to give a bath to a dying patient who was hooked up to a ventilator and other life-prolonging equipment.

She says she touched the man’s bed, and “everything around us stopped.”

She says her surroundings disappeared and “it was almost like I swapped places with him.”

She says she could suddenly understand everything the man was going through, including feeling his pain.
He couldn’t talk but she says she could somehow hear him convey a heart-wrenching message: “Leave me alone. Let me die in peace…just let me die.”

That shared-death experience spurred her to conduct a five-year investigation into such stories and publish them in her book “The Wisdom of Near-Death Experiences.”

But even before that experience, she says she and other hospital workers had other eerie portents that a patient was about to die.

There would be a sudden drop in temperature at the bedside of a dying patient, or a light would surround the body just before death, she says.

“It’s very common for a clock to stop at the moment of death,” Sartori says. “I’ve seen light bulbs flicker or blow at the moment of death.”

A mother says goodbye?

One of the oddest shared-death experiences comes from a woman who says she felt the death throes of her mother even though she was thousands of miles away.





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Annie Cap, as a girl, with her mother, Betty. Cap says she was close to her mom in life, and at the moment of death.





Annie Cap was born in the United States but eventually moved to England where she worked for a telecommunications company.
On the day after Christmas in 2004, she says her mother, Betty, suddenly fell ill at her home in Portland, Oregon.

She was hospitalized and over the next few days all of her major organs began to shut down.
Cap, however, says she didn’t know her mother was dying.

Yet in a strange way she says she did.
Cap learned that her mother was ill but says she couldn’t get a flight during the holiday season so all she could do was wait.

She was in her London office with a client one day when she started to gag, struggling to breathe.
She was mystified because she says she was in good health.

She struggled for air for about 25 minutes, and with a growing sense of dread regarding her mother.

“I felt and heard this strange gurgling in my throat,” she says. “I started coughing and gagging. And I had this deep, growing sadness. I quickly rescheduled my client and once they had left, I ran as fast as I could to my house and called my mom’s hospital room.”

That’s when she learned that her mother was gasping for air, on the verge of death, Cap says.
While Cap was on the phone, she says, her mother died.

She’s convinced that she somehow shared her mother’s death throes, but she kept denying it because she was an agnostic at the time who didn’t believe in the afterlife.

Now she says she does.
Today Cap is a therapist in London, and the author of, “Beyond Goodbye: An Extraordinary True Story of a Shared Death Experience.”

“It wasn’t a blissful experience,” she says of that day after Christmas. “I was suffocating.”





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The last photo taken of Annie Cap, left, and her mother, Betty.





Skeptics question the claims

However dramatic shared-death experiences may be, they offer no more proof of an afterlife than near-death experiences, skeptics say.
Sean Carroll is a physicist who has participated in public debates about the afterlife with Moody and Eben Alexander, a neurosurgeon and author of The New York Times best-seller “Proof of Heaven.”

Life after death is dramatically incompatible with everything we know about modern science, says Carroll, author of “The Particle at the End of the Universe.”
He says people who claim that a soul persists after death would have to answer other questions: What particles make up the soul, what holds them together, and how does it interact with ordinary matter?

In an essay entitled “Physics and the Immortality of the Soul,” Carroll says the only evidence of afterlife experiences is “a few legends and sketchy claims from unreliable witnesses … plus a bucket load of wishful thinking.”

“We are made of atoms,” he says. “When you die, it’s like a candle being put out or turning off a laptop. There’s no substance that leaves the body. That’s a process that stops. That’s how the laws of physics describe life.”

Nickell, the paranormal skeptic, says stories of shared-death experiences also rest on a flimsy foundation.
“That’s the problem with all of them — they’re all anecdotal evidence and science doesn’t deal with anecdotal evidence,” Nickell says.

Peters, the former hospice worker who says he had such an experience, is convinced they’re real.
His encounter altered the course of his life.

He eventually founded the Shared Crossing Project, a group based in Santa Barbara, California, which offers counseling, research and classes to educate people about afterlife experiences.

When asked if he could have imagined his experience with Ron, the merchant seaman, Peters says “absolutely not.”
“I had no idea that was even possible,” he says. For him, “shared-death experiences didn’t even exist.”

It wasn’t until Peters heard Moody give a lecture eight years after his encounter with Ron that Peters first heard the term.
He doesn’t think his encounter with Ron was an accident.

He believes Ron was trying to return the comfort he had given to him.

“I think what he was saying to me was, ‘Don’t despair. Life goes on. Look how awesome it is,’ ’’ Peters says. “It was a true gift of love on his part.”

Or, as the skeptics would say, perhaps it was just Peters rewriting the moment to help himself accept a difficult loss.
Peters has considered that possibility but says he saw something else that convinced him Ron knew he was there.

He says that when he plopped back into his body after hovering over Ron’s bed, Ron made no gesture.
His eyes stayed closed and his body remained still.

But Peters looked closer at Ron and says he noticed something else:
A tear was running down his cheek.

 
5 Stories of People With Pre-Birth Memories


FETUS-shutterstock_128569892-WEBONLY.jpg

Many people report memories of being in the womb, being born, and–in the most mystical cases–of being in another realm before entering the womb.
It is difficult to prove this phenomenon exists outside of anecdotal evidence, but for many people this is a very real experience.

Elisabeth Hallett, a registered nurse with a degree in psychology, wrote in her book “Stories of the Unborn Soul: The Mystery and Delight of Pre-Birth Communication” that we don’t hear often about pre-birth experiences because: “It’s scary to reveal an experience that contradicts the common view of reality. As one woman said, ‘I have been reluctant to share these experiences, mostly out of fear that people would think I was completely nuts.'”


Boy Remembers Song Played on Way to Hospital

On the Near-Death Experience Research Foundation website, Nicola E. told the story of a student of hers named Michael.
Nicola was friends with Michael’s mother, who died when he was only a few months old.

She had witnessed Michael’s birth, as she had gone to the hospital support her friend, who was a single mother.
Nicola didn’t have further contact with Michael or his family after her friend died, until he was a student in her 4th grade class.

Nicola and Michael didn’t discuss Michael’s mother much, but he knew they’d been friends.

The students were asked to discuss their earliest memories.

Michael put up his hand and proceeded to describe in detail traveling to the hospital with Nicola as she was going to attend his birth.

He said he was in her grey car, he remembered the lyrics to the song that was playing, he saw Nicola stop at a gas station to ask for directions to the hospital, he saw her use a payphone in the hospital, and take a sweater that wasn’t hers in the waiting room and put it on.

All of these things were true.
She had a grey car at the time, but hadn’t since about two years after Michael’s birth.

Some words Michael remembered from the song corresponded to a song she listened to often on a tape in that car.
It was a rural hospital and she got lost on the way, so she stopped at a gas station for directions.

The hospital didn’t have cell phone service, so she used a payphone.
She was ashamed that she took a sweater that wasn’t hers; no one was around to claim it, it was just laying there, and she was very cold, so she put it on and kept it.

She never told anyone about this.

Like Waking From Anesthesia

A man named Michael Maguire told Hallett his experience can be compared to waking from anesthesia:
“I can clearly remember being in the spiritual, and then suddenly finding myself on Earth trapped in a baby’s body. It’s a bit like having an operation. One moment you’re in an operating theater counting back from 10; the next you find yourself in the recovery room. The major difference is that when you have an operation, you’re drowsy before and after the operation. With my experience, I was fully mentally alert before and after the transition to Earth.”

Remembering Birth Complications

A woman named Joelle told Hallett that when she was in her 30s, her aunt told her about complications during her birth, which her mother had never mentioned to her.
Memories she seemed to have from the time of her birth made more sense to her after her aunt’s revelations.

Her aunt told her that hers was an emergency birth at home.
She was lifeless when she came out of the womb.

Her aunt put her little body in another room, thinking she was dead.
The midwife arrived and was thankfully able to revive the baby.

What Joelle remembers is: “being in a place indescribable. It’s peaceful there, quiet, other people are with me. They are one. We are one. Not male, not female–I can see it in my mind’s eye but I can’t describe it. There are no voices, but I hear words. Someone says, ‘There’s a body, the person who had it felt it was too difficult a life and changed their mind.’ If I want it I have to go now, now. I hesitate, I hear a voice near me say, ‘No, it’s too soon, too soon, wait a while,’ but I can’t wait. I must go back. Someone says, ‘Decide now.'”

‘That’s the lady who took care of me before I was born!’

The following story was shared on Reddit: “My coworker told me a story about his 4-year-old daughter. He and his wife took her to an old mission in town that’s a bit of a tourist attraction and has a statue of the virgin Mary near the entrance. His daughter immediately points to the statue and exclaims, ‘Daddy, I know her! That’s the lady who took care of me before I was born!'”

A Reassuring Voice

Linda Parrino shared her story on an About.com forum about pre-birth experiences:

“I remember floating on a cloud. There were pink and blue clouds as far as I could see. I was at peace, I heard a voice that sounded like a woman but I did not see her. She spoke softly and the communication was more like speaking with the mind. I remember her telling me it was my time to go to Earth and be … born. I responded that I wanted to stay there, where I wassafe. She said you have to go now, don’t worry you will be fine. I have had this memory as far back as I can remember and it has been a comfort to me all of my life.”

 
Reincarnation Expert Dr. Jim Tucker Talks ‘Spiritual’ Research in Scientific America


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Dr. Jim Tucker learned from the best.
His predecessor in reincarnation studies at the University of Virginia, Dr. Ian Stevenson (1918—2007), earned the respect of America’s scientific community for his sober analyses, even if he didn’t convince everyone reincarnation undoubtedly exists.

Though he was based in the United States, many of Dr. Stevenson’s subjects were in Asia. Dr. Tucker is bringing the research home to America, a move with as many benefits as challenges.

You won’t find a Buddhist on every corner here willing to talk about past lives–or, more to the point, willing to listen when his child seems to be talking about a past life.

That’s not to discount Dr. Stevenson’s work.
He documented thousands cases of children who seemed to remember their past lives, and some “memories” were so precise that Stevenson could track down the purported past-life incarnations.

He found coroner’s reports and other documents that confirmed the details the children gave of their past lives and deaths.
These are called “solved” reincarnation cases.

But convincing Asian cases run the risk of being dismissed in America as psychological concoctions fostered within the prevalent belief system.
In the United States, if a child talks about his other mommy, his grandson, or the fire he died in, parents aren’t so quick to surmise that they could be memories from a past life.

The worry that a family may have influenced a child with probing questions or talk of past lives isn’t as prominent in the United States. “We don’t have to worry about the cultural factors that are potential contaminants in the Asian cases,” Dr. Tucker said.

On the other hand, when nobody is looking for past-life memories, they’re harder to find. But Dr. Tucker has managed to study strong cases in the United States, including some solved cases comparable to Dr. Stevenson’s in Asia.

Far from fostering talk of past lives, some American families Dr. Tucker has worked with have been dead-set against it.
Only after convincing evidence emerged that the child was remembering a past life–evidence strong enough to convince skeptical parents–would Dr. Tucker hear from them.

For example, an evangelical Christian in Louisiana who was completely resistant to the idea of reincarnation was eventually convinced by the details his son gave of a past life.
When his son, James Leininger, was 2 years old, he began having horrific nightmares of crashing in a plane.

The boy said he was shot down by the Japanese, that his plane took off from the Natoma ship, and that he had a friend named Jack Larson.
He also identified the site where he crashed, Iwo Jima, from a photograph.

Iwo Jima is an island that the United States fought to capture in 1945.
The Natoma was indeed involved in the Battle for Iwo Jima.

One pilot died in the battle, and a pilot named Jack Larson was also on the Natoma.

Leininger started saying he was the third James.

The pilot who died in the Battle for Iwo Jima was named James Huston Jr.
That would make James Leininger the third James if he is the reincarnation of this pilot.

Dr. Tucker was raised Southern Baptist himself.
When asked how his family feels about his research, he said, “I don’t completely know how they feel about it.” His mother is supportive, though he’s not sure she’s convinced reincarnation exists.

His wife and children are supportive.

He’s also lucky to work with supportive colleagues at the University of Virginia.

The university’s Division of Perceptual Studies brings together researchers who investigate near-death experiences, apparitions, death-bed visions, and other topics related to human consciousness.

“You never know who’s going to be open to it,” Dr. Tucker said. “It’s different to be sure, but I think that we approach it in a way that’s reasonable and that’s true to the overall scientific approach of curiosity, trying to learn about what’s going on without having any preconceived ideas.”

He also conducts more conventional research alongside his reincarnation studies.
While the conventional methods of scientific investigation are able to measure phenomena with a reassuring certainty, Dr. Tucker said there are many important subjects that don’t necessarily lend themselves to conventional study.

They should, however, still be explored.

The Benefits of Reincarnation Research

Reincarnation research can help some children who are having a hard time coping with past-life memories.
Such children can sometimes even experience symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), caused by their visions of dying violently.

Some have phobias related to these traumatic visions, and some simply talk about missing their old family members so much they become very agitated.
In solved cases, children who have visited the families of their past-life incarnations have often resolved the issues that were upsetting them.

Dr. Tucker explained that sometimes it helps because the child’s memories have been validated, or because the child can see that the old family moved on and that life is in the past. Either way, children usually stop talking about their past lives around the age of 6 or 7.

Another way in which this research may help Americans, is that it confirms a belief in the afterlife. Dr. Tucker said that his research can hopefully help people treat each other better, though he says any kind of spiritual belief, whether in reincarnation or otherwise, can help in this regard.

Will Americans one day be as open to the idea of reincarnation as people in Eastern cultures? “I don’t necessarily see the American culture moving in that direction,” Dr. Tucker said.

Roughly 20 percent of Americans believe reincarnation may exist, he said, and there’s no indication that belief is on the rise.
But Americans may be more likely to believe in reincarnation after hearing examples within their own culture of children who seem to remember past lives, rather than examples from villages on the other side of the world.

As for the multiple details that children give of their past lives that match up with real people who have died, Dr. Tucker said, “It defies logic that it would just be a coincidence.”
He gave the example of a woman in Lebanon who accurately gave 25 names of people from her past life along with descriptions of their relationships.

In his book, “Return to Life: Extraordinary Cases of Children Who Remember Past Lives,” Dr. Tucker gives many examples of children in the United States and abroad whose apparent recollections of previous lives have confirmed his belief in life after death.

 
[MENTION=6917]sprinkles[/MENTION]

3-D insulator called Han Purple loses a dimension to enter magnetic 'Flatland'

Dye first made 2,500 years ago is focus of quantum spin study
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Magnetic order in a silicate forms like pieces of a Rubik’s cube clicking into place.

In a scrambled Rubik's cube, colorful squares clash without order.
As pieces click into place in the hands of a skilled puzzle solver, the individual characters of squares dissolve as solid faces of uniform color emerge.

In the same way, barium copper silicate–also known as "Han Purple," a vivid pigment used in ancient China–transforms from a nonmagnetic, disordered insulator into a magnetic, ordered condensate under conditions of extreme cold and high magnetic field. The components that "click into place" to form an entirely new phase are the electron orientations of atoms, or "spins," described by their quantum state as "up" or "down."

Now, scientists at Stanford, Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Institute for Solid State Physics (University of Tokyo) have discovered that at the abrupt lowest temperature transition at which the silicate enters a new state–called the quantum critical point–the three-dimensional material "loses" a dimension to form a Flatland, of sorts.

Just as in the 1884 novella Flatland that posited a planar world, the spins strongly interact only in two dimensions.
Effects from the third dimension are negligible. Their work appears in the June 1 issue of Nature.

First author Suchitra Sebastian of the Geballe Laboratory for Advanced Materials and of the Applied Physics Department conducted the experiments for her doctoral dissertation in collaboration with co-authors Ian Fisher, an assistant professor of applied physics at Stanford who was Sebastian's thesis adviser; scientist Neil Harrison, who was on Sebastian's thesis committee, and scientist Marcelo Jaime, postdoctoral fellow Peter Sharma and theorist Cristian Batista, all of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL) at its Los Alamos National Laboratory campus; scientist Luis Balicas of the NHMFL's Florida State University campus; and Associate Professor Naoki Kawashima of the University of Tokyo.

"We have shown, for the first time, that the collective behavior in a bulk three-dimensional material can actually occur in just two dimensions," Fisher said. "Low dimensionality is a key ingredient in many exotic theories that purport to account for various poorly understood phenomena, including high-temperature superconductivity, but until now there were no clear examples of 'dimensional reduction' in real materials."

Said Harrison: "What these findings in barium copper silicate demonstrate is something very fundamental that may provide the key toward understanding the role of dimensionality in quantum critical phenomena. This may be a crucial step for understanding the required properties of new materials, including more exotic superconductors, perhaps even ones with superconductance at higher temperatures."

In the normal, or insulating, state of the silicate, a pair of "up" and "down" spins cancel out each other to produce no net order.
But in the magnetic state, ordering occurs between neighboring electron pairs in all three dimensions.

At magnetic fields above 23 tesla (800,000 times that of the Earth's magnetic field) and temperatures near absolute zero, the silicate enters a rare state, called a Bose-Einstein condensate, in which electron spins move as a collective whole.

From frustration to fruition

At a critical point, the ordered spins in the condensate appear to lose a dimension.
Think of the silicate as stacked layers.

Suddenly, the spins in one layer cannot influence those of neighboring layers.
Magnetic waves travel only along flat planes rather than throughout the entirety of the three-dimensional material.

Batista proposed a theoretical explanation for this strange behavior: It may be due to an effect called "geometrical frustration."
In the crystal structure of barium copper silicate, individual copper atoms in the silicate layers are not stacked directly above each other, but instead, are shifted over in each layer in zigzag fashion.

Near the critical point, the quantum behavior of the spins in such a layered arrangement may "frustrate" one layer from influencing neighboring layers.
The experimental techniques Sebastian and researchers used to show this effect allowed them to tune high magnetic fields at the lowest experimentally accessible temperatures to precisely access the immediate vicinity of the quantum critical point and explore new physics.

World-class facilities and technical support at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Tallahassee, Fla., made this possible.
Before this discovery, it had not been possible to experimentally achieve this level of proximity to the quantum critical point in Bose-Einstein condensates.

"Magnetic moments associated with the electron spin seem to play a crucial role in the behavior of high-temperature superconductor materials," Batista said. "Fluctuations of the magnetic moments affect the flow of current-carrying electrons in a nontrivial way, in particular near the quantum critical point, where these fluctuations become very large. By studying the quantum critical behavior of insulating materials (with no current-carrying electrons), we can isolate the magnetic properties and gain a better understanding of their possible behaviors."

The discovery of reduction in dimensions at the quantum critical point in the magnetic insulator barium copper silicate provides a clue to mysterious physical phenomena observed in other materials, such as superconductivity at high temperatures and the anomalous behavior of metallic magnets known as "heavy fermions."

"The holy grail for condensed matter physicists is to make the essential step of understanding the mechanisms that can produce high temperature superconductivity," Harrison said. "The observed dimensional reduction in the Bose-Einstein condensate of barium copper silicate provides a particularly vivid example of the role of dimensionality in condensate physics because it is free from other complications that cloud our understanding of superconducting materials."

While electron charge now transports information in electronic devices, electron spin may someday fulfill the same role in "spintronic" devices.
"Spin currents are capable of carrying far more information than a conventional charge current–which makes them the ideal vehicle for information transport in future applications such as quantum computing," Sebastian said.

Noted Fisher: "Our research group focuses on new materials with unconventional magnetic and electronic properties. Han Purple was first synthesized over 2500 years ago, but we have only recently discovered how exotic its magnetic behavior is. It makes you wonder what other materials are out there that we haven't yet even begun to explore."

Funding for this research came from the National Science Foundation; Laboratory Directed Research and Development support at Los Alamos National Laboratory; the State of Florida, the Department of Energy, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the Mustard Seed Foundation.


 
Merging Two Souls:
Cellular Memory and Organ Transplants


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Modern medicine is a wondrous and complex thing.
As an institution it has its beginnings in pre-history, with herbalists and shamans who treated every ailment, every illness with magic and salves and fireside dancing.

Of course, the state of medicine has advanced 1000 fold since then.
We graduated from superstition, to fledgling theories about the transmission of disease – such as the miasma theory of medicine – to germ theory, modern pharmaceuticals, genetic analysis, stem cell therapy, and of course, organ transplantation.

That last one has a longer and more storied history than you might think, and it gets kind of weird.
Organ transplantation is an incredible thing, if you think about it.

The very idea that one can remove a piece of someone’s body, put it in or on someone else’s, and that organ will become part of the second person, allowing them to heal and survive whatever trauma or disease brought them to a position of need in the first place… it’s amazing!

According to Donate Life, an American organization advocating for organ donation, there were 28,953 organ transplant procedures conducted in the US last year, and there are more than 123,000 people desperately awaiting suitable organs or tissue, just in the United States at this moment. When scaled globally, those numbers are staggering.

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So think about that for a moment.
That’s almost 30,000 people, just in the US, who got a second chance at life because someone was willing to give up their organs (either upon their death or while alive).

A little piece (or a few little pieces) of the 15,000 or so people who donated their own bodies to help those in need, live on in the surviving transplant recipients.
Those are people who have physically merged; donor and recipient – upon success of the procedure – essentially become one person.

That may seem to you, to be a strange way to look at it, but there’s actually more to it than you might think.
For as long as we’ve been transplanting parts of people into other people (more than 2000 years), there have been recipients of those parts who have claimed that once they started to live with the new addition to their body, they began to take on strange personality changes, often things that were completely counter to their normal demeanour.

Their preference for various foods would change drastically; something they enjoyed before becomes intolerable, or something they previously found disgusting is suddenly a constant craving.

They would suddenly feel the urge to begin smoking, or to take up a particular hobby.
Almost as if a part of the donors personality has also been grafted onto, or into their body.

For a lot of people that probably sounds pretty familiar, though it might feel like just an urban legend.
You might think it invokes some spiritual connection; a transfer of the soul of one person into another.

And while that might be something to think about, there is a basis in material fact here.

If you go looking, you’ll find a plethora of anecdotal accounts of people experiencing exactly what’s laid out above.

You’ll also find a strong skeptical argument refuting the idea as entirely impossible.
What we’re talking about is cellular memory. It’s a fairly old concept, with connections to past life regression and reincarnation.

Cellular memory is a theory that our cells, all 37 trillion of them, actually contain copies of our memories.
You’ll note that no one really knows how or where memories are stored, but it’s long been thought that they were restricted to the brain.

This, however, is no longer the case.





Through the study of epigenetics, which is often called cellular memory, and which has long been thought pseudoscience along with cellular memory, we now know that our cells, or even our very DNA actually do contain some element of our memories.

That element can be passed on – in the case of epigenetics, it’s passed from parent to child during gestation – though it’s not like handing down a photo album from generations past. Researchers have found that basic instincts, fears, and primal associations may be passed on this way.

It turns out that the same transfer of experience may happen with organ transplantation.
Last summer, a team of researchers from the Swedish Karolinska Institutet, announced the discovery of the mechanism for cellular memory and its transfer among cells.

Their paper, published in the scientific journal Cell, examines the interactions of proteins and DNA during cell division, isolating what’s known as transcriptions factors.[1]

“The DNA in human cells is translated into a multitude of proteins required for a cell to function.
When, where and how proteins are expressed is determined by regulatory DNA sequences and a group of proteins, known as transcription factors, that bind to these DNA sequences.

Each cell type can be distinguished based on its transcription factors, and a cell can in certain cases be directly converted from one type to another, simply by changing the expression of one or more transcription factors.

It is critical that the pattern of transcription factor binding in the genome be maintained.
During each cell division, the transcription factors are removed from DNA and must find their way back to the right spot after the cell has divided.

Despite many years of intense research, no general mechanism has been discovered which would explain how this is achieved.”

Here’s the thing, each new cell needs to know how to order its transcription factors, and needs to understand the order of transcription factors that existed before it was created, so that it can maintain its identity.

No one really knows exactly what information is being transferred between cells in this way, and since the cells need to have the memories of the cells in previous generations, whatever information is contained in those memories gets passed on, even if that information is superfluous to its purpose.

Now, because any cell in your body can at any time be converted into any other kind of cell – i.e. a lung cell could be converted into a brain cell if needed – that means that whatever memory that cell contains will then be passed on to other cells in other systems of the body.

If there is more than just identity information being stored in those proteins, then that information is also being shared, and will eventually spread.





So here we go.
If Jane gets a kidney transplant from Bob, and Bob’s kidney cells contained information about a memory, maybe that he enjoyed sardines, then when Bob’s kidney cells begin to interact with Jane’s cells, that memory information will be passed on to other cells.

Which in short order could have Jane craving those disgusting little fish in a can.

It is the process of cellular memory that keeps you who you are over the years of your life.

All of your cells are replaced by new ones regularly, and without cellular memory, those new cells wouldn’t know how to make you be you.
We don’t yet know how far cellular memory theory goes, the extent to which information can be passed between individuals in this way is unknown.

But here’s a little something to think about:

The Theseus Paradox poses the question, if a ship sailed for one hundred years, and over those years the crew worked to maintain the ship by replacing worn boards, eventually every board on the ship will have been replaced with new wood.

At the one hundred year mark, would it still be the same ship?


[1] Taipale, Jussi et al. Transcription Factor Binding in Human Cells Occurs in Dense Clusters Formed around Cohesin Anchor Sites. Cell, Volume 154, Issue 4, p801–813, 15 August 2013. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.07.034
 
Present!
Robert Mays:
What Medical Neuroscience Can Learn from Near-Death Experiences


[video=youtube;w01ecQ2fokw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=w01ecQ2fokw[/video]

"The mind-entity hypothesis proposes that the 'mind' is an objective, autonomous entity that can separate from and operate independent of the brain."
Robert Mays presents "What Medical Neuroscience Can Learn from Near-Death Experiences" at the 2014 International Association for Near-Death Studies Conference in Newport Beach. California.
This program was aired on KMVT15 Community Media.
 
Jane Katra:
The Amplitude of Illumination



[video=youtube;kKqreMVM_ig]https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PL139C378676224244&feature=player_detai lpage&v=kKqreMVM_ig[/video]

The Amplitude of Illumination: Emergence of the Energy of Higher Consciousness
Jane Katra, PhD -- web site http://www.janekatra.org/

Presented at the IANDS 2010 Conference September 2-4, 2010 Denver, CO

The development of the human being is the passing from one state of consciousness to another, sequentially and in stages, through a series of shifting values: Instinctual, emotional, intellectual, and conscious evolution: intentional action for transformation from one level of being to another.
 
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This is a good one!!
Gregory Shushan -
"Near-Death Experience and the Origins of Afterlife Beliefs"


[video=youtube;QVeoV14J2dY]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=QVeoV14J2dY[/video]

"In this seminar I will review my research into the relationship between afterlife beliefs and certain types of 'religious' or 'mystical' experiences worldwide as found in the texts of early civilizations, and in the earliest ethnographic reports on indigenous societies.

The key issue is the extent to which afterlife conceptions are consistent cross-culturally, and with the spontaneous, evidently universal near-death experience.
In opposition to contemporary postmodernist-influenced assumptions that religious beliefs and experiences are entirely culturally constructed, I argue that afterlife conceptions in human societies are commonly formed not only by a combination of culture-specific socio-historical and environmental factors, but also universal cognitive factors and universal anomalous experiential factors.

This is demonstrated by the existence of thematically consistent narratives of near-death experiences found in nearly all times and places, which in turn correspond to the widespread general similarities found in afterlife conceptions worldwide.

This is despite differences in social organization and scale, and high degrees of cultural independence and geographical and chronological distance between the societies considered."

GREGORY SHUSHAN is author of the Grawemeyer Award-nominated Conceptions of the Afterlife in Early Civilizations: Universalism, Constructivism, and Near-Death Experience (Continuum Advances in Religious Studies, 2009).

He has been Visiting Lecturer in Religious Studies at University of Wales Lampeter, Lecturer in the Study of Religions at University College Cork where he helped establish the first such department in the Republic of Ireland, guest lecturer in Anthropology of Religions at Swiss University, and Research Fellow at the Centro Incontri Umani (The Cross Cultural Centre) at Ascona, Switzerland.

He has presented his research in seven different countries, and is the recipient of six academic awards, including the Gordon Childe Prize.
He holds a Diploma in Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology from Birkbeck College (University of London), a BA in Egyptian Archaeology and an MA in Research Methods for the Humanities from University College London, and a PhD in Religious Studies from University of Wales Lampeter.

He is currently a Research Fellow at the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion, University of Oxford, researching comparative afterlife beliefs in indigenous religions worldwide in the context of shamanic and near-death experiences.
The project is supported by a grant from the Perrot-Warrick Fund, Trinity College, Cambridge.
 
If you have never heard his story - you should.
But also, this is a very well-done video that has actually changed some of my own presumptions about the man.
Enjoy.

Eben Alexander:
A Neurosurgeon's Journey through the Afterlife



[video=youtube;qbkgj5J91hE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=qbkgj5J91hE[/video]


In this intimate and powerful re-examination of his best-selling book "Proof of Heaven," Dr. Alexander looks at the past two and a half years of his life spent in trying to reconcile his rich spiritual experience with contemporary physics and cosmology.

He is convinced that his remarkable near-death journey is totally consistent with the leading edges of scientific understanding today. 2014.


This presentation was part of the 128th Summer Convention of the Theosophical Society in America.
The theme for the conference was "Science and the Experience of Consciousness," which brought together such distinguished scientists as physicist Amit Goswami, consciousness researcher and psychologist Dean Radin, physicist and psychic researcher Russell Targ, neurosurgeon Eben Alexander, and more. 2014.
 
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