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I went from this warm amazing felling
originally posted by: KKLOCO
What I find interesting is that there is supposedly a choice. Why would there be a ‘choice’ of anything after we die (go into the light - don’t go into the light)?
If there really is a choice, I’m leaning towards it being a trap. Otherwise, we’d just be physically dead and our spirits would be in heaven, or whatever you want to call it.
If we truly reincarnate here, and the point is to learn — how the hell do we learn anything by having our memories wiped every time we come back?
I’ve got more questions than answers on this topic.
originally posted by: KKLOCO
What I find interesting is that there is supposedly a choice. Why would there be a ‘choice’ of anything after we die (go into the light - don’t go into the light)?
If there really is a choice, I’m leaning towards it being a trap. Otherwise, we’d just be physically dead and our spirits would be in heaven, or whatever you want to call it.
If we truly reincarnate here, and the point is to learn — how the hell do we learn anything by having our memories wiped every time we come back?
I’ve got more questions than answers on this topic.
Between 10 and 20% of people who survive near-death experiences tend to describe the moment as a bright light or say that they saw dead loved ones among other visual experiences. Many people look on this skeptically, but the new study may have found a scientific explanation for this phenomenon.
What did the researcher see in dying people's brains?
Using EEG, the researchers observed that cardiac arrest or acute asphyxia led to high levels of gamma activities in the brain among both humans and animals. Gamma power in the brain is an indicator of consciousness and tends to be associated with intense focus, problem-solving and other brain activity that requires mind power.
Specifically, the activated areas of the brain that the scientists observed among dying patients are similar to the areas of the brain that handle internal visual activity like dreaming. This could explain the bright light or faces of loved ones. While the patients are not seeing these images actually materialize in front of them, they are essentially dreaming them as they pass away.