What The Afterlife Looks Like | Full Audiobook | (NDE) Near Death Experience
What Researchers Found
The Story
Malcolm Miller, a 44-year-old man, suffered a perforated stomach ulcer on October 26, 2006, which caused severe pain and led to emergency surgery. Doctors induced a coma, and he remained unconscious for nine days. During the coma, Miller left his body and stood beside it in the ICU. He met a guide named Tom, who held his hand and led him through darkness where he experienced a life review, feeling the impacts of his actions on others. They entered a tunnel to a bright light, then visited Tom's house, a garden, a lake, a city, and halls of learning in the spirit world. Miller explored light and dark spheres, witnessed building creation by thought, shopping without money, and briefly reunited with deceased relatives. Helpers explained spirit life rules. After nine days, Miller awoke in the hospital. He wrote a book to share his insights, emphasizing love, karma, and preparation for death. He gained a deeper purpose, compassion for all, and rejected religious myths for open-minded understanding.
“think of life after death as life before death try to think of life on the other”
The NDE includes an OBE claim of seeing one's comatose body, a nurse, and a doctor (spirit guide) checking a monitor and writing notes in the ICU, but these are predictable ICU elements lacking unique, verifiable specifics. No attempts at verification, prior reporting, or confirmed details are mentioned, resulting in low evidential strength.
Score reflects verifiable perceptions reported. A low score indicates the experience was primarily spiritual or subjective, not that it didn't occur.
Score reflects transformation as described. Domains scored 0 indicate the topic was not discussed, not that no change occurred.
Are you here because someone you love has died?
These accounts were gathered because death may not be the end. Thousands of people have experienced something beyond — and come back to tell us about it.
What Researchers Found
The NDE includes an OBE claim of seeing one's comatose body, a nurse, and a doctor (spirit guide) checking a monitor and writing notes in the ICU, but these are predictable ICU elements lacking unique, verifiable specifics. No attempts at verification, prior reporting, or confirmed details are mentioned, resulting in low evidential strength.
Score reflects verifiable perceptions reported. A low score indicates the experience was primarily spiritual or subjective, not that it didn't occur.
Score reflects transformation as described. Domains scored 0 indicate the topic was not discussed, not that no change occurred.