NDE TV Presents Susan, while in coma from rolling her vehicle, she watched her children from above.
What Researchers Found
The Story
In the blink of an eye, life can flip from ordinary to extraordinary, as it did for Anita, a resilient mother from Mississippi. Her first brush with death came in 1999 on Highway 6. Driving her Forester to visit her mother, she lost control. The car spun wildly, rolled repeatedly, and ejected her onto the road just outside Baptist Memorial Hospital. Doctors and nurses rushing to work stabilized her broken body—three fractured neck vertebrae, collapsed lungs—rushing her to a trauma center. She spent six months on a ventilator in a coma, her mother refusing to let go of her only child. From that coma, Anita's spirit lifted to a surreal vantage: perched atop a single-wide white trailer under a dark sky. Beside her sat Kathy, a friend lost to ovarian cancer, and Kathy's mother-in-law, another cancer victim. Below, her children frolicked as tiny tots, though they were older in reality—frozen in her heart as her 'babies.' A pull tugged at her soul; she had to return to them. It felt like a dream, timeless, urging her back to motherhood. Years later, in 2015, hardship compounded: homelessness, strokes in a shelter shower, rejection at ERs for lack of insurance. After surgery and a heart attack, life support clicked off. Her spirit soared again, hovering ceiling-high, gazing at her weeping son alone in the room. No tunnel, no review—just overwhelming peace, love, acceptance. Afraid to stray far, tethered by a silver cord, she chose return: 'I have to help him.' These odysseys transformed Anita. Fear of death vanished; she embraced 'surfing without waves'—flowing positively through paralysis, nursing homes, divorce from an uncaring husband. With grit and guardian angels like a 90-year-old roommate nurse, she relearned walking, driving, living independently. Now in her own apartment, she shares on Facebook: stay positive, beat the odds. Small kindnesses—a Happy Meal from a driver—shine bright. Her story whispers that mindset shapes reality, turning survivors into beacons, proving life's waves are for riding, not drowning in.
“I was even alive but they kept me alive or my mother where I and then I sat on”
The NDE includes extreme medical crises like prolonged coma/ventilator use and life support disconnection, with out-of-body perceptions of specific details such as overheard nurse conversations about Dilaudid and viewing her son alone crying from above. However, no verification attempts, confirmed accuracies, or documented timely reporting are mentioned, while some elements like family distress are predictable, limiting overall 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 extreme medical crises like prolonged coma/ventilator use and life support disconnection, with out-of-body perceptions of specific details such as overheard nurse conversations about Dilaudid and viewing her son alone crying from above. However, no verification attempts, confirmed accuracies, or documented timely reporting are mentioned, while some elements like family distress are predictable, limiting overall 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.