domingo, 21 de diciembre de 2008

A Doctor’s Need To Know

SHORT COMMUNICATION 54.

A Doctor’s Need To Know

By

Roger Behra


A great number of medical doctors believe that when a patient is pronounced dead, that is it, nothing, no more life here, and no life after life ends here. But the doctors on many occasions are told their thinking is flawed, wrong, and to put it bluntly, they need to update their thinking as soon as possible.

They need to change their thinking especially when a patient is pronounced clinically dead on the operating table, and due to modern procedures they are brought back to life. That happening is called a near-death experience.

During the near-death experience of a patient the spirit of the person leaves the body, rises, hovers, usually at one corner of the ceiling, and then sees and hears EVERYTHING that is done and said. After a period of time if the resuscitation is successful, the patient is brought back to life. The period of time before resuscitation can last from a few minutes to a much longer period of time. It after the resuscitation that the patient has a story to tell, usually, o a very skeptical doctor.

It is true that a patient can theoretically hear everything that is said without a near-death experience, but a near-death experience has to be in effect in order for the patient to see everything that went on. So, a new scientific experiment (yes, science is finally getting involved) is going be in effect soon. And it will not take many of them to convince skeptical doctors (or others either) that a person has a spirit that lives on and can see and hear.

In some operating rooms shelves with words and pictures on them will be installed well above eye-level. Only the top shelf will have the words and the pictures. And only the hovering spirit will be able to see the words and the pictures as it hovers in one place near the room’s ceiling.

Later, after each successful resuscitation, when the patient is able to speak and tell a story and answer questions, if it includes seeing words and pictures seen on the well above eye-level shelves, while the patient’s spirit was hovering near the ceiling, any doctor’s thinking that there is not spirit or an after-life will have to be changed. There will be considerable head-scratching, and science thinking will take a big hit and have to be changed.

Now, what cannot be at all believed is why it took so long for science to do this type of experiment. Thousands upon thousands of near-death stories have been told by patients, but science refused to validate the stories, until recently. We are all waiting for their long-awaited and reasonable reply.

R. B.

12/21/08