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Full Version: An Australian man shares his near-death experience.
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"Australian News" reported that the incident happened in January 2019. Blake went to bed as usual, but at 3:10 in the morning, he made a strange grunting noise, which woke his light-sleeping wife and was so frightened that she hurried to call an ambulance. 

When the medical staff arrived, they found the patient dead. During the rescue process, they even used electric shocks 10 times. Just when they were about to give up, they miraculously detected a pulse. Nearly a week later, Blake woke up in the hospital with a full recovery after treatment with no long-term damage to his brain.

Others, however, have had very different near-death experiences. Jessie Sawyer, from the United States, said she saw her deceased friend greet her, and a light appeared on the right. Cynthia Busch saw the magnificent hall, the white clouds and the light, and the deceased grandmother anxiously asked her to go home quickly.

Palliative care expert Patrick Steele said there were different theories about the light you saw when you were dying. Some people think it's because of seeing the afterlife, or human consciousness leaving the head. Psychologists speculate that the brain may be flashing an early memory, or some kind of defense mechanism.

Still, Steele most agrees with the medical explanation. He took "passing out" as an example to explain that the brain needs a lot of oxygen and blood supply to function effectively. "Low blood pressure leads to changes in the blood supply to the brain, which can cause a kind of tunnelled vision phenomenon." Therefore, before fainting, it is possible to see The darkness is slowly approaching from the periphery, and the so-called white light is a similar principle, just a "more exaggerated version" of fainting.


https://www.ettoday.net/news/20221016/2359183.htm