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So you when to hell now what.
RE: So you when to hell now what.
(December 8, 2014 at 1:12 pm)Huggy74 Wrote: post an account of an Hindu having an NDE, or one that involve Santa Claus...
Here's three. "CAN YOU PROVE THEM WRONG??"

Quote:The following Hindu near-death experiences come from Pasricha's and Stevenson's research as well as other sources on near-death experiences in India.
Vasudev Pandey

Vasudev Pandey was interviewed in 1975 and again in 1976. He was born in 1921 and had nearly died in his home of what he described as "paratyphoid disease" when he was about 10 years old. Vasudev had been considered dead and his body had actually been taken to the cremation ground. However, some indications of life aroused attention, and Vasudev was removed to the hospital where doctors tried to revive him, using "injections," with eventual success. He remained unconscious for 3 days and then became able to describe the following experience (as narrated to us in 1975):

"Two persons caught me and took me with them. I felt tired after walking some distance; they started to drag me. My feet became useless. There was a man sitting up. He looked dreadful and was all black. He was not wearing any clothes. He said in a rage [to the attendants who had brought Vasudev] "I had asked you to bring Vasudev the gardener. Our garden is drying up. You have brought Vasudev the student." When I regained consciousness, Vasudev the gardener was standing in front of me [apparently in the crowd of family and servants who had gathered around the bed of the ostensibly dead Vasudev]. He was hale and hearty. People started teasing him saying, "Now it is your turn." He seemed to sleep well in the night, but the next morning he was dead."

In reply to questions about details, Vasudev said that the "black man" had a club and used foul language. Vasudev identified him as Yamraj, the Hindu god of the dead. He said that he was "brought back" by the same two men who had taken him to Yamraj in the first place. Vasudev's mother (who had died before the time of the interview) had been a pious woman who read scriptures that included descriptions of Yamraj. Vasudev, even as a boy before his near-death experience, was quite familiar with Yamraj.

Durga Jatav

Durga Jatav, a man approximately 50 years old, was interviewed in November, 1979, and again 3 months later. About 30 years before, he had been ill for several weeks, suffering from what had been diagnosed as typhoid. When his body "became cold" for a couple of hours, his family thought he had died. He revived, however, and on the third day following this he told his family he had been taken to another place by 10 people. He had tried to escape, but they had then cut off his legs at the knees to prevent his escape. He was taken to a place where there were tables and chairs and 40 or 50 people sitting. He recognized no one. They looked at his "papers," saw that his name was not on their list, and said, "Why have you brought him here? Take him back." To this Durga had replied, "How can I go back? I don't have feet." He was then shown several pairs of legs, he recognized his own, and they were somehow reattached. He was then sent back with the instructions not to "stretch" (bend?) his knees so that they could mend. (Durga's older sister, who was also interviewed, corroborated his account of his apparent death and revival.)

Durga's sister and a neighbor noticed a few days after he revived that marks had appeared on his knees; there had previously been no such marks there. These folds, or deep fissures, in the skin on the front of Durga's knees were still visible in 1979. There was no bleeding or pain in the knees other than the discomfort engendered by Durga's following the "instructions" to keep his knees in a fixed position. X-ray photographs that we had taken in 1981 showed no abnormality below the surface of the skin. Durga had not heard of such experiences before his own near-death experience. He did not see his physical body from some other position in space. He said that afterward the experience seemed like a dream; nevertheless, he claimed that it had strengthened his faith in God.

One informant for this case (the headman of the village where Durga lived) said that at the time of Durga's experience another person by the same name had died in Agra (about 30 km away); however, neither Durga nor his older sister were able to confirm this statement.

Chhajju Bania

Chhajju Bania was interviewed in 1981, at which time he was about 40 years old. His near-death experience had occurred some 6 years earlier. He became ill with fever and his condition deteriorated until he was thought to have died, at which time his relatives began preparing his body for cremation. However, he revived, and he gave the following account of his experience as he remembered it afterward:

"Four black messengers came and held me. I asked, "Where are you taking me?" They took me and seated me near the god. My body had become small. There was an old lady sitting there. She had a pen in her hand, and the clerks had a heap of books in front of them. I was summoned ... One of the clerks said, "We don't need Chhajju Bania (trader). We had asked for Chhajju Kumhar (potter). Push him back and bring the other man. He (meaning Chhajju Bania) has some life remaining." I asked the clerks to give me some work to do, but not to send me back. Yamraj was there sitting on a high chair with a white beard and wearing yellow clothes. He asked me, "What do you want?" I told him that I wanted to stay there. He asked me to extend my hand. I don't remember whether he gave me something or not. Then I was pushed down [and revived]."

Chhajju mentioned that he later learned that a person called Chhajju Kumhar had died at about the same time that he (Chhajju Bania) revived. He said that his behavior had changed following his near-death experience, particularly in the direction of his becoming more honest.

Chhajju's wife, Saroj, remembered her husband's experience, but her account of what he told her about the near-death experience differed in some details from his statement. For example, she said he had told her (about reviving) that at the place to which the four men had taken him there "was a man with a beard with lots of papers in front of him" (not an old lady). The bearded man said, "It is not his turn. Bring Chhajju Kori (a weaver)" (Not Chhajju Kumhar). Other discrepancies between the two accounts concerned unimportant details. Saroj remembered her husband telling her that he had not wanted to leave "there" and that he had been "pushed down" before he revived.
In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty.
- Thomas Jefferson
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
(December 8, 2014 at 1:14 pm)FatAndFaithless Wrote: Here's three. "CAN YOU PROVE THEM WRONG??"


I can't find anything that states that they were acknowledged as dead by medical professionals. The first story just illustrates how villagers (none of them doctors) mistook the guy for being dead.

As for the second story, there are acknowledged discrepancies in the account.
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
You..do know what an NDE is, yes? A near-death-experience, not "officially-declared-dead-by-medical-professionals" experiences. It's almost as if NDE's are entirely subjective and reflect the culture and religion of the person experiencing them. Gee, who would've thunk it?
In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty.
- Thomas Jefferson
Reply
RE: So you when to hell now what.
(December 8, 2014 at 1:31 pm)FatAndFaithless Wrote: You..do know what an NDE is, yes? A near-death-experience, not "officially-declared-dead-by-medical-professionals" experiences.

incorrect, it is called an NDE because the person came back from clinical death, as illustrated in the news story I posted. Just being comatose wouldn't count as an NDE because there is still brain activity, and the experience could be rationalized as a dream.

During clinical death, there is no brain activity...
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
Uh..I don't know where you're getting your defintion from, but they're called Near-Death experiences. It's an experience that involves coming close to clinical death, not being clinically dead for a length of time.
In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty.
- Thomas Jefferson
Reply
RE: So you when to hell now what.
(December 8, 2014 at 1:42 pm)FatAndFaithless Wrote: Uh..I don't know where you're getting your defintion from, but they're called Near-Death experiences. It's an experience that involves coming close to clinical death, not being clinically dead for a length of time.

It's called an NDE, because they obviously haven't gone through the full process of being dead...
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
Good boy, not having gone through the process of being dead means not becoming dead..

Are you really discounting any NDE that doesn't have a medical announcement of "being dead"? How on earth does that have anything to do with the phenomena people claim to see in their head? Does a doctor's "dead" diagnosis deposit a dimension of defendable definitude for you?

(yay alliterations)
In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty.
- Thomas Jefferson
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
Hey wow did you spot that afterwards or did you work on it Smile Nice moves. 8 hit combo.

People experience all kind of shit when their body is under extreme conditions. No need to reach for the supernatural. It's actually impossible to demonstrate a supernatural cause anyway, even if we had no natural one.
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RE: So you when to hell now what.
(December 8, 2014 at 1:55 pm)robvalue Wrote: Hey wow did you spot that afterwards or did you work on it Smile Nice moves. 8 hit combo.

Believe it or not it just happened until the last "d" word, which I then chose. I actually only edited it because I stupidly put "done" instead of "gone" in the first line. I swear!
In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty.
- Thomas Jefferson
Reply
RE: So you when to hell now what.
Medical professionals mistakenly declaring people dead must happen a lot, since there's a name for at least one way it happens. From wiki: "Lazarus syndrome or autoresuscitation after failed cardiopulmonary resuscitation is the spontaneous return of circulation after failed attempts at resuscitation. Its occurrence has been noted in medical literature at least 38 times since 1982."
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