close
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGpxfoF3SYg

    This man died...and returned..Heaven and Hell are real It is for some to mock or belittle a person's near death experience or find explanations that certify that it's a phenomenon of brain chemistry. In doing so, a saying comes to mind, 'what you say about others says more about... more

    Reviewed by aliasinkhorn Jun 17 2008, 07:01pm ( 13 reviews ) youtube.com

  • Showing 12 of 13
  • Reviews of the site
  • Join StumbleUpon or login to add a review! default avatar
  • Reviewed by Schitso on Oct 22 2008, 7:26am

    I lol'd
  • Reviewed by jesuis on Jul 18 2008, 6:25pm

    @gillsburg: All you can perhaps tell is that he truly believes its real. @kpinto01: He needs no proof. At least he has some reason to believe in God. @aliasinkhorn: Mocking and belittling him is obviously not fair (although tempting), but there is nothing wrong with being sceptical of his story and postulating other explanations. 'What you say about others says more about you than it says about them.' - Yes (and no), and in this case it says that you have the presence of mind to question everything about this story in the face of extraordinary claims. No one's judging anyone's experience; at least not like God supposedly judges everything anybody does. Once again, what is wrong with questioning and being sceptical in the face of no evidence and the availability of natural explanation? You are making an empirical claim saying that all near death experiences always change lives for the better; I would argue against that. He sees skydiving as some kind of sin now or 'drug', and well, we might differ in opinion about what a 'life changing for the good' is, but I don't believe it's adopting Christian beliefs and believing that everything pleasurable is a nasty sin / offensive to God; believing in heaven and fearing hell. Although I concede that religion is the great coping mechanism. Like Oraiste says: the described experience is similar to the experience obtained from psychoactive drugs in some people; and benefits can, more often than not , be obtained from those experiences. @jito: Would it help if I worded it like this: "...and the brain did endure the trauma, giving forth great doses of dopamine which caused a flourish of visions in the subconscious world. A noble attempt to keep safe the brain from further damage. Hell awaits whomever doubts what is written here." Please don't think that all science is is unsubstantiated claims; and don't get too hung up on the word theory, it's a word scientists use for everything; like the theory of a spherical earth (it could be an illusion - nothing it 100% certain) P.S This guy would probably be a good subject for Dr. Ramachandran who is investigating religious experience in the brain.
  • Rated by aliasinkhorn on Jun 17 2008, 7:01pm

    This man died...and returned..Heaven and Hell are real It is for some to mock or belittle a person's near death experience or find explanations that certify that it's a phenomenon of brain chemistry. In doing so, a saying comes to mind, 'what you say about others says more about you than it says about them.' These cannot judge my experience no more than I can their experience. Only the results of an experience can be perceived and evaluated. In the case of near death experiences, it is clear lives change for the good forever.
  • Rated by keyj63 on Jan 26 2008, 7:01pm

    this is the testimony of a man who died and experienced a glimpse of what death brings.
  • Rated by philmgrain on Jan 26 2008, 8:50am

    So, um... about that brain damage...
  • Rated by jito on Jan 25 2008, 12:31pm

    I would listen to a man with a testimony rather than a man with a theory.