Scientific explanations for near-death experiences are sometimes a lot less believable than the experiences themselves.
・DISCOVERING WHO AND WHAT WE ARE・
Scientific explanations for near-death experiences are sometimes a lot less believable than the experiences themselves.
One of the arguments often cited against the idea of reincarnation is that “the living outnumber the dead.” In other words, there are more people alive today than have existed throughout the whole of human history combined.
Ben Breedlove, 18, died on Christmas Day from a heart attack. Since his death, a video he posted on YouTube has captured the world’s attention.
Although she herself is very reluctant to admit it, everything points to an ordinary Canadian woman having been this famous novelist in a previous life.
Another musical prodigy suggests a possible reincarnation of a famous composer with striking facial similarity.
Neale Donald Walsch, author of the Conversations with God books, tells the story of his near death like experience.
The Lennon-Brontë Connection is the follow-up to All You Need is Love. That was the book in which an ordinary Canadian health-care worker, Jewelle St James, shared her extraordinary search for the truth behind her inexplicable grief after the death of John Lennon … and her discovery of a past life in seventeenth-century England.
Here are two conferences on a similar theme in 2012: the Second Annual Afterlife Awareness Conference and the International Conference on After Death Communications.
This is one of those cases where the facial resemblance just hit me. I have no idea if this is an actual reincarnation, but this and other similarities suggest at least the possibility.