Whats the deal with the bright light

by kelsey007 7 Replies latest jw friends

  • kelsey007
    kelsey007

    What's the Deal With the Bright Light You See Before Dying?
    By Brendan I. Koerner
    Posted Tuesday, October 1, 2002, at 2:42 PM PT

    Train operatorKelvin DeBourgh Jr. was killed last week when the new AirTrain, which connects Manhattan to Kennedy International Airport, crashed. Before succumbing to his injuries, he told rescue workers: "I can't see you anymoreall I see is a bright light." Why do the mortally wounded often report seeing a bright light before dying?

    Assuming it's not the Great Beyond, medical science has advanced several theories as to the bright light's physiological roots. Many researchers ascribe the glow to the effects of anoxia, or oxygen deprivation, which can affect the optic nerves. Others suspect that trauma to the right temporal lobe, the area of the brain responsible for perception, can cause the senses to malfunction. Michael A. Persinger, a neuroscientist at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, has replicated the bright-light phenomenon in test subjects by stimulating their right temporal lobes with mild electromagnetic fields.

    A third theory holds that the brain releases massive amounts of endorphins, or natural painkillers, when the body is gravely injured. Those endorphins may "override" the optic nerves, causing the victim to see a peaceful glow rather than their own mangled body or teams of desperate paramedics scurrying about. This endorphin-induced serenity can be crucial to warding off lethal shock, thus giving the person better odds of survival.

    It has also been suggested that some bright-light glimpsers neither gaze at eternity nor experience unusual neurological activity. Instead, they may simply mistake the high-powered operating room lights as something a tad more mystical.

    Bonus Explainer: In Western societies, the bright light is often accompanied by visions of deceased relatives, idyllic gardens, and a convivial bearded man in flowing white robesall standard images of the Christian heaven. Dying Hindus in India, by contrast, typically picture the afterlife as a Kafkaesque bureaucratic office. Fading Micronesians have been known to describe a bustling, skyscraper-filled metropolis.

  • ISP
    ISP

    Don't know........but I aint in any hurry to see it.

    ISP

  • ballistic
    ballistic

    I keep seeing a computer game when I close my eyes to go to sleep. so much I hate it. Is there an answer to that?

  • ISP
    ISP

    Ballistic.....would going to bed with shades help?

    ISP

  • target
    target

    when my sister-in-law was dying of cancer, she was at home, no operating room bright lights or anything. Just before she died, she sat upright in bed and looking around the room and said "Its beautiful!" She was obviously seeing something the rest of us were not.

    Of course we will never know for sure until we see it, or not, ourselves. I have no burning desire to find out just yet.

    Target

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    A doctor believes that the right temporal lobe is responsable for perceptions attributed to the spiritual. He wrote a book about it: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0060175044/qid=1033689859/sr=1-2/ref=sr_1_2/103-5566907-7911012?v=glance

    SS

  • Granny Linda
    Granny Linda

    Guess it's better to see some sort of bright light then experience the horrific suffering that many might at time of death.

    I try and remain open to different theories, but have accepted that until my moment of ultimate truth arrives, it's all just that...theory.

    good too see you posting here.

    Granny

  • freedom96
    freedom96

    Very interesting. What happens after we die will be very interesting. Not in a hurry to find out personally, but I hope that it is everything we hope it will be.

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