Mind
This is what a near-death experience really feels like according to science

No one knows for sure what happens after death, but researchers have been working to solve the question of what humans experience when they’re dying.
Charlotte Martial, PhD, neuropsychologist at the University of Liège and University Hospital of Liège, Belgium, and her team analyzed the written accounts of near-death experiences from 154 people, publishing the results in Frontiers of Neuroscience. It’s the first rigorous study of this phenomena, Dr Martial told ScienceDaily.
As it turns out, there are four major events common to these close calls.
A lot of us fear death and expect the worst when it comes to dying, so it’s nice to know that a peaceful feeling is the most common near-death phenomena of all.
Still, 69 per cent of the study participants reported this visual. Why exactly this happens is still not fully known.
One theory proposes oxygen deprivation is the cause; others suggest that the bright light is the result of some kind of brain activity that is triggered while dying.
But that's still a theory that would probably take a miracle to confirm.
Many skeptics and non-believers may still knock the idea that these spirits exist, but Dr. Martial found that 64 percent of the people in their study encountered such apparitions while almost dying.
Some report that seeing a people from their past; others say they encounter spirits of some sort.
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There have been many attempts to try to uncover the reason for out-of-body experiences, ranging from theories related to inner ear problems and even tricks of the mind.
Either way, Dr Martial and her team found that 35 per cent of people reported leaving their own body; 36 per cent said that returning to their body was the very last thing that happened in their near-death timeline.
Dr Martial told ScienceDaily that, “This suggests that near-death experiences seem to be regularly triggered by a sense of detachment from the physical body and end when returning to one’s body.”
However, only 22 per cent of the participants – 34 people – shared the same timeline.
The order of phenomena began with the out-of-body experience, being in a tunnel, seeing a bright light, and then feeling at peace.
Who knows what the truth is?
Written by Taylor Markarian. This article first appeared in Reader’s Digest. For more of what you love from the world’s best-loved magazine, here’s our best subscription offer.