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Exploring the Darker NDEs (Read 12370 times)
Yvvak
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Exploring the Darker NDEs
Jul 21st, 2014 at 8:08pm
 
Hey everyone,

I'd like to discuss distressing NDEs, or NDEs that take a darker turn than the blissful majority in the form of voids or hellish enviornments. Research into these darker NDEs has been incredibly limited compared to their nicer counterparts for a variety of reasons, from a lack of reporting to a general disinterest by researchers. What do you all think causes these NDEs to occur? The individual's morality can't really be counted as a causal factor, since several of them have been reported by normal people that haven't done anything to deserve such an occurrence, while there are blissful reports from criminals. It could be the manifestations of the person's fear, but this doesn't make much sense when you consider most NDEs don't involve this notion of conquering certain fears before the bliss. I hope to hear your opinions on this phenomena and possible explanations.
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DocM
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #1 - Jul 22nd, 2014 at 7:48am
 
How many states of mind do people have while incarnate in a living body?  Some are disturbed and angry, some desolate, some content.  How many NDEs are possible then, when the body is suspended?  Many. 
And it is a tough picture to piece together because outwardly someone may appear content or happy, yet their inner state may be in despair or turmoil. 

My own opinion is that we experience what we are in tune with at the time, and what best suits our deepest convictions and beliefs.  This doesn't mean that those who have a negative NDE or afterlife experience are necessarily in an eternal state of angst.  Only that may be there initial experience until they are ready for something else. 

But why should we all have the same uniform afterlife experience when we have a myriad of emotional experiences while in a body in the physical world?

M
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heisenberg69
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #2 - Jul 22nd, 2014 at 8:14am
 
In addition to Doc's comments some people have suggested that a 'negative' NDE experience may be essentially an incomplete one; some 'positive' experiences have started in a dark state but lead on to some kind of resolution or insightful experience after time. Some negative NDE experiences have been attributed to certain medicines/drugs, such as those involved in birthing, and may not be NDEs in the strictest sense. A perplexing issue all the same.
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Yvvak
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #3 - Jul 22nd, 2014 at 8:43pm
 
You both raise good points, and I would like to propose the idea that made the most sense to me. In regards to mindset and fear levels at the time of death, I can certainly see how this could initially cause one to slip into some of the more frightening realms. Heisenburg, I'm glad you brought up the part about the various drugs and their effect on NDEs, because a portion of the void NDEs occurred while the individual was being given nitrous oxide during childbirth. I wouldn't go so far as to explain this phenomena entirely as a result of that, but I feel that certain drugs (anesthesia, nitrous oxide, ketamine)  can cause alterations in initial consciousness after bodily departure, even if said departure is merely temporary. Another problem one faces with these cases is the perspective the individuals have about the events, such as the case of inverted NDEs, where the individual experiences characteristics of a blissful NDE (beings of light, life review, etc) and regard them as terrifying. Overall, there needs to be more research done into these cases.

I've also read several interesting theories where these NDEs occur due to the individual's interaction with archetypal fears within the collective unconcious proposed by Jung.
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heisenberg69
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #4 - Jul 23rd, 2014 at 12:15pm
 
'I've also read several interesting theories where these NDEs occur due to the individual's interaction with archetypal fears within the collective unconcious proposed by Jung'.

A kind of unplanned trip to a fear-based group belief territory in Monroe terms!
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Berserk2
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #5 - Jul 23rd, 2014 at 8:54pm
 
For me, this issue requires an initial identification of assumptions, their validity, and how they can be tested.
For example, consider the assumpton that dark NDEs do not point to hellish realms populated by real discarnate spirits, but rather are a psychic projection based on fears and prior expectations.  Then consider Howard Storm's initially hellish NDE. 

(1) He is an atheist who doesn't believe in God, let alone Hell.
(2) In the hospital, his astral self hears voices, saying, "Come with us."  He thinks this voice comes from a well-intentioned source that is trying to help him in his disorientation.  So his ensuing hellish experience takes him by surprise and is contrary to his beliefs and expectations.  He is not reacting to fear.
(3) His exoerience of having his spirit body torn apart after a struggle has precedent in other hellish NDEs, but Storm does not know about such precedent. 
(4) His experience of Christ coming to the rescue when he finally and reluctantly prays for His help also finds precedent in hellish NDEs. 

Now if (1-(4) do not signify real discarnate spirits trapped in a real hellish plane, then why trust any contacts with discarnate family members in NDEs?

















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Yvvak
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #6 - Jul 23rd, 2014 at 10:00pm
 
You raise a good point, and I agree that these experiences are more than the psychic projections of the individual (however I do feel that these, as well as the fears held within a sort of collective unconscious like I mentioned in an earlier post, help to build the experience). I feel that these hellish realms are real, but I'm unsure as to why this occurs to ordinary people and how long people generally stay stuck. As you mentioned, Storm was lured into one of these realms and able to escape through prayer, which gives us indications as to how people can end up here and, more importantly, a method of how to get out. That's why I feel it is very important to study these cases of dNDEs; they give us a fuller view of the afterlife and allow us to prepare accordingly for any complication that may occur during the transitioning process.
Berserk2 wrote on Jul 23rd, 2014 at 8:54pm:
For me, this issue requires an initial identification of assumptions, their validity, and how they can be tested.
For example, consider the assumpton that dark NDEs do not point to hellish realms populated by real discarnate spirits, but rather are a psychic projection based on fears and prior expectations.  Then consider Howard Storm's initially hellish NDE. 

(1) He is an atheist who doesn't believe in God, let alone Hell.
(2) In the hospital, his astral self hears voices, saying, "Come with us."  He thinks this voice comes from a well-intentioned source that is trying to help him in his disorientation.  So his ensuing hellish experience takes him by surprise and is contrary to his beliefs and expectations.  He is not reacting to fear.
(3) His exoerience of having his spirit body torn apart after a struggle has precedent in other hellish NDEs, but Storm does not know about such precedent. 
(4) His experience of Christ coming to the rescue when he finally and reluctantly prays for His help also finds precedent in hellish NDEs. 

Now if (1-(4) do not signify real discarnate spirits trapped in a real hellish plane, then why trust any contacts with discarnate family members in NDEs?

















 

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Yvvak
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #7 - Jul 23rd, 2014 at 10:16pm
 
That's a great way of putting it!

heisenberg69 wrote on Jul 23rd, 2014 at 12:15pm:
'I've also read several interesting theories where these NDEs occur due to the individual's interaction with archetypal fears within the collective unconcious proposed by Jung'.

A kind of unplanned trip to a fear-based group belief territory in Monroe terms!

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Berserk2
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #8 - Jul 25th, 2014 at 7:23pm
 
1, Are we entitled to reject as mere thought forms from Super-ESP those beings who repulse us with their evil and accept loving NDE family reunions?
2. Are evil people allowed to continue their evil ways after death?
3. Is Swedenborg right that hellish planes governed by the principle like attracts like?  are
4. Are NDE visits to hellish planes merely a warning to make better choices to shape our astral energetic makeup for higher planes? 
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1796
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #9 - Jul 25th, 2014 at 11:40pm
 
Thought provoking questions, Don.
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1796
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #10 - Jul 26th, 2014 at 12:09am
 
The personality fills up by the shortest and most economical route between its most distant existant opposing points. That is, between its most distant and diverse values and ideals in both their positive and negative form (values/ideals for and against things). So that that part or range of the personality that lies between these points exists in potential, even though it may not have been consciously practiced or triggered yet, and even though the individual may deny to themselves and others that such personality characteristics exist within their self. This is how we can know what another person will most likely think even long before they have thought it, and what they will most likely do before they do it, under given circumstances, and even though they think they would do something else, and this is because it exists on the gradient or spectrum between their opposing ideals. The opposing values/ideals form the periphery of the personality spread, with each pair of opposing points having a line of potential running between them through the centre of the spread. These lines of potential also run diagonally, not through the centre but between any two points on the periphery of the personality. And at the places where any of these lines cross and intersect with each other are places of high potency. For each point of high potency, be it the centre or anywhere else, there are environmental triggers or circumstances that would accommodate or draw forth the acting out of that personality quality.

A person may have never gone to a place/region in their personality, not in thought or behaviour, and may deny it exists, but as that region is within the range between their values and ideals then it does exist, like the numbers exist that lie between any two numbers, and like an island is shaped by its surrounding coast and all its inland areas exist because of the shape of its coast.

This is relevant not just to how a person will think and behave in life and to what sort of situations they gravitate to and how they behave there, but also to their general atmosphere of mind, what they sympathise with and discord with, and how and what they fear, what they dread, like and dislike, want and not want, what their reflexes of thought and emotion are, and this is in life and in death, for after they drop the physical body they still have their emotional and mental bodies in which they think and feel, and which gravitate towards particular circumstances, just like in physical life.

crossbow   
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« Last Edit: Jul 26th, 2014 at 4:19am by 1796 »  
 
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Rondele
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #11 - Jul 26th, 2014 at 9:35am
 
The question of why do some people have darker NDEs seems to me to parallel the question as to why do some people have horrific nightmares.  There may be nothing in their makeup or in their actions that account for why they wake up temporarily terrified by a nightmare that, upon examination when awake, they can find nothing that could account for what they dreamed.

Howard Storm is an example of someone whose life, prior to his NDE, probably did account for his horrifying NDE.  In other words, he was "scared straight" and in such case the NDE was probably constructed to motivate him to change his ways.  And it certainly did!

But then we have Swedenborg, who tells we always end up after death in the place which represents our real love, no matter how we may behave while alive.  And moreover, that real love is our core self which ES seems to indicate is as inviolate as our DNA. 

That, by the way, is one of my sticking points with ES.  He offers little hope of our being able to change that which we truly love.  Yes, we can alter our behavior and we can live a life devoted to serving others, all the while fighting or suppressing urges that would lead us in a whole other direction.

Stripped down to the core essence of who we really are might explain why some people experience unsettling NDEs.

Maybe Storm is still the person he was before the NDE, the only difference being that he suppresses those past urges and has become a man of the cloth out of fear rather than love?

Of course we will never know.  As for me, I prefer to think that grace trumps karma (i.e. bad behavior) regardless of what ES has written.  Otherwise we are doomed for the sin of being born with innate "loves" over which we have no control to change. 

I guess the question is, can grace not only trump bad behavior, but can it also change those innate characteristics over which we seemingly have no or little control?  And if it can, doesn't that also mean it can change the core essence of our being?

Can it change evil into good?  At least in Scott Peck's view, genuinely evil people really do exist.

R

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recoverer
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #12 - Jul 26th, 2014 at 2:59pm
 
Rondelle said: "Howard Storm is an example of someone whose life, prior to his NDE, probably did account for his horrifying NDE.  In other words, he was "scared straight" and in such case the NDE was probably constructed to motivate him to change his ways.  And it certainly did!"

Recoverer responds: "Perhaps related to what Roger says above, P.M.H. Atwater has researched more than 3,000 NDEs including many negative NDEs and said that everybody experiences what they need to experience, including people who have negative NDEs. Different strokes for different folks? In many cases "constructed" could be a key word.

Albert
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1796
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #13 - Jul 26th, 2014 at 10:07pm
 
rondele wrote on Jul 26th, 2014 at 9:35am:
(1) The question of why do some people have darker NDEs seems to me to parallel the question as to why do some people have horrific nightmares.  There may be nothing in their makeup or in their actions that account for why they wake up temporarily terrified by a nightmare that, upon examination when awake, they can find nothing that could account for what they dreamed.

......

(2) I guess the question is, can grace not only trump bad behavior, but can it also change those innate characteristics over which we seemingly have no or little control?  And if it can, doesn't that also mean it can change the core essence of our being?

R

1. Yes, I am not suggesting the qualities of NDEs are dictated by the personality, only that the personality in its active and dormant parts is wider than is generally realised and that it is relevant to most situations in which we find ourselves.  

2. To that question I say yes, certainly. If we present our self as we are, honestly and transparently before God, and hand over our struggles/sins to Him, which is repentance, then the light of grace which is the light of God can shine unobstructed through our self and change for the better results.  

Try it and see for your self.    

By the way, all proper prayer begins this way, that is, with repentance.
Otherwise it is like being inside your house and trying to converse with God who is outside your house and not letting him in. He must be let in and shown all the rooms and hidden things. When he is inside and has been shown all, then prayer, which is communion with God, can take place and his light can do its work and clean the house.   
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Re: Exploring the Darker NDEs
Reply #14 - Jul 27th, 2014 at 9:14pm
 
We have an interpreter here, there and everywhere that we experience ourselves as individuals. We are like children with imaginations that run away with us -- take a walk on the wild side/there's no place like home.

Apparently, later, we look back on all of "this" as great fun. But, it isn't real -- it's a story we create about ourselves.

If each one of us is part of the whole with greater understanding as we move along in our "dream" of uniqueness and physicality toward our actual selves, which are spiritual, immortal beings, it would be expected that we would partake of "pleasant" and "unpleasant" experiences along the way.

Eventually, I assume all spirits recognize themselves in the "other" and thereby learn/know what is and is not real.
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