Wit's dissolving mind will no doubt invent a library, or a scenteur's organ--the vast collection of reference scents used in the perfumer's craft, arranged upward in tiers like an orchestra.
"An estimated 98 per cent of patients accurately predict when they will die - often within a day or two, but sometimes even to the exact hour. In the final 72 hours, the dying person often experiences a burst of energy and mental clarity that they used to declare their love, say goodbyes and right past wrongs.
Patients report having dreams that revolve around travel - a sleigh filled with relatives, filling a car up with gas, a train leaving a station or a bus stopping and starting Many people report seeing a warm and welcoming light. Visions of deceased loved ones are common. The dying reach for them, talk to them.
'When will we be leaving?' one man asked. 'Monday,' was the accurate response.
'To keep these stories to ourselves would be unfair,' said Rose De Angelis, the centre's nursing director. 'We experience these things - if not daily - certainly weekly'."
Link: What happens when we die?.
Via: Professor Hex.
Reminds me of a beautiful movie, Antonia's Line, where the first scene shows Antonia waking on the day she knows she will die. (Scandinavian film I think?)
This is a great post, I'm going to blog on it myself, thanks.
Posted by: Alison Tuck | Sunday, February 11, 2007 at 08:43 PM