The unusual things people talk about 72 hours before they die

Shortly before they die, people feel that they are going somewhere from this world, feeling that they will travel. Some even see their relatives who died in the past, as if they were coming to get them. So states the latest research conducted on the basis of conversations with people who [...]
Some even see their relatives who died in the past, as if they were coming to get them. So states the recent research carried out, given conversations with people who have continued contact with those who are close to death.
I lost my sister and my father for nine weeks so I decided to devote myself to the investigation of death. I realized people thought they'd die. In the 72 hours leading up to death, there are several things going on -- 18x1>, relates Patricia Pearson, journalist and author of the book “Opening Heavens Door: Investing Storys of Life, Death and What Comes After” (Opening Paradise gates: Research into life, death, and the following accounts.
Research is based on conversations with people whose profession is constant contact with patients who suffer from incurable diseases. He talked to people who have experienced clinical death and returned to this world.
Patricia has discovered how 72 hours before her death, people start talking about unusual things, travel, how they can't find shoes, because they want to go home, even though they're at home...
They actually have visions of travel, they feel they're going somewhere. My “My sister was sick of breast cancer and until she was lying before her death she repeatedly repeated: “I don't know how I'm going to be “, and she mentioned some unfortunate “stewardess”, recalls Patricia.
Nurse Maggie Callan of the U.S. Elevation Centre has shown how a patient died of cancer in the pancreas and before his death asked “does my wife know everything about passport and ticket?
This nurse says that it was close to hundreds of patients who have been dying and that their visions regarding travel cannot be regarded as chance. People before death feel like they're going somewhere.
Many people about an hour before their death have seen loved ones who had recently died, and what they saw was not dependent on whether they had taken herbs or not, Dr. Charles Ossis and Dr. Erlandura Haraldson of Iceland University.
Among those people was 84-year-old patient Audrey Scott, who died of cancer. She told her adopted son Frankie who had actually died a few years earlier. She had told him to enter the room and sit quietly on the couch next to her.











