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Chemical Afterlife

A beckoning light; a feeling of transcendence: these are two characteristics of a near-death experience that new research suggests may relate to amounts of certain chemicals in the blood.
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A beckoning light; a feeling of transcendence: these are two characteristics of a near-death experience that new research suggests may relate to amounts of certain chemicals in the blood. “The phenomenon known as ‘near-death experience’ is the stuff of hospital dramas, a dramatic conceit for movies about do-overs and for a (I guess lucky) few of us, a mysterious peephole to ‘the other side.’ The phenomenon is very real: By various estimates, 11% to 23% of those who had experienced cardiac arrest and lived to tell about it report some unique cognitive experience — an overwhelming feeling of transcendence, doors opening, beckoning light, a thumbnail life-review — that broadly fits the description. (The Internet yields a bounty of personal accounts as well, so it must be real!) But their observations are not very well explained — not, at least, by standard earthly measures.”

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