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The Wisdom of Near Death Experiences

How Understanding NDE's Can Help Us to Live More Fully

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The Wisdom of Near Death Experiences

By: Dr Penny Sartori
Narrated by: Julie Maisey
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Dr. Penny Sartori is a registered nurse who began researching Near Death Experiences (NDEs) in 1995 after one of her long-term intensive care patients begged her to let him die in peace. The event shook her deeply and eventually led her to enroll in a PhD program to research NDEs. The findings, along with the profound spiritual lessons that she has gleaned from her work, are published here.

During her academic work, Dr. Sartori studied three samples of ICU patients during a five year period. The first consisted of 243 patients from the first year of data collection who survived their ICU experience. Of those, two experienced an NDE, and two an out-of-body experience (OBE). The second cohort consisted of survivors of cardiac arrest during the five year period. Of those, 39 patients (or 18%) experienced an NDE. The third cohort consisted of all the patients who experienced an NDE during the five year period.

Their stories are captured in her new book. One patient in particular, patient number 10, stands out for Dr. Sartori.

When asked about the biggest takeaway from her research, Dr. Sartori says, "In medicine, we're trained to believe that the brain gives rise to consciousness. My research into NDEs has made me question this prevailing paradigm, which admittedly is very widespread. The most important lesson for me has been a deeper appreciation for death and a whole lot less fear and anxiety about it."

In addition to detailing dozens of case studies, the book also discusses childhood NDEs, differences in NDEs among different cultures, and the after-effects of NDEs - one of which is the inability, in some patients, to wear a wrist-watch.

Penny Sartori PhD, RGN is an expert in NDEs and undertook the UK's first long-term prospective study. She is the author of The Near-Death Experiences of Hospitalized Intensive Care Patients: A Five Year Clinical Study and lectures both nationally and internationally.

©2014 Penny Sartori (P)2015 Audible, Ltd
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Critic reviews

"Nurse Penny Sartori was driven by an experience with a traumatized dying patient to study near-death experiences, not to pursue what might happen in an afterlife but rather to improve what happens in this life. Her goal was to learn all she could about the dying process in order to help her patients find meaning in their illness and restore a sense of well-being in their lives. The Wisdom of Near-Death Experiences, the fruit of her labors, is an invaluable resource for health care workers, for dying patients and their families, and for all of us who will face death eventually.” (Bruce Greyson, M.D., Carlson Professor of Psychiatry & Neurobehavioral Sciences University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA)
"With more than twenty years experience of nursing dying people in an intensive therapy unit , plus a Ph.D. in Near-death Experiences, Dr. Sartori is very well qualified to discuss issues of death and dying. She believes that NDEs provide us with a greater understanding of the dying process and that care of terminally ill patients could be enhanced if NDEs would more widely studied. A greater acceptance of the inevitability of death would help the situation of terminally ill people. At present they are increasingly exposed to invasive and burdensome treatments even when prospects for recovery are recognised as minimal. This is an immensely valuable contribution to current debates about patient care." (Paul Badham PhD., Professor Emeritus of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Wales, Trinity, St. David)
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I am thankful for the interesting research conducted in this book on NDE's. It makes me curious and hopeful about the end of life experience. I hope there will be loving peace but as she says we cannot say what really happens on the other side of the veil until we get there and do not return. I wonder if it is worth bringing people back to awareness on their death bed to help them find closure with loved ones if they do not have any loved ones on earth. Due to autistic traits I struggle to connect and form relationships with people. I am not sure if I would like to gain awareness just like the woman near the end of this book who wanted to leave this world and go to her husband. The last chapter of this book is beautiful. There is also a lot of wonderful wisdom and good advice on living peacefully in the present and not worrying too much about the past or the future. I call these attachments with material things that form through our senses. It reminds me how delicate and sensitive we are as God's creation.

Interesting insight and wonderful wisdom

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science needs to stop dismissing NDEs. the NDE is real and should be treated as such.

very life affirming, as much about life as death.

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Easy to listen to and very informative. I'll be listening to most of it again soon.

Hugely intriguing study

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Narration for this was always going to be tricky to get right and I don’t think the subject matter suited this jaunty delivery.
Interesting research, lots of personal stories with implications for recommendations for improvements to medical practices.

Managed to listen to the end

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I read Penny's book after it being recommended in John Burke's Imagine The God of Heaven. it was interesting to hear things from a medical practitioner's perspective who was taking a clinical approach while still not being dismissive of NDEs. Again, as John Burke says, people will still attempt to interpret what they have seen amd experienced according to their worldview, but Dr Santori treats every individual story with equal respect and, although she has her own view, does not dismiss any particular perspective as being less valid than another, leaving it for us, as the reader's to make up our own minds.

A Clinical Reflection

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