
FTL.Wanderer
Enlightened
- May 31, 2018
- 1,782
I'm sure a lot of people in this community have read the work of Dr. Sam Parnia that argues not only may consciousness survive beyond clinical death, but also that during clinical death, some patients' consciousness experiences their environment in baffling ways medical staff nevertheless verified as true (at least what these clinically dead patients claimed to have seen/heard). Being a US citizen, I was fond of shotguns as my method because their lethality is very high and, I thought, very quick. Reading the work of Parnia and other medical doctors who've recorded other dead (but later resuscitated) patients' inexplicable awareness, I'm now frightened that if consciousness could survive temporarily in pieces of the remaining brain, the perception of time could be traumatizingly distorted so that death may seem like another extended torment.
I'm now researching more peaceful ways out of life. Like SN and the Exit Bag. But there's so little to go on about the dying process cognitively, understandably, that I feel I'm almost at the same place I was when I was a late teen. But now an even scarier place because there's the possibility that experiencing death could be ... unpleasant even after the body appears dead.
Anyone else come upon any other empirical studies on consciousness and post-clinical-death? Have these kinds of questions changed anyone else's plans?
I'm now researching more peaceful ways out of life. Like SN and the Exit Bag. But there's so little to go on about the dying process cognitively, understandably, that I feel I'm almost at the same place I was when I was a late teen. But now an even scarier place because there's the possibility that experiencing death could be ... unpleasant even after the body appears dead.
Anyone else come upon any other empirical studies on consciousness and post-clinical-death? Have these kinds of questions changed anyone else's plans?