Reader\'s Digest Australia & New Zealand - June 2018

(Steven Felgate) #1
June• 2018 | 59

thisinourfamily...”Thentheyof-
fered extraordinary stories – death-
bed visions, sensed presences,
near-death experiences, sudden in-
timationsofalovedoneindanger.
Afriendoncetoldmethat,asaboy,
hehadcomedowntobreakfastand
seenhisfather,asalways,atthe
kitchentable.henhismotherbroke
the news that his father had died in
thenight.Hebrieflywonderedif
she’dgoneinsane.“He’ssittingright
there,” he told her. It was the most
baff ling and unsettling moment of
his life.
Ihadnoideatherewasthis
kept-hiddenworldallaroundme.I
wanted to understand what we knew
aboutthesemysteriousmodesof
awareness.Forfouryears,asajour-
nalist, I pursued the questions.

A2014STUDYby The Palliative
CareInstituteandHospiceBuffalo
inNewYorkstatefoundthat60per
cent of their dying patients, over

an 18-month period, had comfort-
ingvisionsanddreamsoflivingor
deceased family members in the
lead-uptotheirowndeaths.
here is pain in loss, and then there
isfurtherpaininthesilenceborneby
fearofbeingdismissed.Tellsomeone
aboutitandtheexplanationscome.
Hallucination. Wishful thinking.
Coincidence.
IwenttoaChristmaspartywith
oldfriends,andcaughtupwithaman
whoworksforabank.Itoldhimsome
ofwhathadtranspiredwithKathar-
ine. He said gently: “I don’t mean to
be unkind, but it is very likely that
she was imagining these things.”
Why did he feel he could speak with
authority about what the dying see?
Spirituality used to be considered
an ordinary part of the human ex-
perience,butnowitqualifiesasan
extraordinary state requiring ex-
traordinary evidence. Why should
this be? It has to do with the rise of
PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK scientism, a prejudice that believes

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