Life review
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A life review is a phenomenon widely reported as occurring during near-death experiences, in which a person rapidly sees much or the totality of their life history in chronological sequence and in extreme detail. It is often referred to by people having experienced this phenomenon as having their life "flash before their eyes".
The life review is discussed in some detail by near-death experience scholars such as Drs. Raymond Moody, Kenneth Ring, and Barbara Rommer. A reformatory purpose seems commonly implicit in accounts, though not necessarily for earthly purpose, since return from a near-death experience may reportedly entail individual choice. Interestingly, while experiencers, who appear to number into many thousands according to NDE studies, sometimes report reviews took place in the company of otherworldly beings who shared the observation, they also say they felt unjudged during the process, leaving themselves their own strongest critics. Although rare, there are also a few accounts of life reviews or similar experiences without a near-death experience such as the simpler out-of-body experience or under circumstances of intense threat or duress. While some scientists discount near-death experiences themselves or stigmatize their study, the large body of accounts, when set under scrutiny, tends to defy dismissal as hallucination or cerebral effect, by virtue of its unusual detail, volume, consistency, verisimilitude, narrators' credibility, and its insistent recounting of vividness and panoramicity. The near-death experience and its derivative phenomena as a result tend to lie more in the realm of the paranormal and parapsychology, though that does not argue against their scientific study or reality per se.[original research?]
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[edit] Duration
The perception of time appears to be subjective and has been described as from lasting less than a few seconds to instantaneous, though at least one experiencer described it as feeling like half a minute. Accounts differ as to what phase of a near-death experience a review might take place in.
[edit] Scope and clarity
Subjects frequently describe their experience as panoramic, 3-D or holographic. During a life review, the subject's perception is reported to include not only their own perspective in increased vividness, as if they were reliving a given episode itself again, but that of all other parties they interact with at each point being reviewed. Betty Eadie's widely read account, in which she described the life as her best conception of hell, also described the life review as extending to ripples of one's life and acts out into further degrees of separation. Some believe this extension to have limitations.
The term 3D is employed to approximate the inclusion of different physical perspectives onto a scene; the intensity of a life review was described by one individual as enabling him to count every nearby mosquito; but equally common is the description of feeling the emotional experience of the other parties, including in one case virtually everyone in a room. While some accounts appear to describe scenes as selected, others more commonly narrate the experience as including things they had, probably naturally, long ago entirely forgotten, with "nothing left out." Experiencers commonly describe the intense vividness and detail as making them feel more conscious and alive than when normally conscious.
[edit] Effect
The effect of a life review is often a strongly transformative experience. Experiencers describe them as extremely unpleasant from the perspective of the unhappiness they had inflicted on others, including feelings they had never dreamed of as resulting, and equally pleasant from the perspective of the good feeling they had brought to others' lives, extending to the littlest forgotten details.
Experiencers often report a sharp drop in materialistic outlook (both acquisitive and philosophical), an intensified compassion for others and sense of interconnectedness, newfound altruistic activities, personality changes (though occasionally entailing divorce), a new interest in self-education and spirituality, and so on. Dannion Brinkley as one instance described himself as putting off previously deep-rooted sociopathic traits ingrained from a difficult childhood through his work as a sniper in the Vietnam War. A frequent comment by experiencers is that they later strongly avoided unethical or inconsiderate actions because they wanted to avoid painfully reliving the receiving end of the action which they knew would await them.
The transformative effect is in fact so statistically uniform in comparison with other areas of demographic study that some near-death experience investigators point to it as much as to experiencer accounts' detail as evidence for the empirical reality of the phenomenon itself. Kenneth Ring's book Lessons from the Light includes numerous accounts of a near-death experience permitting people hitherto blind, including cases from birth, as enabled to see (and interpret) vision during the experience.
[edit] Life review in popular culture
- The life review is suspected to be the source of the expression "I saw my life flashing before my very eyes", and some[who?] have speculated it might be connected to details like records of life in Revelation 20:12 in the Christian Bible.
- In Blackadder: Back and Forth, the Life Review is used as a plot device. When Baldrick forgets the correct placement for a series of unlabelled dials, Edmund Blackadder half-drowns him, hoping that, when his life flashes before his eyes, he'll be able to remember the correct positions.
- In Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, the character Death points out that a person's life does indeed flash before their eyes before they die, and that the process is called "living".
- In Richard Matheson's novel What Dreams May Come, a newly dead character sees all the events of his life unfold in reverse, then later experiences the same thing much more slowly, in a self-evaluation process that the novel equates with purgatory.
- In the short story 'Bullet In The Brain' by Tobias Wolff, the character Anders has a minor life review, seeing a particular memory from his childhood after being shot. Wolff also draws attention to that which he did not see in his review.
- In the movie American Beauty, at the end, we can see an example of a life review, more based on emotions and sensation than in a "full review" of the main character's life.
[edit] Further reading
- Lessons from the Light (Kenneth Ring, Ph.D; Evelyn Elsaesser Valarino): ISBN 0-9661327-8-5
- The Complete Idiot's Guide to Near-Death Experiences (P.M.H. Atwater, L.H.D.; David Morgan): ISBN 0-02-863234-6