Almost Facing Death

@zubirik (111)
Philippines
August 5, 2010 6:47am CST
Every person has a different story if the topic is about death. Merely all people are afraid to die. In deed, death is one of the fearful event that happens to an individual. But have you ever tried almost facing death. I have encountered it for several times already. This happens when I'm sleeping. They term this as "Pancreatitis". Sleeping while you are full.Now I learned my lesson. I was almost dead. I thank my mom for waking me up. I thought it was a very bad dream. The result is, I was so fainted and almost dehydrated. For me, it's like God is giving me another chance to live. Anyway, do have an experience similar to what I had? If yes, please tell us. If no, do you have any relevant near death experience?
1 person likes this
3 responses
@kaylachan (58907)
• Daytona Beach, Florida
6 Aug 10
I'm not sure I can answer that, but I can tell you my story anyway. This is based on what others have told me considering I was way too young to remember it. Now, this may not be the same thing, but I'm going to respond anyway. When I was three months old, I was abused by my birth mother's boyfriend. He beat my skull in by hitting it against the wall and the floor. Either way he kept banging it until I stopped crying. The reason I was even crying in the first place was because I had colic. A very common new born disorder. Not a big deal to some, but apparently a very big deal to the creep who did this to me. I struggled in the hospital for I don't know how long having suffered seven skull fractures and a large hematoma (blood clot ) in my brain. I should have been killed almost instantly, but I lucked out. Doctors removed the clot, taking 30 percent of my brain with it. I obviously survived because I sit before you today, but I almost didn't. However, I didn't get off scott free eaither. While I survived the ordeal I've got perment side-effects. Blindness, Cerbal Palsy and unexplained headaches just to name a few. I've recovered now having limited use of my right side, light and color vision and all of my hearing back. When I first woke up, I was blind deaf and paralized from the waist down. Or, so the doctors assumed. Being as young as I was, the doctors couldn't be certain if I'd be able to walk. I was slowed down and delayed when I learned to walk, had speach problems when learning to talk and had no use of my right hand for seven years as well as spending ten years on anti-convoulances while my brain tried to heal from the Trama. Now at age twenty-seven, I limp on good days, and on bad days I'm pretty much confind to the apartment or my wheelchair. As I got older my legs couldn't keep up the strain I was putting on them my left side supporting my weight (well a majority of it). I've lucked out, and things could have gotten worse, but the fact I'm able to talk and type is good enough for me.
• Philippines
6 Aug 10
Yes, almost. I've experienced it when i was operated and undergone appendectomy. I haven't noticed it till it blow'ed out and allowing it to passed by for 3 days before I was operated.
• India
5 Aug 10
I had never faced anything bad in my life so when i had a accident recently while driving with my partner, i just could not react, we both we stunned and onlookers moved our vehicle and us to one side of the road. we were still sitting on the pavement not knowing what to do for a full 30 minutes. All we could do is thank god for giving us another chance and signing up for an life insurance policy the next day. We realised that we were financially responsible for a lot of people and we decided to do something about.