I am an atheist.
I’ve always assumed an afterlife was as realistic as Santa Claus.
I was blown away by what I discovered.
In some cases, they’ve turned out to be shockingly accurate.
For example, there was one case of a child who had specific memories of his troop during WW2.
There was another who identified and met his previous life’s childrenwho are now older adults.
They did not remember being knights or princesses, the way a child making up a fantasy would.
The memories were mundanein the best way.
Psychic medium tests at The Windbridge Institute.
Before losing my dad, I had never considered mediums anything more than woo-woo nonsense.
At best they were kindhearted people deluded into believing they could communicate with the dead.
At worst they were predators preying on the desperate and grieving.
In other words, they couldn’t cheat.
Even so,some of the mediums were shockingly accurate1getting up to 90% of relayed information correct.
I had to see for myself, so I went on to get multiplepsychic medium readingsof my own.
Of course, a few were what I expected: very general, nothing evidential.
But a few blew me away.
They knew things they could not have knownsuch as the name of my dad, of both my grandmothers.
Near-death experience research at the University of Virginia and New York University.
They both found that some of these NDEs were verifiable in that people come back with accurate information.
Some are given a choice to come back or not.
Most people who have NDEs also seem to return profoundly changed.
They no longer fear death.
This lasts for years after their NDE,according to follow-up research2.
The bottom line.
I am someone who operates off of solid research and evidence, not faith or belief.
And I’m so glad I’ve found it.