
Product Title:
Visions, Trips, & Crowded Rooms: Who & What You See Before You Die
Description:
David Kessler, a renowned expert on death & grief, takes on three unique shared experiences, our ability into explain & understand the secret of our last days of challenge. The first is “Visions.” How into lose sight of this dying world, appear some people are looking into come into the world. The second shared experience is always ready for a “journey.” These trips can seem into be into us all into leave, but for the dying, they may on arrival. Finally, the third phenomenon, “crowded spaces.” The dying often talk about seeing a roomful of people, as they constantly repeat, the word crowded. In truth, we never die alone. Just as loving hands greeted us when we were born, loving arms into embrace us when we die. In the carpet of life & death, we can begin into make connections into the past that we missed into see in life. While the death look like a loss for the living are, the last hours of a dying man can never be filled with emptiness, but by abundance. In this fascinating book brings us David breathtaking stories from the bedside of the dying that will educate educate, & comfort us all. P>

Before the mother of a friend of mine died, she told her daughter she was making a trip. With this knowledge, I was drawn to David Kessler book. He himself is very interesting, but the stories of the experiences of health care workers of all types was more than interesting.
It is a very fast read. Each experience is short, descriptive and to the point. Most people were happy about their experiences with writing, you die because they could maintain the anonymity. However, their lives and beliefs were challenged and often changed because of these experiences. Is
The book definitely worth reading and give extra thought. In many ways it is very comforting.
Rating: 5.4
Iloved this book. I have read a lot on this subject. This gives hope and comfort for those who are, with leave May Care by friends or relatives, the preparation for this mortal sphere. I have always felt that to live, to learn to learn about death and dying better.
Rating: 5.5
Finally someone has captured what so many of us believe, have to our loved ones pass away a witness to be true and even more from us. And regardless of whether you are not in the idea that there is a universal, common and beautiful experience, as we believe share, it is an undeniable Kessler take work. . . enightenment and hope. This is one reason why I love this book. (My husband, the biggest skeptic of all, was blown away by this work. And it has opened up a wonderful dialogue between us – another reason why I love this book!) Kessler is authentic, compelling and beautifully written stories allow us a look at what is an inevitable time in our lives, the end of it. And if you do not already believe, you can convince very well. WOW!
Rating: 5.5
I was disappointed in this book, although it is comforting, since I have recently bereaved. I had hoped that the accounts would provide more accurate information about what the dying person said they heard or seen. Instead, each account as it was written by the same person sounded, (the author). Each account proceeds in exactly the same way: the narrator is given the mandate, will tell the setting, then the incident is related. This does not mean that the author invented the accounts, but that is the feeling that goes through the reader. The book would have sounded more authentic is if the author would have the authors write their own accounts, with minimal editing. The author says that the experience of many dying people are remarkably similar, this book emphasizes his statement.
Rating: 5.3