Raymond Moody Quotes

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In the sciences...if anyone advances anything new...people resist with all their might; they speak of the new view with contempt, as if it were not worth the trouble of even so much as an investigation or a regard; and thus a new truth may wait a long time before it can win its way." Goethe
Raymond A. Moody Jr.
There are always two things that fill me with wonder—the starry heavens above me and the conscious self within me.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Paranormal: My Life in Pursuit of the Afterlife)
There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle. —Albert Einstein
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Proof of Life after Life: 7 Reasons to Believe There Is an Afterlife)
All of these patients have experienced a floating out of their physical bodies, associated with a great sense of peace and wholeness. Most were aware of another person who helped them in their transition to another plane of existence.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Life After Life)
What do I think happens when we die? I think we enter into another state of existence or another state of consciousness that is so extraordinarily different from the reality we have here in the physical world that the language we have is not yet adequate to describe this other state of existence or consciousness. Based on what I have heard from thousands of people, we enter into a realm of joy, light, peace, and love in which we discover that the process of knowledge does not stop when we die. Instead, the process of learning and development goes on for eternity.
Raymond A. Moody Jr.
As she explained to her students, patients often awoke from very bad illnesses or cardiac arrests, talking about how they had been floating over their bodies. “Mm-hmmm,” Norma would reply, sometimes thinking, Yeah, yeah, I know, you were on the ceiling. Such stories were recounted so frequently that they hardly jolted medical personnel. Norma at the time had mostly chalked it up to some kind of drug reaction or brain malfunction, something like that. “No, really,” said a woman who’d recently come out of a coma. “I can prove it.” The woman had been in a car accident and been pronounced dead on arrival when she was brought into the emergency room. Medical students and interns had begun working on her and managed to get her heartbeat going, but then she had coded again. They’d kept on trying, jump-starting her heart again, this time stabilizing it. She’d remained in a coma for months, unresponsive. Then one day she awoke, talking about the brilliant light and how she remembered floating over her body. Norma thought she could have been dreaming about all kinds of things in those months when she was unconscious. But the woman told them she had obsessive-compulsive disorder and had a habit of memorizing numbers. While she was floating above her body, she had read the serial number on top of the respirator machine. And she remembered it. Norma looked at the machine. It was big and clunky, and this one stood about seven feet high. There was no way to see on top of the machine without a stepladder. “Okay, what’s the number?” Another nurse took out a piece of paper to jot it down. The woman rattled off twelve digits. A few days later, the nurses called maintenance to take the ventilator machine out of the room. The woman had recovered so well, she no longer needed it. When the worker arrived, the nurses asked if he wouldn’t mind climbing to the top to see if there was a serial number up there. He gave them a puzzled look and grabbed his ladder. When he made it up there, he told them that indeed there was a serial number. The nurses looked at each other. Could he read it to them? Norma watched him brush off a layer of dust to get a better look. He read the number. It was twelve digits long: the exact number that the woman had recited. The professor would later come to find out that her patient’s story was not unique. One of Norma’s colleagues at the University of Virginia Medical Center at the time, Dr. Raymond Moody, had published a book in 1975 called Life After Life, for which he had conducted the first large-scale study of people who had been declared clinically dead and been revived, interviewing 150 people from across the country. Some had been gone for as long as twenty minutes with no brain waves or pulse. In her lectures, Norma sometimes shared pieces of his research with her own students. Since Moody had begun looking into the near-death experiences, researchers from around the world had collected data on thousands and thousands of people who had gone through them—children, the blind, and people of all belief systems and cultures—publishing the findings in medical and research journals and books. Still, no one has been able to definitively account for the common experience all of Moody’s interviewees described. The inevitable question always followed: Is there life after death? Everyone had to answer that question based on his or her own beliefs, the professor said. For some of her students, that absence of scientific evidence of an afterlife did little to change their feelings about their faith. For others,
Erika Hayasaki (The Death Class: A True Story About Life)
Dead people look different, don’t they,” said my grandmother, coming up behind me. “It’s like something has left them and gone somewhere else. Must be the soul.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Paranormal: My Life in Pursuit of the Afterlife)
Carl Gustav Jung had a near-death experience; he describes it in the section entitled “Visions” in the book Memories, Dreams, and Reflections.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Reflections on Life After Life)
Жизнь подобна тюремному заключению. Но в этом состоянии мы просто не понимаем, какой тюрьмой является для нас наше тело. Смерть подобна освобождению, выходу из тюрьмы. Это пожалуй самое лучшее с чем я мог бы ее сравнить
Raymond A. Moody Jr.
SDEs, however, do provide proof beyond reasonable doubt that the soul survives bodily death. By definition they are experiences in which one or more person(s) share in a dying person’s transition.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Proof of Life after Life: 7 Reasons to Believe There Is an Afterlife)
We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Glimpses of Eternity: Sharing a Loved One's Passage From This Lifetime to the Next)
We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.” —Pierre de Chardin
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Glimpses of Eternity: Sharing a Loved One's Passage From This Lifetime to the Next)
Life After Life, by Raymond A. Moody, Jr., M.D.
Joseph McMoneagle (Mind Trek)
Durante l’abbandono del corpo si prova un senso profondo di pace e di completezza. Molti avvertono la presenza di qualcuno che li aiuta nel loro passaggio a un diverso piano di esistenza. Molti vengono accolti da persone care trapassate prima di loro o da una figura religiosa di particolare importanza nella loro vita e legata, naturalmente, alla loro religione.
Raymond A. Moody Jr.
there is a wonderful story of St. Thomas Aquinas, the eleventh century philosopher and theologian, who wrote voluminously almost until the end of his life. Then he had a vision of the light, after which he said, “All I have written is like straw.” He stopped writing and within a year he quietly and mysteriously died.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (The Light Beyond)
People who undergo an NDE come out of it saying that religion concerns your ability to love—not doctrines and denominations. In short, they think that God is a much more magnanimous being than they previously thought, and that denominations don’t count.
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (The Light Beyond)
I was reading Plato's 'The Republic' at age 18, and I can't account fully the electricity that had for me. I have never been religious. I talk to God every day, but He's never said a word to me about religion! I think the most powerful prayer is surrender. I have absolutely no fear of death. From my near-death research and my personal experiences, death is, in my judgment, simply a transition into another kind of reality.
Raymond A. Moody Jr.
Life After Life, by Dr. Raymond A. Moody. When Dr. Moody was
John L. Turner (Medicine, Miracles, & Manifestations: A Doctor's Journey Through the Worlds of Divine Intervention, Near-Death Experiences, and Universal Energy)
Il mondo in cui viviamo é solo il parto della nostra immaginazione?
Raymond A. Moody Jr. (Paranormal: My Life in Pursuit of the Afterlife)
The subject of near-death experiences runs through both my professional and personal lives, keeping them joined and never letting me forget that while we are learning to live, we are also learning to die.
Raymond Moody