Posted on 05/30/2026 8:24:13 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
At thirty-seven, Ned Dougherty seemed to have it all: a Mercedes-Benz, a private jet, and a well-known nightclub in the Hamptons. Then he met death, and nothing was ever the same.
On July 2, 1984, after a fight with a business associate, Dougherty collapsed on the sidewalk. He felt like he was falling into a dark, endless pit. Medical records show he had respiratory and cardiac arrest and was clinically dead for an hour and six minutes. “I was literally dead in every sense of the word at that point,” Dougherty told The Epoch Times.
“And my journey on the other side began.”
According to Dougherty, his consciousness left his body, traveled into another dimension, and was enveloped in a brilliant golden light more resplendent than the sun, yet causing no pain.
Dougherty was suddenly joined by his deceased best friend, Daniel McCampbell, who had passed away during the Vietnam War. Daniel communicated to Dougherty, “I’m here to show you the way. You have a mission ahead of you in your life.”
After Dougherty woke up, he became a different person. He sold his clubs, gave up drugs and alcohol, and started volunteering. He even did the jobs he once looked down on, such as taking out the trash, cleaning bathrooms, and directing traffic. For the past forty years, he has spoken and written about his experience, not to prove anything, but because he believes he returned with a purpose.
Dougherty’s transformation is not unusual.
A 2024 survey by the Near-Death Experience Research Foundation, the largest existing database on the question, found that nearly 80 percent of near-death experiencers report major to moderate life changes after their return: reordered priorities, new vocations, even transformed worldviews. The aftereffect is so consistent across decades that it has inspired entire research programs.
“These are profoundly changed people,” Dr. Jeffrey Long, who has been doing near-death experience (NDE) research for 30 years, told me in an interview for a recent documentary: “Final Hours.”
Compared to people who did not have near-death experiences, those who did were much less afraid of death, more likely to believe in an afterlife, more interested in the meaning of life, and felt more love and compassion.
These positive effects persisted and even intensified in the eight-year follow-up assessment, suggesting a fundamental and permanent change in their consciousness rather than a temporary psychological reaction.
The longest-running dataset on the question, run by the psychiatrist Bruce Greyson at the University of Virginia, compared experiencers’ attitudes at intake and two decades later. The changes held for the entire time.
Twenty years on, the experiencers were still more drawn to service and less interested in the markers most people spend their lives chasing.
Greyson concluded that near-death experiences are “unusual in the long-term persistence of attitude changes.” Most peak experiences in life fade over time, but these changes seem to last.
Why? It comes down to three things that these people gained through the experience.
In the largest aftereffects study to date, published in 2024 in the journal Resuscitation, Long compared 834 near-death experiencers with 42 controls who had had brushes with death without an NDE.
Three elements repeatedly appeared in his analysis and the experiencer’s write-ups as the engines of change. The first element is the one that most NDE analyses stop at. The other two are the ones that actually rebuild a life.
Dougherty felt like he floated out of his body and watched paramedics working on his own “corpse” outside his nightclub. Others describe leaving their bodies in operating rooms, cars, or hospital beds, and seeing everything with incredible clarity. Many say it felt more real than real.
In Long’s analysis of more than 200 out-of-body observations from his database, he found that more than 98 percent of what experiencers reported seeing and hearing while clinically unconscious proved accurate in fine detail.
Dougherty left behind his old life to help others. He described that, during his near-death experience, a being of light told him to do charity and missionary work and to make prayer a regular part of his life. Afterward, he gave up drugs and alcohol and spent 30 years speaking and writing about his experience, hoping to inspire others.
He later wrote in his book “Fast Lane to Heaven,” “My mission was not clearly defined for me at first, but I now find that each and every day it is being defined for me more clearly.”
Another well-known case is Dannion Brinkley, who was struck by lightning on Sept. 17, 1975, while talking on the phone in Aiken, South Carolina. He was clinically dead for twenty-eight minutes. He remembers beings of light telling him to use what he learned to help people who are dying.
In 1997, he co-founded a nonprofit, The Twilight Brigade, dedicated to ensuring that no veteran dies alone. He has logged more than 34,000 hours of hospice volunteer service and has been at the bedside of more than two thousand people during their final days.
Each NDEr’s new mission was built from scratch, often at high personal cost (lost careers, abandoned businesses, decades of unpaid work). The pattern is consistent enough across cases that researchers such as Long have come to treat it as a defining feature of the phenomenon rather than an unexpected side effect.
Sometimes the message is delivered by a deceased friend, as in Dougherty’s case. Sometimes by what they call beings of light. The content of the guidance varies, but the structure is consistent: the experiencer is shown their life, often in a panoramic life review, from the perspective of the people they affected. They feel what they did to others and are measured against a universal moral standard, arriving at an intuitive understanding of right and wrong.
This life review is what makes the aftereffects so durable. The transformation is not built on belief in an afterlife—plenty of people believe in it and live unchanged. The transformation is built on the experience of having been seen, from the inside of every life one has touched, and measured against a standard of goodness one can’t attribute as one’s own invention. The combination of the three elements, delivered in a single experience, is what changes a life.
The pattern shows up everywhere a researcher looks, regardless of the experiencer’s culture, age, or prior beliefs.
I have seen this pattern myself. For the past six months, I have been working on the documentary “Final Hours.” I met a former Harvard neurosurgeon who fell into a coma caused by meningitis, a college pitcher whose heart stopped during surgery, a young woman in a head-on car crash, and a cancer patient whose organs failed in the intensive care unit.
All of these subjects died, came back, and were forever changed.
Their experiences were nothing alike, but what they did with them was. The documentary, which premieres this June, expands the series “Where Does Consciousness Come From?” and conveys something difficult to put into words: What these people sound like, what their faces show, the particular stillness of a person who is no longer afraid of death and has a new purpose in life.
It is an odd thing when the 911 paramedics
show up at your house, and you recognize one of them
from a previous visit and say “hey, man, how are you doing?”
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Don’t ask me how I know this...
I wonder if people beheaded have this experience until their brain dies.
Life is in the blood. You are not dead until the blood is dead.
When are they going to find one 4 days dead like Lazarus? (Or even just one day dead)
Paul wasn’t allowed to say what he saw or the words spoken. Yet, strangely enough, everyone else can.
While nodding off at the computer, I read that "4 days dead like Lazamataz." Thanks for waking me up! 😹
Good Point.
Ha!!!
Wake up!, a little Lauren! Wake up!!
Beheaded-one guy wanted to prove he could talk after being guillotined. Went ahead with it and he was proved right-just for a few seconds.
My first NDE was in 1988. Yes, it changes you and your life a lot.
I know most of the people mentioned in the article personally after 38 years following this topic.
The big difference between my NDE and others is that I never fully returned to my physical body. I’ve been straddling bot realities all these years, and it’s not easy.
After experiencing the profound Love of Heaven, you don’t want to be here on earth.
The life review process is merely the increased awareness as your consciousness expands beyond your physical body and expands through the stored memories in your soul. (In reverse sequence). Ever since I died, I am able to read these stored memories in the souls of other people as consciousness became physical to my perception. It’s like extreme empathy.
Souls are perpetual and grow by experiencing being human.These physical bodies are merely a projection screen for the consciousness of our souls.
We are seeds of consciousness, planted here in the darkness of earth, to sprout and grow, learning to become One with and utilize the Divine Light.
I have many questions.
Was the friend whom he saw really that person?
Remember when Paul speaks of the man (himself) that went to “Third Heaven?”
That is what an NDE is like when you go to the higher levels of Heaven. Remember, my Father’s Mansion has many rooms.
In soul, most likely.
I say most likely as a soul without a physical body can present itself to you as any person at any age that you expect to see them.
And, there are many imposters.
This scripture is very accurate and describes what I experienced, including not being allowed to tell much of what I was told and shown.
2 Corinthians 12
2 I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven. Whether it was in the body or out of the body I do not know—God knows. 3 And I know that this man—whether in the body or apart from the body I do not know, but God knows— 4 was caught up to paradise and heard inexpressible things, things that no one is permitted to tell.
5 I will boast about a man like that, but I will not boast about myself, except about my weaknesses. 6 Even if I should choose to boast, I would not be a fool, because I would be speaking the truth. But I refrain, so no one will think more of me than is warranted by what I do or say, 7 or because of these surpassingly great revelations.
Therefore, in order to keep me from becoming conceited, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. 8 Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. 9 But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. 10 That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.
What about animals in the afterlife? I want to see my dogs again
I watched several NDE videos on YouTube, some of them not very credible. One said they met Satan and thought he was a really cool guy. Another was sent to hell where he met Marilyn Monroe and JFK.
Some of these seem very sincere and believable but others not so much.
Yes, they exist.
Several times in doing hospice work the pets that were previously deceased arrived to greet the person at death.
The most profound was when three corgis appeared to a woman I was caring for, a few hours prior to death. I couldn’t see them, but I could hear them.
That same woman asked the Dr to get me right away. When I walked into her room, she turned in bed, reaching toward me and said, “Take hold of my hands and pull me out of my body.”
I started laughing out loud and explained that’s not how it’s done. I explained to her that by relaxing in prayer she could step out as and be guided home. We prayed together and in a few minutes, she was gone. (She had advance bone cancer that spread through her body.)
I’ve been with many people at death, and for some reason God allows me to cross over with them. It’s a beautiful experience.
Many, or most NDE experiencers return to their body and form a spiritual ego, losing the higher connection experienced during the NDE.
They write books, lecture and do TV appearances, treating the NDE as a possession. The ego identity blocks higher awareness.
That’s not true of all experiencers. Dr Mary Neal, an orthopedic surgeon in Wyoming and Anita Morjani are two that have been able to share their experience without losing their higher connection.
Eban Alexander developed a bigger ego telling about his NDE experience than he had as a spinal surgeon. I met with him recently and he has grown a lot, but still not reconnected. I say this not to criticize him, but so others can observe his difficult experiences and learn from them, rather than replicating them.
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