Man who died for 6 minutes says he ‘can’t imagine anything worse’ than what he saw

Some people think that when you die you get sent to either heaven or hell. But according to some people who were clinically pronounced dead for a certain amount of time, that’s not always the case. One man, who was pronounced dead for six minutes before being brought back to life, claims that the afterlife is a truly terrible place. So, what did he see? (Picture: Getty)

What do people see when they die?

Although it is hard to measure, there have been a few studies looking into near death experiences. In general, people tend to describe sensations of seeing their life being replayed, having out-of-body experiences, dreaming and meditative states. The research of one psychiatrist, Dr Raymond Moody, reveals that hundreds of people described pleasant experiences in which they left their body, viewed themselves from above, and passed down a tunnel toward a light that helped them to evaluate their life before returning back to life (Picture: Getty)

But writing on Reddit, a man describes the situation which occurred when he was just 15 years old. After an episode of ventricular fibrillation, which is a type of irregular heart rhythm, he collapsed. He was told after that the emergency medical service arrived to the scene and discovered that his heart had stopped beating - and although this state of 'death' lasted six minutes, the man claims he went on quite a journey in the viral post (Picture: Getty)

The man said things began with a white light. The light initially calmed him, and he had a feeling that he was ascending. As he was doing so, he passed several gates, before arriving to a place he describes as ‘beyond reality’. He thought he was not alone, and says that several ‘life forces’ came towards him. He wrote: ‘At first, because of my Christian upbringing, I believed them to be angels. In my incorporeal form, I made the spiritually-equivalent gesture of opening my arms, anticipating their embrace.’ However, it was not what he thought it was (Picture: Getty)

The man goes on to explain that he felt himself to be shackled by the lifeform's powers, and feelings of humiliation and terror came over him. He realised that these beings were ‘cruel, unsympathetic overlords’ that laughed at him in a manner described as ‘cold’ and ‘mocking’. And he said that the beings revealed some ‘horrifying truths about existence’ which he shared in the post (Picture: Getty)

He wrote: ‘Our universe, like many others running parallel to it, contains a pittance of the total energy in existence. It is a farm, used to produce souls, which only arise in the precise conditions found in our cosmos. When you hear scientists talk about the improbability of the existence of our goldilocks universe, it’s because they don’t actually come into being spontaneously. They’re designed. And the hands that craft them are not benevolent gods, but rapacious beings with little care for the creatures they create. Our ultimate purpose, I learned in the custody of the spirits that shackled me, was to ripen until we were ready to serve them on their higher plane’ (Picture: Getty)

He added: 'I can’t imagine anything worse than what I experienced, subsumed beneath an ineffable grief and torment.' The man writes in the post that he was warned not to reveal their existence, but when he was revived, he tried to explain to anyone who would listen about what he experienced. However, he said he was brushed off, and was told he had suffered a very serious and traumatic experience for a young man. Eventually, he said he convinced himself it was all a dream. Until he met someone else (Picture: Getty)

He says he met the author of a book who had claimed to meet God in the afterlife, and told him that 'he knew the truth, that slavery awaits us all'. He continued: 'A flicker in his gaze betrayed his knowledge of the fact. He really had died and visited the afterlife, but lied about it in his book. Because he knew.’ So, why did the man tell his story? He wrote: ‘During my visit, I learned things about our universe that I wish I hadn’t. Perhaps in sharing my story, I might help our species prepare for what comes after we expire’ (Picture: Getty)