Kenneth Ring
Near-Death Experiences and Shamanic Initiation: When Clinical Death Meets Ancient Ceremony
Here is something that should stop you mid-step: a Dutch cardiologist and a Siberian shaman, separated by five thousand miles and five thousand years of cultural context, are describing the same journey. One speaks in the language of peer-reviewed cardiology journals.
Cardiac Arrest and Consciousness: Pim van Lommel's Prospective Study
In 2001, the Lancet — one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world — published a study that should have transformed neuroscience. Pim van Lommel, a Dutch cardiologist, and colleagues reported the results of a prospective study of near-death experiences in cardiac arrest survivors:...
Near-Death Experiences: What Clinical Data Reveals About Consciousness and Brain Death
The near-death experience (NDE) is one of the most well-documented anomalies in clinical medicine — and one of the most systematically ignored. Approximately 10-20% of people who survive cardiac arrest report detailed, vivid experiences during the period when their brain showed no measurable...
Stanislav Grof's Spiritual Emergency Framework: When Awakening Becomes Crisis
In the standard medical model, a person who hears voices, sees visions, experiences the dissolution of their identity, believes they are connected to a cosmic intelligence, or feels that reality has fundamentally shifted is mentally ill. The diagnosis is psychosis, the treatment is antipsychotic...
Dying Practices and Bardo Navigation: The Art of Conscious Death
Every spiritual tradition agrees on one thing: how you die matters. Not in a moral sense — not heaven for the good and hell for the wicked — but in a practical sense.