Experiences of Horror During a Coma | An Interview with Joachim Nicolay

Experiences of Horror During a Coma | An Interview with Joachim Nicolay

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Descriptions:

30 to 50 p.c of men and women who were being in intense treatment, are traumatised later on on. For example, they report: “You have to think about it like staying in a nightmare… but like a nightmare that is 10 times worse. It is in fact not just like a nightmare. It is even worse. It is a correct horror vacation.“

Dr. Joachim Nicolay, psychologist and thinker, phone calls for a far better dealing with of experiences during a coma. He criticises that “medicine suffers from visual agnosia”.

Contents:
00:00:53 What is a “coma”?
00:04:04 Terrifying experiences throughout a coma
00:07:55 Good experiences through a coma
00:12:20 “Experiences of hell”
00:18:37 Near-death experiences are changeover experiences
00:20:38 Aid with destructive near-death experiences
00:26:48 Consciousness during a coma and the means to assume
00:27:28 Help with a cherished man or woman in a coma
00:28:47 Negative near-death experiences are tabooed

Credits:
Director: Heike Sucky
Translation: Katrin Salhenegger-Niamir
Voice-in excess of: Aryan Salhenegger-Niamir, Werner Huemer
Editorial contribution: Heike Funke
Editor, Interviewer: Werner Huemer

℗ Mediaservice Werner Huemer
© 2022 Thanatos Tv EN

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30 Comments

  1. Essential information was there. I had to repeat many sections many times. As it is hard to find this logical explanation
    for these different experiences. And I was looking all the time for an answer to how could people who did awful things in their lives just run away with it? By having a good NDE?
    So, I started looking for other explanations for NDE.
    Now, it makes sense to me.
    Thank you. It was a fantastic video.
    The questions and the details Joachim goes through are just perfect.
    I wish we could have Mr Joachim Nicolay many more times.

  2. Although animals in this world are so innocent, like dogs, cats, rabbits, goats, elephants, cows, etc., they are treated with unbearable cruelty worldwide. And we don't need proofs that they have emotions and love more than humans sometimes.
    Is there a video or a book explaining what this has to do with NDE or the afterlife?

  3. Than you for doing this interview. Aside from spiritual experiences, this has important implications for how necessary it is to take more human and psychological-emotional factors into consideration in the medical world.

  4. I am a retired. nurse and for the last twenty years of my career worked as a hospice nurse and was always aware that the seemingly unconscious patient was always aware of a loving attentive caret which sometimes one could perceive by the subtle relaxation of facial muscles. For those involved in health care, I think it is essential that staff should be encouraged to approach the unconscious patient with the assumption at some level, they are aware of your presence and need the same loving assurances given to the conscious patient. Sadly this isn’t always the case as so many in the field carry the assumption that the unconscious are totally lacking in sensory and mental perception. Hopefully , with the phenomena of the near death experience, attitudes are slowly changing. Thank you for this important post.

  5. I think the horrific experiences of coma are solely caused by being trapped in a sick body. If you can break free of the body the experiences almost always become pleasant.
    A good example is Eben Alexander's transition from the horrible underground environment (body) into something resembling a classic NDE or out of body experience.

  6. I believe consciousness is the screen on which all appears, "dead" or "alive" and everything in-between..so therefore present in all types of sleep or coma states too..it is the ever present eternal All..it never goes anywhere..this is non duality teachings. Thank you for your interesting sharing here.

  7. I have always believed that one's state of mind at the point of passing, says much of their experience. I get and understand hellish/negative experiences. God only know what's really in their mind, during a lifetime of pain, suffering and struggle vs. love, happiness, healthy life. The difference lies in a coma experience vs. near death experience. Can't see the souls/spirit leaving the body during a coma. The body isn't compromised yet. (No reason to leave the body.)

    Really good point in the near death experience, is not the final experience. It's like looking at a website on a beautiful location/place you wish you could vacation/visit or a place you wouldn't want to visit. War torn Ukraine, Middle east… You get a visual experience, without actually visiting/experiences. Window shopping in a sense. Look, but can't touch then back to reality you go. We're only shown what we need to see and feel, so as to show one's true reality in life and life after death vs. what we think life is really all about. The experience brings Perspective to ones life. The regression experience really fills in the blanks of what happens after we truly pass on to another life or otherwise. NDExperience is part 1; Paranormal experience is part 2; Regression experience is part 3. Makes sense.

  8. Why wasn't this picked up much earlier by people who got specilized in the research of NDE, meaning Raymond Moody and Pim van Lommel?
    So, for some reason the induced coma seems to play a distinguishing role anyway, in terms of the valuation of the experience, otherwise Moody and Van Lommel would have mentioned the (negative) phenomenon and studied it. Both specialists do mention negative experiences, btw, but they claim that these apply to only a minority of NDEers.
    I would like to know if an induced coma causes a situation that Moody and Van Lommel call "Brain death" i.e. no measurable activity of the brains.

  9. My thinking is if there's any kind of narcotic(s) being intervenously delivered to the patient, during a coma, this will cause hallucinations during a coma.
    Are narcotics even being prescribed during any coma? Any nurse or doctor out there able to answer my question?
    I would be so greatful.

  10. It could also be that most of the people who do go to Hell will not get a option to come back. So they do not have a NDE in the first place and so that is why we do not have a lot of them either, statistically speaking.

  11. hell (whatever that is) and damnation (whatever that is) always scared me, and id love to beleive its as he says- isnt compatible with existing with the love of god. so many people tell me its still our free will to damn ourselves to hell and even god wont save you because your so far gone or just dont "want to go to heaven." this helps a little….still scared af…

  12. As a survivor of an eight day Covid coma in December 2021, I watched this video in awe. The guy nails it and I hope he does not mind, but am going to send him my experiences that I had already written down shortly after going home. In my experience a coma is not a black screen. Things happen. There is colour, often vivid, noise and when you come back, and during the coming back process, the most horrible dreams and delusions. I would class myself as a strong independent person. These delusions and dreams are on another level. Even now although I know they are not correct, I can tell you a lot of them have a basis in reality and I still believe then to be true. Good effort on this video again. The first one that I thought understood what I experienced.

  13. My son suffered from catastrophic brain injuries last year after a collision between his bicycle and a car. He was sedated in intensive care, but the nurses, following protocol, attempted to wake him up every four hours, to test his sedation. They shook him by the shoulders even though he had a broken arm and clavicle, and yelled at him to wake up. I am wondering how much of the horror experience by patients is due to these protocols. He was found to be brain dead nine days after his accident and removed from life support two days later. I was profoundly upset by the experience of watching a nurse do this on the one occasion I observed it, and once he had died regretted that this had been done to him. I am not convinced that doctors understand the need for analgesic as well as sedation either – when I challenged a doctor performing a procedure on my elder son, she told me "Don't worry, he won't remember it" as though the experiencing of pain under sedation is nothing. This very mechanistic approach to medicine may be the reason why so many patients report negative experiences while in comas – their brain may not remember what was happening, but their bodies do.