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Real Life Bone Chilling Visioning Footage

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Hospice Nurse Julie

Hospice Nurse Julie

Күн бұрын

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#endoflife #hospice #activelydying

Пікірлер: 2 100
@terryfraatz424
@terryfraatz424 Ай бұрын
I watched my Mother do this, I watched my uncle do this, I watched my Father do this, and I watched my wife do this. There isn't a single person on this planet who can tell me that this isn't real. I am turning 74 this year, and I simply cannot wait to see my family again.
@ra7e
@ra7e Ай бұрын
@terryfraatz424 Your words brought tears to my eyes... I am in my 30s, waiting to one day see my mom too.❤️‍🩹 May you receive all the love from your children and grandbabies for many more years, before you see your whole family again 🩷
@terryfraatz424
@terryfraatz424 Ай бұрын
@@ra7e 🙂👍
@haribo245
@haribo245 Ай бұрын
@@TOMTOM-zj5xj There are patients who were in a coma, clinically dead or even declared dead. They report events that they should not know and are checked by the medical staff and relatives. The blind from birth sees outside the body, the Alzheimer's patient remembers events from childhood. For 2024 years, Christ, His Mother and His saints have also revealed themselves to people from non-christian religions, performing miracles with them, I have not yet heard of any Christian healed supernaturally by any god of the pagans. I speak because I study the phenomenon and I can argue with cases that happened nowadays (there are also medical documents)
@sushimaster652
@sushimaster652 Ай бұрын
I'm sorry, but you have no proof that this is a hallucination. I'll never understand people that make disparaging/negative comments on videos like this. It's almost as if it makes them happy to steal someone's hope. Sad.
@jessicasanchez5765
@jessicasanchez5765 Ай бұрын
​@@TOMTOM-zj5xjThen you've never seen this. C'mon! It's as silly as saying hypoxia is responsible.😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅 Sorry, the real data contradicts you.
@debrahoeker8161
@debrahoeker8161 Ай бұрын
I am a retired oncology nurse. Early in my career a woman was at the end of life with her family at the bedside. She was making motions with her hands and reaching out. The Dr. explained to the family that these actions were not unusual at this time and she may be anxious or confused. Her son spoke up and said," she isn't confused. Her parents were deaf and she is signing to them She just signed that we were here and to wait for her she will be there shortly". I thought the doctor was going to faint. She died by the end of my shift.
@earnold1896
@earnold1896 Ай бұрын
@debra I chuckled at that especially the doctor being so shocked.
@cerorchid
@cerorchid Ай бұрын
Wow
@lucius4556
@lucius4556 Ай бұрын
My niece worked in oncology and told many stories of people dying talking to unseen people.
@renegadetherapist5664
@renegadetherapist5664 Ай бұрын
I love this! This is real.
@robinsmith4958
@robinsmith4958 Ай бұрын
Wow!!!
@dianablackman4528
@dianablackman4528 Ай бұрын
I am convinced that shortly before death the "veil" separating this world and the spirit realm is lifted.
@beabea3121
@beabea3121 28 күн бұрын
Me too!❤
@mariapaz2789
@mariapaz2789 28 күн бұрын
Totally
@seanhammer6296
@seanhammer6296 28 күн бұрын
I am convinced that this type of thing is end of life brain activity.
@CriminalonCrime
@CriminalonCrime 27 күн бұрын
@@seanhammer6296 that's not untrue, but there's a little burst of brain waves and then the body is instantly several grams lighter after death, there's energy leaving the body and no one has traced where that energy is going, it doesn't stay in the body, that we do know!
@giggles7179
@giggles7179 27 күн бұрын
I won't go into too much because some people find it absurd and I don't want to offend anyone here, but there was a group in the 1990's that set out to prove an afterlife. Over the course of several years, they claimed to have actually been working with a team of like-minded figures from the past that had dedicated much of their lives to do the same....only now from the other side of "the veil." The stories of what they were actually able to accomplish are absolutely fascinating and the work continues to this day. The group invited and played host to many respected scientists, doctors, etc. who were indeed able to corroborate not only the activity, but were also able to inspect every facet to convince themselves there was no trickery they could find. Some of the activity involved what was referred to as an "apport," where items would simply manifest in mid-air and fall to the table. The most jarring of these was a newspaper from the early 1900's....but in flawless, just-off-the-presses condition. What I've mentioned here is barely scratching the surface and many people find it appalling that more of the public hasn't been told about the experiments and what they accomplished, but the mainstream news agencies rarely take a chance on any material like this because 1.) Too many people would simply dismiss it 2.) In some instances, they've been explicitly told not to by governmental agents that fear such information could very well upset a world where religious beliefs have already caused centuries of bloodshed. I can't say for certain what I believe, but there _is_ a lot of material out there that seems to suggest the same theories. I simply like the thought of an afterlife in general - who doesn't? I also love the thrill of the unknown. In the end, to have complete confirmation would take a lot of magic out of the world. With that, I choose to read and research as much as I can. I figure that way, I'll always look at the world with the wonder of a wide-eyed child.
@beths999
@beths999 Ай бұрын
My mom was 38 yrs old when she passed from colon cancer. I wasn’t there when she passed but our dad told us that a minute before she died she woke up out of a coma, sat up with a huge smile and said, “The angels are here! They’ve come to get me”. Then she passed.
@TheFriendlyPsychopath-ow7pw
@TheFriendlyPsychopath-ow7pw 29 күн бұрын
@@beths999 There's no such things as angels.
@Samahra01
@Samahra01 29 күн бұрын
​​@@TheFriendlyPsychopath-ow7pw there are. You not believing that doesn't change that God and Satan exist. Secondly, WHY ARE YOU CRAPPING ON SOMEONES COMFORT and THEIR EXPERIENCE?!!?!?! What are you doing here watching this then?
@elizagoodytwoshoes9140
@elizagoodytwoshoes9140 29 күн бұрын
​@@Samahra01exactly well said, life's experiences are each their own. I have had many personal experiences with family and friends who have passed. My brother visited me many times to alert me to my mothers danger, we lived in another town and were able to help her because of him. To know is to have faith life is eternal no matter the naysayers.
@LindaKayHolevas
@LindaKayHolevas 29 күн бұрын
Yes! I saw the angels come for my dad when he passed, too. It was a beautiful moment. ❤❤❤
@TheFriendlyPsychopath-ow7pw
@TheFriendlyPsychopath-ow7pw 29 күн бұрын
@@Samahra01 If its real then prove it.
@xxfox
@xxfox Ай бұрын
My brother came to my house to die recently. He was only here for less than 4 days. The night before he passed, I went in to tuck him in and he was so excited he said "I dreamt that I saw Mom at Walmart, and she couldn't believe how good I looked." He was so happy. He told me what a fantastic night he had with me and he couldn't believe how fantastic it was. He did wait for me to come in that next morning. I sat and prayed for him for a few minutes and he passed right around that time. So, I didn't get to talk to him again after his dream. This was 11 days ago.
@adenasmith903
@adenasmith903 Ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss 😢, but I am so very happy that you had those last 4 days together. How blessed you both were. ❤
@Oilers1972
@Oilers1972 Ай бұрын
Very sorry for your loss.
@kimbrown7308
@kimbrown7308 Ай бұрын
So sorry for your loss.
@brokenwing2840
@brokenwing2840 Ай бұрын
I worked in an area of healthcare where I was with people at there time of passing and with my Dad while he was passing. This is true. I have also seen the rally. This video is so comforting. Thank you for sharing it.
@roseanndivincenzo
@roseanndivincenzo Ай бұрын
I’m so sorry for your loss. May your brother rest in peace.
@psrwhite
@psrwhite Ай бұрын
A few days prior to my husband dying he was staring at the wall. I said what are you looking at? He said "Jesus". That brought me comfort.
@evelynvanzale4757
@evelynvanzale4757 Ай бұрын
A few hours before my dad died, he was staring at the ceiling with a look of absolute disgust and when I asked him what he was looking at, he said 'John O'Sullivan'! It's quite a common name, but the only John O'Sullivan our family knew was very much alive! I'm guessing, for whatever reason, my dad didn't like him very much, either that, or there was another John O'Sullivan that my dad had known in his life who did him, or someone else, wrong!
@seajay20
@seajay20 Ай бұрын
How special. I hope I see Jesus when I die, too (I currently have Ovarian Cancer).
@evelynvanzale4757
@evelynvanzale4757 Ай бұрын
@@seajay20 When your time comes, you will, but you may have a lot of time yet, so, in the meantime, keep the faith and above all, keep cheerful, no matter how down you may sometimes feel as none of us is promised tomorrow, not in this world, but believers have nothing to fear!!!😊♥
@helenarubio3371
@helenarubio3371 Ай бұрын
Wow
@lisasuzanne8474
@lisasuzanne8474 Ай бұрын
​@@seajay20 ~ I have Stage IV Ovarian cancer. Just diagnosed in March 2023.
@aelbereth6690
@aelbereth6690 Ай бұрын
My great-aunt Rose was 99 and in a nursing home. She was mentally alert and hadn't been ill, but was frail and had been in bed with a cold. My mother went to visit her and found her out of bed, packing a suitcase. My mother exclaimed, "Aunty! What on earth are you doing?" Rose replied, "I'm going to stay with Emmie, so I have to get my things ready." Emmie was one of her sisters, who had died over 30 years before. When my mother asked what she meant, she said "Emmie came and asked me to go home with her." My mother told me about it that evening, and said she was afraid Aunty was getting dementia. I told her I didn't think it was that at all. Rose died in her sleep that night.
@marilyncausey9348
@marilyncausey9348 28 күн бұрын
This is beautiful. Thank you for sharing ❤
@joannrobinson8830
@joannrobinson8830 25 күн бұрын
For about 2 weeks before my mother in law passed she kept telling me to pack her bags she was going home. I would tell her she was home. Now I understand ❤
@Malabus73
@Malabus73 23 күн бұрын
Wonderful story. Thank you for sharing.
@CrashBandiscoot
@CrashBandiscoot 2 күн бұрын
My fiancés grandma was like that for over a year or so. She had some form of Alzheimer’s or dementia but always had a smile. She was always “waiting for Shorty to come by” or “getting dressed to go see Shorty”. She was always soooo excited. He was with her for a long time it seems. It’s the nickname of her brother who passed decades before. You’ll never be able to convince me he wasn’t hanging out there with us ❤
@kristiedarling4888
@kristiedarling4888 Ай бұрын
My dad kept saying "it's beautiful, it's so beautiful. Can you see it? Listen to the angels sing. You really can't see that ?" And then his very last lucid moment, he wanted to call his dad and let him know he was going to be little late. He passed 5 hours later. It was the most incredible moment to share with him. I'm definitely not afraid to die.
@maureenmiller-delisle2505
@maureenmiller-delisle2505 24 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness that’s exactly what my mom was saying the night before she passed away! Wow!
@greenbeans575
@greenbeans575 5 күн бұрын
Biggest hug ever. TY
@Samacaronii
@Samacaronii Ай бұрын
One of my favorite night shift memories came from an amazingly sweet 94 y/o. He called out in the middle of the night, "Momma, Daddy, y'all go back across the street. I'll be home later." Having littles of my own, it's so humbling to remember that my elderly patients were once somebody's baby. It makes caring for them all the more special.
@ContraryMary
@ContraryMary Ай бұрын
@@Samacaronii I love your story.
@earnold1896
@earnold1896 Ай бұрын
I believe we are all ages inside. Nothing weird but sometimes we feel as a kid.
@Susan-nm3sx
@Susan-nm3sx Ай бұрын
Oh how beautiful. It’s true. ❤❤❤
@toadsie73
@toadsie73 Ай бұрын
This is something everyone should remember about anyone they encounter. People might be so much kinder…
@rlic9206
@rlic9206 29 күн бұрын
4 of my 5 girls work in Healthcare. I tell them, their patients were little kids once also. They always treated their patients above and beyond with care, love and kindness. I am very proud of my girls.
@jimrebr
@jimrebr Ай бұрын
My dad is visioning, he is in hospice, my mom passed away 4 months ago, he has dementia and he’s deaf. He has seen all of his deceased siblings and his mom, he calls out to them. He is definitely ready to join mom, they were together 71 years, they are soulmates. He has been visioning since February.
@itsqueencleopatra
@itsqueencleopatra 29 күн бұрын
@@jimrebr in my culture this is a good sign once one partner goes, the other goes not too long after. This is a strong indication that according to the Bible, they were really ONE flesh.
@jimrebr
@jimrebr 29 күн бұрын
@@itsqueencleopatra I agree wholeheartedly, my mom would never leave my dad, ever, I feel she’s at the other side of the veil, waiting with her loving heart, for my dad. He wants to be with her so much. The morning of my mom’s death, my dad reached up and got our favorite picture of mom, her photo was movie star beautiful, I look like my mom, but she was prettier.I have the same kind of relationship with my husband, One Love, we are soulmates too, just as my 5 younger siblings are in soulmates marriages too!
@itsqueencleopatra
@itsqueencleopatra 28 күн бұрын
@@jimrebr I’m so happy for your family and that your mom and dad loved each other dearly. This cannot be bought in a store with money…priceless. I also ask that you keep my in your prayers that I find my soulmate too. In my culture ( I’m from a small island in the Caribbean) marriage is an honorable thing and something to be valued as an achievement in life. Not money, wealth but serving God and following him, including the command to be married to a man of God.
@mariapaz2789
@mariapaz2789 28 күн бұрын
I'm so sorry,l also went thru the same ..❤
@lorir.1115
@lorir.1115 27 күн бұрын
You've been through a lot in a short amount of time. I know your Mom, Dad and family will be together again soon and I hope you are finding comfort in that.
@TheGeekMonster
@TheGeekMonster Ай бұрын
My best friend of many years died from cancer when he was just 36. I visited him a day or two before he passed. For quite a few days before his death, he started telling us that he could hear God calling him every time he closed his eyes, "It's time to come home!" He had no fear, he was completely lucid and at peace. He was able to talk, recognize his loved ones, and crack jokes, right up until the end. I asked him to look for my old cat when he got to Heaven, and he grinned and said that would be the first thing he'd do.
@robinsiciliano8923
@robinsiciliano8923 28 күн бұрын
That’s so sweet.
@ubb.9363
@ubb.9363 27 күн бұрын
I told my mom to tell.my grandmom (her mom) that I missed her spaghetti and homemade meatballs😂she said.she would so I hope she did😂❤❤❤❤❤
@user-sk2px6ox7m
@user-sk2px6ox7m 20 күн бұрын
@@ubb.9363u Italian ?❤
@ubb.9363
@ubb.9363 20 күн бұрын
@@user-sk2px6ox7m half
@CCmagee3
@CCmagee3 17 күн бұрын
Awesome story.
@SometimesMyself
@SometimesMyself Ай бұрын
Not just his childlike voice, but the way his face lights up! It’s mama!
@lynnroney1234
@lynnroney1234 Ай бұрын
When my Mom was dying, she was in horrible pain from a ruptured bowel. At one point, looking at the foot of the bed she said “Hi Cam.” My dad. After that, she was completely pain free, alert and happy. My Dad came to be with her. They were going to be together forever 🥹
@ddelaney712
@ddelaney712 Ай бұрын
I work in Healthcare and I worked with the elderly with Alzheimer's and Dementia, along with a few other ailments associated with the elderly. I can testify I have seen many people passing, and for me, it's typical in the run up to crossing over. There has been many people waking up and asking me where a parent went or an aunt or uncle. ( Most heartbreaking for me was a absolutely wonderful lady who's son had passed years before thanks to illness, and the excitement she had telling me she talked with him almost made her appear childlike. ) She passed away not long after. I do want to say, from a personal point of view, watching these people being excited over people long gone is a blessing. Even if we don't understand, it is, for them, happiness and a joy in a time where their lives are ending soon. Thank you for taking the time to read this, it's greatly appreciated.
@discospiders
@discospiders Ай бұрын
The veil gets thinner as you get closer to going Home.
@ericherman5413
@ericherman5413 Ай бұрын
About 6 weeks before he passed, my grandpa was in the hospital and saw a man in a white suit. He said the man came to him and told him it was "almost time to go home" and he had come to get him ready. So for 3 days my grandfather kept trying to find that man, leaving the hospital room and getting lost. He hated the hospital. They kept tying him down. He had dementia so everyone chalked it up to him being difficult and hallucinating, but I think it was an angel who had come to tell him he was going back to the world we all came from. Thanks to incredible hospice carers like you, my grandpa died comfortably. He waited until he was alone to go, which was hard, but some people just don't want to leave when the people they love are there. Thank you for your work. It matters.
@jamesharris5012
@jamesharris5012 Ай бұрын
@@ericherman5413 this happened with my 93 year old mum a few days before she died she said who's the man in the white suit? She said he was standing outside the open bedroom door we were alone in the house
@ViKee010
@ViKee010 29 күн бұрын
@@ericherman5413 I just wanted to tell you that your words brought me comfort. The very end where you said “he waited until he was alone to go, which was hard”. My Mom and Dad passed in September 2020, 12 days apart. I wasn’t with either of them and they couldn’t be together. There were reasons that were very valid but it absolutely has been the hardest thing for me to come to terms with. They had both been with my husband and I for a couple of years till then. It is one of the biggest regrets in my life. But your explanation that “some people just don’t want to leave when the people they love are there” gave me some relief and a different way of looking at it, which helps. Thank you so much for your soothing words. Sincerely. ✌🏻🤍🤞
@robinsiciliano8923
@robinsiciliano8923 28 күн бұрын
@user-vy2ef9yr3f
@user-vy2ef9yr3f Ай бұрын
That man DID see his mom..she was there to take him to heaven
@Totaly14
@Totaly14 Ай бұрын
@@user-vy2ef9yr3f believe what you want
@Fortheloveofleroy
@Fortheloveofleroy Ай бұрын
@@user-vy2ef9yr3f They were there to take him home. Angels. ❤️🙏
@rondakamakahi3772
@rondakamakahi3772 29 күн бұрын
@@Fortheloveofleroy my thoughts exactly ❤️
@aaronjames3228
@aaronjames3228 29 күн бұрын
No he was hallucinating
@aaronjames3228
@aaronjames3228 29 күн бұрын
​@Gabriellejoeyleeray1969 no
@lisapilot2895
@lisapilot2895 Ай бұрын
My grandmother's caretaker came to visit her the day she died. She was not ill, but very frail at 99 years old. That day, she introduced the caretaker to a dear friend who, she indicated, was sitting across from her on the bed (my grandmother was in a nursing home at this time). The caretaker said hello, and they had their visit. She went to leave and told my grandmother she would be back to see her after dinner. Gramma said, "Oh, I don't think that will be necessary tonight. Please don't come." The caretaker was confused, but agreed that she wouldn't stop by again. Right after dinner, she received a call from the nursing home: my grandmother had passed. I have always believed the visiting friend had come to take Gramma with her.
@carolynpurser7469
@carolynpurser7469 Ай бұрын
My aunt saw and was having conversations with her daughter who had passed years before. She passed peacefully. I believe my cousin came to escort her mom to the other side.
@katrinat.3032
@katrinat.3032 Ай бұрын
My father was in a nursing home dying of cancer. One evening I reached into his drawer to get a pair of his Sox. But instead of a label with his name on it, the label had my mother’s maiden name. I felt strongly that she came to help him cross over. She died 2 years earlier.
@aaronjames3228
@aaronjames3228 29 күн бұрын
​@@katrinat.3032just because of some socks?
@robinsiciliano8923
@robinsiciliano8923 28 күн бұрын
💯
@iam_tam22
@iam_tam22 11 күн бұрын
Hello , this happened to me when I was a caretaker . A lady ms Judy , we had spent a few weeks together she told me her many life stories and gave me great advice . I was excited to see her my next shift but she called my job the day before and told them not to send me over anymore. I was sad because I thought I had did something wrong but the day I would of been there on the morning shift . She had passed away. It was bittersweet, I think she didn’t want me to have to find her or be frightened. I thank her for that because it would of messed me up! I’ll never forget ms Judy ❤ along with all the other ppl I’ve taken care of !
@katelynrose3024
@katelynrose3024 Ай бұрын
My first job out of nursing school was on a hospital oncology unit on the night shift. Scenes like this occurred regularly. Patients would see deceased family members, angels flying around the room and one man said Jesus was holding his hands out to him. The patients were very peaceful when this would happen. Many times they would be non-verbal or comatose but then they'd rally and these things would happen. They'd usually pass away soon. I was such a young nurse and experienced so much: comforting patients passing away when no family was present; staying with them so they were not alone. I'll never forget my experiences and am so grateful for them.
@user-xc5es2ut7t
@user-xc5es2ut7t 27 күн бұрын
We set with my wifes grandmother as she was passing, she sat straight up, looked at the doorway between the living room (where she was in her hospital bed) and the kitchen, and said "Oh George, where have you been" she reached toward the doorway and laid back down, smiled intently. It was the most beautiful thing I have ever witnessed. For the following two days, she was at complete peace and literally dies with a smile on her face. ** George was her husband, he passed 7 years prior to her**
@catmama54
@catmama54 Ай бұрын
This did bring me to tears, and I believe with all my heart he saw his mom. I can’t wait to see my parents, my husband, my brother, and my pets.
@Murrrrrrp
@Murrrrrrp Ай бұрын
Gosh, I really hope we get to see our pets as well 🩷
@AWalkWithWhizzy
@AWalkWithWhizzy Ай бұрын
I just want to see my son again. I miss him so much.
@catmama54
@catmama54 Ай бұрын
@@AWalkWithWhizzy I am so sorry for your loss. My mom was never the same after the loss of my brother. No parent should ever have to bury a child.
@s.engelsman4521
@s.engelsman4521 28 күн бұрын
​@@MurrrrrrpThat seems to be the consensus! ❤😊
@carrieannkouri2151
@carrieannkouri2151 Ай бұрын
When my mom was in the last 2 weeks in hospice care, she was barely able to move, speak, let alone sit up. She sat straight up in her bed and reached out her arms, looking in the corner of the room and began yelling at the top of her lungs, “ Daddy!”. He had been dead for nearly 40 years. This went on for 30 seconds! “Daddy!” Then, she fell back onto her bed and never regained consciousness. She passed 2 days later. I truly believe my grandfather was calling her to the other side.
@qt4516
@qt4516 26 күн бұрын
The truth is in the bible Ecclesiastes 9:5 For the living know that they will die; But the dead know nothing, And they have no more reward, For the memory of them is forgotten. Please watch a video called. Let's Talk About the Afterlife - 6 Things the Unsaved Discover at Death - The Rich Man & Lazarus, Channel is called. A&Q Productions
@Dadandsonfishingadventures-m1w
@Dadandsonfishingadventures-m1w Ай бұрын
My Mum was dying with cancer and in her last days she was very mindful of peoples language as if she was in the presence of someone/something(bless her, she knew a few swear words herself 😂 love you Mum 😉) Two days before, Mum (who was stone deaf and had no hearing aids in) was sleeping peacefully, two relatives were visiting, one heavily pregnant. We spoke in a whisper and I asked "Do you have a name for the baby yet?" She whispered two or three names back, Mum instantly came to and said "It's Isabelle, Ive had confirmation" then went straight back to sleep. And indeed that is her name 😅❤
@xxfox
@xxfox Ай бұрын
WOW. That is amazing.
@mortalclown3812
@mortalclown3812 Ай бұрын
Most of us who've had NDEs felt a wave of Love so powerful that it almost needs another name. 😊 It's unconditional, has no favorites and knows no condemnation. That shouldn't irk anyone, but... yo. The difference between spirituality and religion is akin to the difference between the ocean and a droplet of water: yes, it's that much. Our thoughts are enormously powerful - so is love sent from the heart. And - last thing, I promise - forgiveness is downright alchemical in terms of healing and mending broken places. Sending love and extra angels to everyone - especially if you're suffering, lonely or afraid. Hugs across the miles, dear ones. We're all in this together. 🕉☪️✡️✝️💜🙏
@LynneC44
@LynneC44 29 күн бұрын
Thank you for this beautiful post ❤
@user-fk9nr6ko4z
@user-fk9nr6ko4z 26 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@robertmyers6865
@robertmyers6865 22 күн бұрын
That was GOOD!
@pfdrtom
@pfdrtom Ай бұрын
The most common word spoken on a battlefield by the wounded and the dying is "Momma".
@3172bees
@3172bees Ай бұрын
Well, I could add a few but this is a family show. : )
@stormysmom222
@stormysmom222 Ай бұрын
@@pfdrtom 💔
@fatalberti
@fatalberti Ай бұрын
@@pfdrtom whew. man. thats heavy, but true. i hate war
@toddboden972
@toddboden972 Ай бұрын
I think that's different tho. Most of their moms were still alive. It so sad what those poor kids went thru.
@mmps18
@mmps18 Ай бұрын
As the mother of a son this comment made me cry!
@donnajones6306
@donnajones6306 Ай бұрын
I've been with my mama for 3 years now. She had stopped driving,couldn't remember how to take her medicine. I'm grateful that I'm able to be here and care for her.
@TabithaBarrettRN
@TabithaBarrettRN 27 күн бұрын
God bless you for doing that for her 🙏🏼🫶🏼
@pumpkinpuna4087
@pumpkinpuna4087 24 күн бұрын
She is lucky to have you too❤
@kerry8863
@kerry8863 24 күн бұрын
He didn't take his eyes off his Mum, this is precious! Thank you for sharing.
@josee123
@josee123 Ай бұрын
A few weeks before my mom passed in 2018, she told me angels would rock her back and forth, to comfort her. She said she would only tell me because I'm the only one who'd believe her. The night she died, she was in the hospital and she said to me, what's that light in the bathroom? I wasn't sure what she meant and thought maybe she wanted the light on so I turned it on and she shook her head as if to say no, there's a "Light" in the bathroom. She died less than an hour later. It gives me comfort knowing what that light really was!
@davidlrattigan
@davidlrattigan Ай бұрын
My grandmother's youngest child (of eight, I think) had Downs Syndrome, and she swore she wouldn't die before him, so that she would always be there for him. He passed away at about the age of 50, and sure enough, just a week or two later, she died (in her nineties by then).
@nicolegreen3317
@nicolegreen3317 Ай бұрын
@@davidlrattigan She fulfilled her promise. What beautiful maternal devotion.
@robinsiciliano8923
@robinsiciliano8923 28 күн бұрын
That is pure mother’s love. So beautiful.
@F3mal3Titan
@F3mal3Titan 27 күн бұрын
I have a daughter with down syndrome and I pray to God frequently that I will live longer than her or die with her so I can always be with her. What a touching story I hope God grants me the same as your grandmother.
@lowrider419fly
@lowrider419fly Ай бұрын
When my great uncle was dying, he saw his horse, Buddy, that he loved as a young boy. He said, "Buddy, wait for me! I'm coming!" His horse's name and likeness are engraved on his headstone.
@sushimaster652
@sushimaster652 Ай бұрын
How beautiful!!! I wish I could like your comment a hundred times 🥹
@ericbitzer5247
@ericbitzer5247 Ай бұрын
I watched a lot of videos of heaven and hell testimonials and so many of the heaven ones said our animals are waiting for us on the other side! I believe he really seen his horse and is with his horse now having a great time.
@aaronjames3228
@aaronjames3228 29 күн бұрын
​@@ericbitzer5247when I went to Sunday school when I was younger we were told that animals don't have souls so they don't go anywhere when they die
@northernlitez1
@northernlitez1 29 күн бұрын
​@@ericbitzer5247Amen! I believe this also There is a true story of a little girl named Della who had 2 beloved cats die in a house fire. A few years later Della was in her last moments and from her hospital bed she sat up with a big smile and called out to those 2 kitties with outstretched arms. She then laid back and followed them.
@ericbitzer5247
@ericbitzer5247 29 күн бұрын
@@northernlitez1 Wow! That's so sad and beautiful at the same time.
@lisajunebuscaglia3510
@lisajunebuscaglia3510 Ай бұрын
I had a PT that told me her old cat was sleeping on the foot of the bed. She was so happy.
@mysticalrosemary4661
@mysticalrosemary4661 29 күн бұрын
Now that is a comforting thought!
@LynneC44
@LynneC44 29 күн бұрын
I had a cat, that after years of passing would still jump on the bed. I could feel him and loved it. For sure your patient was correct!!! ❤
@thatcatboab
@thatcatboab 28 күн бұрын
❤​@@LynneC44
@lovebug1180
@lovebug1180 27 күн бұрын
​@@LynneC44aww that's amazing 😻 I have had so many pets and I can't wait to see them again someday 💕
@sallyspencer5624
@sallyspencer5624 Ай бұрын
I am a retired RN age 82 years and I have seen this and more with PT's who are dying. My own mother asked "Who are all these people?" I had one pt. age 35 with end stage of Lung Cancer (in England) on the morning since his admission, when I went into his room he was in a sitting position say, "What a beautiful morning with a blue sky, sunshine and the flowers in bloom". I turned and looked out of the window. The sky had low gray clouds barely above the roof tops and drizzling with rain, it looked depressing outside. Five minutes later he coughed up blood and died. Another Pt. I had was talking to someone and told me she was arranging a family reunion with her already deceased family. It all seemed natural to me. Thank you for your videos I do enjoy them.
@kayeb7809
@kayeb7809 Ай бұрын
My husband is a retired hospice nurse and was with 100’s of people in their last moments. He said this happens quite often. My aunt had a visit from her deceased husband on her last day and they said she had a two hour visit with him. I think they are sent to come collect us and take us home. That’s just my thoughts and it brings me comfort.
@lasvegashula
@lasvegashula Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@kayeb7809
@kayeb7809 Ай бұрын
@@Paulohlsson7 stop
@archiemustachie3693
@archiemustachie3693 Ай бұрын
Those are exactly my thoughts too. I'm comforted by the thought that when my time comes, my parents will be there to fetch me
@lindakarlsen4459
@lindakarlsen4459 Ай бұрын
My mum has always told me the story of her father's death. He was on his bed dying and he asked for a drink of water. My grandmother went to the kitchen to get it, when out of nowhere, my grandfather reached out to no one, made the motion of grasping a glass, brought the imaginary glass to his lips and made drinking motions. He said thank you Anna (his wife, my grandmother) and then he put the imaginary glass on his bedside table. He then laid back in his bed and died. I think that is lovely. I will add that I worked in a nursing home nursing mainly dementia patients. I have zero fear of death.
@galacticangel5262
@galacticangel5262 Ай бұрын
That´s so lovely!!!!!
@culturematters4157
@culturematters4157 Ай бұрын
My mother is in Stage 7 of dementia and has been under hospice care for 17 months. She has been confined to a bed for 18 months, sleeps 23 hours a day, has to be spoonfed and is double incontinent. Dementia is a cruel disease, both for the afflicted and their loved ones.
@lauraaustin1998
@lauraaustin1998 Ай бұрын
I am so sorry. God bless and comfort all of you. Courage and strength.
@tammyjoma
@tammyjoma 29 күн бұрын
@@culturematters4157 My mother-in-law is in a stage similar to your mother. She is 99 and in the end stages of dementia. She sleeps continually and is unable to waken for more than a few moments at a time. Mom is almost incapable of opening her eyes and has been in this stage for many months. She has even had Covid twice and survived being in the hospital. (I had an uncanny experience when I started to pray for her and she opened her eyes completely wide for about 3 or 4 minutes!) I do think it is easier for me that I am her daughter-in-law as the family 'caregiver'. Mom has lived in a facility for 11 years now after it became too expensive to adequately care for her needs at home. As a believer in Jesus, I think there is purpose in God allowing Mom to live, even in this advanced stage. Although I could not qualify it and much of it is beyond my understanding, I suspect there is more going on than I perceive and feel certain there is meaning to Mom being alive, even in his state. I think it has much to do with having experienced a tiny bit of the perfect love and nature of God. Heartfelt best wishes to you. ♥️
@leinster22
@leinster22 29 күн бұрын
@@lauraaustin1998 Praying for you
@rubberknees
@rubberknees 29 күн бұрын
So very sad, my father in law just passed with dementia, he had a DNR, so his suffering was not prolonged by feeding tubes and the like.
@tammyjoma
@tammyjoma 29 күн бұрын
@@rubberknees I am so sorry to hear about your mother and father-in-law. I actually made another heartfelt reply, but it didn't get posted for some reason. Something that's amazing with my mother-in-law is that she still gets hungry (shows in her body language) and can still be hand-fed soft food. Mom has also had a long-standing dnr, which I think may become implicit in hospice. Mom has had Alzheimer's for 19 years! On the upper scale in terms of life-expectancy with Alzheimer's for sure, which I understand is about 1 to 20 years.
@dreawelty
@dreawelty 29 күн бұрын
My grandma passed away today. Your videos helped me so much to prepare. Thank you so much
@melkey8317
@melkey8317 Ай бұрын
My great grandmother kept telling me I needed to start supper for my great grandfather. I never got to meet him cause he passed before I was born. I also remember her looking at the doorway from the den to the hall and then looking at me. I asked her what was wrong and she told me "you need to get up and let your mother have that seat" My mother passed in '73 and this was in '89. I honestly think our family members come to help us move on from this realm to the next.
@carlzimmerman4341
@carlzimmerman4341 Ай бұрын
When my wife was in the last weeks of her life she was in ICU and I was asking her if she knew where she was and she said she was at a party at her best friend’s house who had passed away about a year before she seemed very happy. Sadly I sensed my wife would not be with me much longer it was so heartbreaking and still 2 years later I breakdown over losing her.
@SuperMissblueeyes
@SuperMissblueeyes Ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss. Thank you for sharing your story.
@js3617
@js3617 Ай бұрын
I'm sorry for the loss of your wife, the love you share for her sounds wonderful. I'm sure she's looking down on you sending you love and guidance. It's so hard to be left behind but never lose faith that they are with us. Cry when you need to, honor her, continue to love her but also keep living your life with love, happiness and enrichment as tough as it may be at times! Feel the warmth of the sun on your face and think of her love showering and warming you. ❤
@mommom3172
@mommom3172 Ай бұрын
May her memory be a blessing to you. ❤️
@irenewarhol1241
@irenewarhol1241 Ай бұрын
@@carlzimmerman4341 I’m sorry 🙏🏼🙏🏼
@charlottehall5191
@charlottehall5191 Ай бұрын
So sorry for your loss.
@carolbraswell4488
@carolbraswell4488 Ай бұрын
I was a CNA for hospice for many years. I have so many wonderful memories of the patients I cared for! I will never forget them. 95% of patients would see their loved one's and have conversations with them. These stories are the same as mine. I'm retired now, but sure do miss working with hospice. Thank you Julie for making these videos!
@Paulohlsson7
@Paulohlsson7 Ай бұрын
Hi Carol, how's your day going with you?
@Anouke79
@Anouke79 Ай бұрын
He was so sweet calling for his mom. It’s like he was 4 again. He seemed very happy.
@rubytuesday1316
@rubytuesday1316 23 күн бұрын
Outside of the USA people understand spirit. From our loved ones to pets they are with us.
@Nopety-Nope
@Nopety-Nope 2 күн бұрын
​@@rubytuesday1316 Millions inside the US also understand spirit.
@rubytuesday1316
@rubytuesday1316 2 күн бұрын
@@Nopety-Nope Im so happy to read that. I can only hope people outside my highly religious county understand !
@Nopety-Nope
@Nopety-Nope 2 күн бұрын
@@rubytuesday1316 Agreed! We are often drowned out and gaslit for believing in such things, but there are millions of us :-) Glad to see it in other countries as well.
@roberthansen9694
@roberthansen9694 Ай бұрын
I'll tell you a story about a visioning incident that made everyone pause. My Uncle's father and mother in-laws were a very devoted couple. I was very close to them as they were always inviting me over to their home, buying me gifts etc. "Gene" came down with cancer and passed away in 1980. "Olive" passed away in the late 1980's. They always had various ailments and were in and out of the hospital. A few days before she passed Olive told a family friend that "Gene" had come to visit her. She went back to the hospital a couple of days later and was lucid when she suddenly passed away. At the family home they put out old photos of Gene and Olive. Their little grandson, who had never known his grandfather, looked at a photo of his grandfather and remarked that was " the man that had come over to visit his grandmother just before she went to the hospital." What do you make of that?
@GOODGRAYCAT
@GOODGRAYCAT Ай бұрын
WOW! That's BEAUTIFUL!❤
@rubberbiscuit99
@rubberbiscuit99 Ай бұрын
@@roberthansen9694 Children tend to be very open -- much more so than adults.
@ladybelle6771
@ladybelle6771 Ай бұрын
Totally awesome! Thanks for sharing. ❤️
@rhondathomas7952
@rhondathomas7952 Ай бұрын
My niece was two days old when my daddy died. As they laid her on his chest, she raised her little head and looked directly at him. He told me after they took her away the “she looked into my eyes and our souls touched. She will know me”. He died two hours later with a smile on his face and I closed his eyes in death. When my niece was small we would catch her talking to herself but when questioned she would say things like, “ Papa says he missed you mommy, but he’s alright!” “Mommy, don’t be sad, Papa said everything will be alright and he loves you.” She said things like this until she was about 6 then it all stopped. 🥰🙌🏻🙏🏻
@sheRaRa101
@sheRaRa101 Ай бұрын
⁠@@rhondathomas7952wow, that’s amazing! Really beautiful. I’ve heard people who channel angels and other beings that children born since 2012 have heightened abilities. It sure seems like it from the kids I see. They’re really in tune with the other side.
@aidawilson971
@aidawilson971 Ай бұрын
This is so true . My Dad at his hospital bed told us he saw his 3 close friends sitting in the corner who had passed on a few years ago. He said they we’re visiting at him. Then he keep telling my sister its time now repeatedly. My sister didn’t really understand what he was saying, then an hour later 12:30pm my Dad had passed away. We believed his friends are there to take him. We missed him dearly . ❤
@anna-marie1995
@anna-marie1995 Ай бұрын
So sorry for your loss. This is a beautiful story nonetheless ❤️🕊️ Thank you for sharing.
@lisaracanelli8406
@lisaracanelli8406 Ай бұрын
I was with my mum one day before she died and she told me when I arrived that I had missed my dad. He came to visit her and she told him to “take care of the girls - the girls being my sister and I” My father had passed 3 months before her. I am comforted by this. Now they are together. Lisa
@gseytah2002
@gseytah2002 Ай бұрын
I have another story... when I was 3 or 4 I thought had a great grandpa on my grandma's side living with us. His bed was in the living room/dining room area as he was bedridden from arthritis & couldn't walk far to the washroom. 1 day I asked my mom Where's grandpa she said at his home I said no the other grandpa that slept right there I haven't seen him in awhile. She looked very shocked she said he died the spring before you were born. She must've thought I was joking and asked how did he look. I said he had long white hair in a pony tail. And he had trouble walking. She was so shocked & started crying & hugged me.
@virginiakey7137
@virginiakey7137 Ай бұрын
Have you experienced anyone knowing what would happen after they passed. My husband age 66 passed from pancreatic cancer after he had the Whipple surgery. It metastasize to his liver. On Tuesday before he passed on Thursday night, he said four things. One, “It is so blue behind you.” He was looking passed me & our daughter. The room wasn’t blue, the blinds were closed. The second thing he said, “I’m ready to send them to Cullman County.” The third thing he said, “Are you smarter than the fifth grader” We always watched Are You Smarter Than a Fifth on Thursday night. It would end at 9:26. He passed Thursday night at 9:26. The fourth thing he said for the second time. “I’m ready to send them toCullman County.” I knew nothing about this county in my state. Nor had I been there. A year and a helf I moved to Cullman & my daughter move here a year after that. A few month after we moved, it hit me we are in Cullman County. He knew what time he would die & that we would live in Cullman. This is different than seeing people. Hope you can help.
@mysticjen379
@mysticjen379 Ай бұрын
Yes I’ve found as my family members have passed over that they are able to…arrange things for us 😁 Good things though! ❤
@xxfox
@xxfox Ай бұрын
@@virginiakey7137 wow! 🤯 that is so cool, I believe they really do orchestrate some things to help us in our journey.
@lornadoone8887
@lornadoone8887 29 күн бұрын
The veil between heaven and earth often becomes very transparent for those who are soon to traverse it. I believe this is the grace of our loving Creator God in action-to the extent that we and our loved ones are receptive to it.
@scottbenzing1361
@scottbenzing1361 29 күн бұрын
Perhaps he was repeating the Word of the Lord about your next steps.
@F3mal3Titan
@F3mal3Titan 27 күн бұрын
What an interesting story.
@Ccc35712
@Ccc35712 Ай бұрын
My grandma saw her dead relatives within 1-3 months before she passed on and told us all about it. She was lucid and still able to walk around with and without a walker. She passed suddenly in her sleep at the age 95 from old age.
@DMV8662
@DMV8662 Ай бұрын
Exact same with my grandmother only she was 93 and a stroke survivor of 22 years...🙏🏻🙌🏻 She was Lucid and comprehending until 3 months before she passed. She became nonverbal and kept reaching out on the air only able to call Tony, Josie, and her Dad..🙏🏻🙌🏻❤️ She passed peacefully in her sleep Thank God🙏🏻
@Ccc35712
@Ccc35712 Ай бұрын
@@DMV8662 wow 🥰 thank you for sharing your testimony. Blessings to you. 🙏✝️
@DMV8662
@DMV8662 Ай бұрын
@@Ccc35712 God Bless you always!!!🙏🏻🙌🏻❤️. Abundant blessings!!!🙏🏻🙌🏻
@rhondathomas7952
@rhondathomas7952 Ай бұрын
Thank God!
@jasonczfan8658
@jasonczfan8658 Ай бұрын
@@Ccc35712 if you get to pass in your sleep at 95 that means you found favor with God.
@heatherharris3394
@heatherharris3394 12 күн бұрын
I wasn't on any medication or oxygen when I was a child and watched my Grandmother pass. After a very bright flash of light, there was a man in a blue suit poking fun at my older brother. I kept asking about him but given the circumstances, I was hushed and amazed that nobody else realized that he was there!! A few months after my Grandmother's funeral, I found out that the man in the blue suit....was my Grandfather ❤
@Pattycake1974
@Pattycake1974 Күн бұрын
That’s amazing!
@robertehatten4847
@robertehatten4847 Ай бұрын
People came to help him transition. He is on his way home. They are telling him it’s time. Remember, you never die alone.
@aaronjames3228
@aaronjames3228 29 күн бұрын
Yes you do
@elizagoodytwoshoes9140
@elizagoodytwoshoes9140 29 күн бұрын
Very true I've watched this personally, my first partner he knew something was up for weeks and had a visitation one week before he died in an accident. His spirit stayed with me for a month or so. Its important to let them go, my brother also died and spirit woke me the night before and told me, let go there's nothing you can do, my current husband witnessed these events. No one can break my faith ever, it truly is remarkable.
@kimberlybamford1072
@kimberlybamford1072 Ай бұрын
Thank you Julie for all you do for all of us. I’m a caregiver to my wonderful husband. He’s 62 and has dementia. But I’m glad I can still help him and keep him at home with me.
@pegs1659
@pegs1659 Ай бұрын
Awww, he's so young. I'm sorry and I pray you keep the strength.
@kimberlybamford1072
@kimberlybamford1072 Ай бұрын
@@pegs1659 Thank you for the prayers. It means a lot to me.
@lisachiappetti6092
@lisachiappetti6092 Ай бұрын
Ok not to scare you or anything but you won't be able to keep him at home forever. It's probably better that he goes to a nursing home sooner rather than later. Like, sooner than you think type of deal. My grandpa is 90 and he has dementia, and my step grandma took care of him herself for as long as she possibly could, and it was very taxing on both of them. I wouldn't wish that on anyone else. Please, my family and I are begging you to take him to a nursing home before you get exhausted. I know it might be hard, but they'll be able to help him better than you ever could. I'm sure you know this, but as he gets older, it's just gonna get worse. Again, I wouldn't wish what my grandpa and step grandma have been through on anyone
@boething
@boething Ай бұрын
When my mother passed several years ago-on the day she passed-she was staring at the corner. She smiled, and my sister asked her if she was seeing our father and brother who had passed before. She shook her head yes. We believe they came to get her.
@lisasuhr6433
@lisasuhr6433 Ай бұрын
It is so comforting to see this. My parents are quite elderly, but are functioning well, but recently Dad had a very serious illness and we feared for his life. I prayed that he would just make it through so he could die peacefully at home at a later time, so I was watching for any of these signs. Long story short, Dad has made a wonderful recovery! I know, at 91, his time is not long with us, but he’s always been my Superman, so I’ll take any days I get ❤
@pearlsbeforeswine60
@pearlsbeforeswine60 Ай бұрын
I wish the term "bone chilling " had not been used here in the header. It makes visioning sound like a cheap horror movie, when it is, in fact deeply comforting. This clip made me cry.
@cindyhurd5488
@cindyhurd5488 28 күн бұрын
I agree
@eri7-11
@eri7-11 27 күн бұрын
I was fine with it, it drew me in
@pumpkinpuna4087
@pumpkinpuna4087 24 күн бұрын
As long as it's not click bait...I'm good 👍
@montanarose4622
@montanarose4622 17 күн бұрын
There’s no reason that bone-chilling has to be negative in this context. It’s just an intense feeling, seeing something incomprehensible - it *does* chill you to the bone.
@OhPleaseMary
@OhPleaseMary Ай бұрын
My grandfather talked about his Mama visiting for days before he passed - we didn't doubt for a minute that she was there! 💜
@bowtoyoursensei554
@bowtoyoursensei554 Ай бұрын
My 92-year old mother had suffered a stroke and couldn't speak, but she kept reaching and waving with one hand. She definitely was seeing something because she was smiling. The hard rs on the back of my neck stood up, but I knew that whatever she was seeing, comforted her a great deal.
@natto84
@natto84 Ай бұрын
… the what on the back of your neck? 😅
@moyra351
@moyra351 Ай бұрын
Why is this described as chilling? It's beautiful.
@FionaEm
@FionaEm Ай бұрын
One Christmas, my family was gathered at my cousin's house. Suddenly, my 99 year-old grandmother exclaimed, "Ooh! I think I've just seen great-granddad on a white horse!" My aunt bustled in and said that wasn't possible because great-granddad died in 1982 - but I thought grandma's vision was fantastic, because maybe her Dad was waiting for her on the other side. Then, without warning, Grandma turned her head, looked straight at me, and asked, "How's your back?" (I have chronic back problems.) It's like she was switching in and out of different realities. Very, very cool 😍 She died 5 months later.
@mscrisvee
@mscrisvee Ай бұрын
My grandfathers visioning was being “fed” just hours before he passed. He would open his mouth and begin “chewing” and whatever he was “eating” must have been so delicious because he had a look of enjoyment and happiness on his face (although his eyes were closed). Seeing this made me wonder who was feeding him and what he was “eating”? This experience was comforting and gave me peace to know he was being greeted with food and joy. He was 92 when he passed.
@archiemustachie3693
@archiemustachie3693 Ай бұрын
My dad too. He was "eating", like lifting a fork to his mouth and chewing. He also drank a cup of (invisible) tea. When I asked him if it was nice he nodded and smiled. (He hadn't been able to eat or drink for a few days by then)
@deannastone8313
@deannastone8313 Ай бұрын
Nurse Julie is our Earth Angel. We appreciate you so much. Thank you because I no longer fear the inevitable. Also, Julie, I feel your advice has helped alleviate some of the suffering. I can't say how grateful I feel.
@Murrrrrrp
@Murrrrrrp Ай бұрын
My grandmother was in a nursing home. We lived states apart and I had hadn’t spoken to her in a long time due to messy family. I finally found her and called to speak with her. She was so happy to hear from me. Shortly after I spoke to her (a day or so), she told the night staff that she didn’t want to wear her pajamas. She told them that she wanted to wear her dress clothes because she was going in a journey. She died that night. I’m so grateful that I got to talk to her before her journey. It’s always given me comfort that she was excited for it.
@LynneC44
@LynneC44 29 күн бұрын
My nana wanted to get dressed up too, right before she passed! She also asked for vanilla ice cream. She had not eaten in days...so wonderful that she wanted to enjoy that ice cream "one more time"...
@Murrrrrrp
@Murrrrrrp 27 күн бұрын
@@LynneC44 Oh gosh, that’s so cute!
@ruthyost8912
@ruthyost8912 26 күн бұрын
My dad was 85 years old and dying from lung cancer. On a Saturday morning in early June, 1999, he called me and said “I'm hungry, I want you to fry me a steak and some green tomatoes”. I was shocked, he hadn't eaten anything for days. He was sitting up in a kitchen chair when I got there. He talked and laughed and ate the good, after which he said “well sis, that’s the last time you have to cook for me. It was good”. He laid back on the sofa and drifted off. The next Tuesdsy, 3 days later, he came to and was reaching his hands upward. He said “oh look. See the cardinals? They are right here, so pretty,” then he passed. I miss him so much every day of my life 😢
@tylahoc9271
@tylahoc9271 Ай бұрын
My mum called for her mum aswell as she was dying. She also sat there, cradling a baby and whispered to me that the baby was so beautiful and she sat there rocking it- I had had a miscarriage ❤
@Motherofthedead
@Motherofthedead Ай бұрын
Awww. He sees his mother. What a peaceful way to leave this world and with his momma!
@anythingandeverythingABCLife
@anythingandeverythingABCLife Ай бұрын
he said mommy, which is even sweeter
@paulbreen8533
@paulbreen8533 Ай бұрын
Made me chuckle, he looks so happy to see his mom again.
@lauraaustin1998
@lauraaustin1998 Ай бұрын
It is quite heartwarming, isn't it.
@meganl.5650
@meganl.5650 Ай бұрын
One of my grandmother's sisters was on her deathbed and appeared to have already "crossed over." She was talking to someone, asking what this person was "doing there," finally calling him by name. It was a brother-in-law of hers who had passed recently but no one had told her so not to upset her. ❤
@ashleymatney6078
@ashleymatney6078 Ай бұрын
Prior hospice nurse here :) Not only have I witnessed this with many patients; I witnessed this with my own mother, around 3 months before she passed. She would tell me to hurry and set the table for her sister, brother, and mom. She would talk to them as if they were right in front of her and tell them that ‘Ashley will set the table for dinner’. It was so real to her. Problem was, they had already passed away years prior. But to her, it was very real. This happened countless times. She was always so happy and smiling. She would even go as far as to say ‘look how beautiful they look today’. Thanks for another great video
@nicolegreen3317
@nicolegreen3317 Ай бұрын
When my grandmother was dying she told the family gathered around her that my deceased grandfather was there. "John! It's John... and he has two little boys with him." They had twin boys who died in infancy, and the family likes to think that they were there with their father to greet her. Death bed visioning of this sort seems to be a comfort both to the dying and to those around them.
@map3364
@map3364 8 күн бұрын
@@nicolegreen3317 of course they were there. How beautiful
@exhibitdesign901
@exhibitdesign901 Ай бұрын
Thank you Julie! I think it is also a nice thing to remind caregivers is to not argue with the person, just let them have their visions.
@cinnamongmc5430
@cinnamongmc5430 26 күн бұрын
I watched my mom do that. She called to her closest sister, "Mayme, Mayme, here take my hand, help me cross over." I was so blessed to be there, laying on the bed with her. When I heard a word from God Almighty on Thursday evening. "Spend the night with your mother Friday night because I am bringing her to myself." Me and two sisters, spent Friday night with mom. Singing, praying, and telling her stories of the things we did when we were young (you know being mischievous) that we thought she didn't know. Mom said, "I know what you all did." Low and behold, early Saturday morning as the sun was rising, I raised up and instinctively looked at the wall, it was snowing, the bed was facing the window. On the wall at the head of the bed, sparkles were on the wall. The sun was shining through the snowflakes. I told the oldest sister there, "Charlotte, look!" And she said, " Hot damn, she teleported." Then KNEW, our Heavenly Father, sent His angel to receive my mother's spirit. I then knew that God Almighty had answered my prayer, which was. "Father God, if you do not do anything else for me, I want to be there when your angel comes to usher my mother's spirit into the great beyond." Almighty God, our heavenly Father did It!!! No fear when you're IN Christ Jesus. Charlotte believes in "new age" stuff. Even to this day, I'm praying and believing for her to receive Christ before it's too late. Thank you to those who read this long comment. The Word of God is True.
@theotherme4120
@theotherme4120 26 күн бұрын
Jesus is God in human form come to save His creation from sin and death! That is GOOD NEWS!
@CaraFay-bf8jk
@CaraFay-bf8jk 4 күн бұрын
What a beautiful experience! I am so glad for you and your mom that you were there!
@pragmaticcat7619
@pragmaticcat7619 Күн бұрын
You really shouldn't judge others for their spiritual beliefs. Perhaps they are right and you are wrong.
@YcatsMartinez
@YcatsMartinez Ай бұрын
I love this. I wish I’d had a camera at the ready when I watched my father visioning. The smile on his face….it was brilliant….I’ll never forget it.
@murphyville
@murphyville Ай бұрын
Before my grandma passed her sisters came to her in a dream. They were telling her to come on. She woke up cursing them out, saying she would go when she is ready! My grandma was always mean lol
@kateashby3066
@kateashby3066 Ай бұрын
Lmao this is really funny, not what I was expecting 😂.
@freddie6307
@freddie6307 Ай бұрын
@murphyville truly sisters to the end and beyond ❤️
@anythingandeverythingABCLife
@anythingandeverythingABCLife Ай бұрын
were her sisters mean?
@murphyville
@murphyville Ай бұрын
@@anythingandeverythingABCLife to me they were sweet. They probably fought like sisters, but my grandmother loved her sisters so much. She spent hours on the phone with them!
@murphyville
@murphyville Ай бұрын
@@kateashby3066 my granny was a trip! She woke up and was like “Cynt, that b-word, telling me to come on! I’ll come when I am good and ready!”
@paulstein7369
@paulstein7369 Ай бұрын
My father saw my mother & our dogs that had passed. Our dogs moved out of the way of the spirit dogs so dad could pet them. Dad passed 1/2 hour later. I wouldn't have been there but the keys to all of my vehicles dropped into the hospice nurses purse. She found them & came back 1 minute before dad passed.😇
@pegs1659
@pegs1659 Ай бұрын
Oh wow!
@GOODGRAYCAT
@GOODGRAYCAT Ай бұрын
That happened for a Reason!❤
@davidqueen8638
@davidqueen8638 23 күн бұрын
I just wanted to pop in to say I can’t thank you enough for helping me grieve with the loss of my grandmother. Although I’m a Nurse Practitioner and have seen patients pass in the hospital setting, I was somewhat unprepared to witness the natural dying process at home with a loved one. My grandmother was calling my dad her “papa” a week before she passed while completely alert and baseline oriented. Your videos helped me during those last few days realize that what I was witnessing was normal and that my grandmother was comfortable. I am 3 weeks out from the loss and am in a much better place than I would be if I hadn’t seen your videos. They are profoundly educational and most definitely needed. Keep up the good work! ❤
@AshGreen359
@AshGreen359 Ай бұрын
I had a hospice case who was an old WW2 vet. He and his two brothers all served in the war. He didn't have any children of his own but his nieces and nephews were in and out of there. One day he sat up in astonishment and called out "Johnny" turns out it's his brother who had already passed and it was extra emotional because his niece was there and it was her father he was seeing. He waited for everyone to leave before he passed.
@kandyhoward1678
@kandyhoward1678 Ай бұрын
My mother-in-law was staying with us when she got sick and went into hospice care. Her great nephew's wedding was taking place around this time and she was aware of the timing. She did not want her passing to cause a problem for family members who needed to be out of state for the wedding. A few days before she passed, I was sitting next to her bed and she was having a conversation with someone in the room that I could not see. She was explaining to them why she couldn't go yet and adamantly told them "I don't want to do it your way, I want to do it my way!" She passed very peacefully a few days later.
@minigirl6839
@minigirl6839 Ай бұрын
My niece kept looking up at the ceiling in the corner of the room. She would shake her head back and forth and say, " No, go away." After a couple of days of her doing that, I decided to ask her who she was talking to. She said, " I don't know they are. They're weird, and they don't have any legs. They keep telling me it's time to go. I'm not ready to go. " I told her it was ok to go, that we love her, we'd miss her and see her again someday. I went down to the chapel to pray . When I got back. I held her hand, and she silently slipped away a few minutes later. I think she was seeing angels.
@Clo87650
@Clo87650 Ай бұрын
I truly believe in the knowing. My father randomly skipped work and kept us out of school one day that was completely not him. We spent the day at the river as a family. Once home that evening he left to the store. Died of a heart attack a mile from the house. He was 32 born with arrhythmia. I think he knew that was his last day.
@randompixels6237
@randompixels6237 Ай бұрын
I saw my mother go from paralyzed frozen staring where her eyes landed, to a beaming beautiful smile looking up like she was in wonder amazement as she passed. I was happy for her.
@cassandrapua5970
@cassandrapua5970 Ай бұрын
My mom saw my dad before she passed which brought us peace.😊❤
@faylinameir
@faylinameir Ай бұрын
My great grandma was dreaming off his deceased family members and maybe seeing them (I don't know) for about a week before she died. She had dementia badly and the night before she passed we "argued" over who loved each other more. When I told her I'd see her in the morning she said I hope so. She knew. for some reason I felt the strong urge to check on her at 3am and she wasn't responsive. Got the emergency hospice care nurse in and she kept her comfortable for the next 13 hours. It was peaceful and I was able to get most of her family there (My mom is trash but that's another story). She never talked again after our conversation but I know she heard us. I held her hand until well after he pulse stopped. 8 years later I named my rainbow baby after her. She's been gone 13 years now and I miss her daily. She raised me like my mother.
@ne1124
@ne1124 Ай бұрын
My mother passed away of a GBM stage 4 brain tumor in 2007. Before she passes, she was engaged in conversations with my father who had passed away in 2005. It is interesting to experience this happening in real time. My sister, who cared for mom my full-time (God Bless her), experienced this and told me about it. When I flew home to see my mom, and watched it happen, I looked at my sister, and she nodded her head “yes”. As in, this is what I was telling you. I’m glad my dad was there to bring peace and joy to my mom during her final months.
@carriehunt6196
@carriehunt6196 16 күн бұрын
At first when he was speaking I thought he sounds just like a little boy calling out to his mom. This is so beautiful! Thank you so much for sharing it with us. 💗
@margaretthatcher6828
@margaretthatcher6828 Ай бұрын
My Dad saw a woman holding back buffalo. We live by Yellowstone so this makes sense...he loved nature and the park. He was worried about them ruining the roof. I told him the roof was fine and the buffalo were beautiful. He saw this several times. Thanks for this vid.
@xxfox
@xxfox Ай бұрын
@@margaretthatcher6828 it sounds like he was in and out of both realms…. The woman with the buffalo and then worrying about the roof. So amazing. 🥲
@lisachiappetti6092
@lisachiappetti6092 Ай бұрын
This sounds native American to me. Did he have any native ancestry that you know of?
@margaretthatcher6828
@margaretthatcher6828 Ай бұрын
@@lisachiappetti6092 No he was from Norway. lol. It does sound Native...but no.
@Anamika_M30
@Anamika_M30 Ай бұрын
In Indian mythology, the God of death rides a buffalo
@kimberlybamford1072
@kimberlybamford1072 Ай бұрын
I’m glad he was seeing his momma. I’m sure that comforted him very much. God bless him.
@Agaettis
@Agaettis Ай бұрын
Videos like this give me so much comfort. My dad was in a coma when he passed but i really hope he got to see his dad before he passed
@chrisgattman4975
@chrisgattman4975 Ай бұрын
My mother died of severe dementia. She could not remember any of her family including my father who passed years before her. On her last night in the hospital she got excited and set up in bed and with a smile she started pointing out the people she loved and had remembered their names. So weird!
@mysticalrosemary4661
@mysticalrosemary4661 29 күн бұрын
Terminal lucidity.
@s.engelsman4521
@s.engelsman4521 28 күн бұрын
​@mysticalrosemary4661 And a real event.
@mysticalrosemary4661
@mysticalrosemary4661 27 күн бұрын
@@s.engelsman4521 Thank you for sharing!
@charthers8903
@charthers8903 Ай бұрын
It’s so comforting he saw her , I wish I could see my mom again
@margaretthatcher6828
@margaretthatcher6828 Ай бұрын
Same here...I miss my mom and dad so much.
@UntangledTreasures
@UntangledTreasures Ай бұрын
Me too! There isn’t a day since May 7th 2011 (day before Mother’ Day) that I don’t miss my Mom and wish I could be with her again.
@bobbibuttons8730
@bobbibuttons8730 Ай бұрын
@@charthers8903 I am the same, every day since she passed on Sept 25th 2011 I have wished I could see her again. It’s a real ache in my heart. I miss my dad too but there is something about a daughter and Mother love.
@Croneposse429
@Croneposse429 Ай бұрын
I also miss my Mom so much, even though our relationship was complicated. When I laugh sometimes I hear her laugh.😢
@mayaaniccha3290
@mayaaniccha3290 Ай бұрын
Yes me too. Just one more hug
@tonybraines7172
@tonybraines7172 Ай бұрын
I think this is where the veil between the world of spirit and this mortal coil starts to thin. Bless you Julie ❤
@kersaninoz
@kersaninoz Ай бұрын
When I hear of someone passing away I imagine the reunion parties going on up in heaven and it comforts me. Imagine seeing your parents/family/friends that you have not seen for many many years once again.
@enigamilennon8088
@enigamilennon8088 Ай бұрын
My mom passed away in December. A week prior to her passing, she was hospitalized. The day before she left the hospital, I was sitting with her and she was staring at the hospital wall, fascinated. When I asked her what she was looking at, she said she was watching the fog and clouds. As a witness, you can tell. She was seeing something real. She looked lighter, happier, and so alive.
@heatherk5567
@heatherk5567 Ай бұрын
I know it's different but I was in a medically induced coma, I was not expected to make it out. Doctors told my kids to bring family. Not only could I tell you what was going on around me, I also met my Grandfather who dies when my Mom was 3.
@pegs1659
@pegs1659 Ай бұрын
Thats so cool.
@andreasalmonson7295
@andreasalmonson7295 Ай бұрын
My dad was 86 when he passed away in 2011. I was with him the night before he passed (at the hospital). Everyone else had already left the hospital as he was sitting up, lucid, talking clearly and ate a full meal. He even got up to brush his teeth! So there dad and I were, he was in the bed and I was sitting on the bed holding his hand. We were having a great conversation and all of a sudden he sat up and was pointing to the corner of the room saying “Arthur, Arthur, do you see my brother Arthur (to me). My dad lived the last 30 years of his life mourning his favorite brother Arthur. Uncle Arthur was out in the ocean salmon fishing with another one of his brothers when suddenly he had a massive heart attack. He was only 56. I have to believe that dad actually did see him because dad’s face lit up with so much excitement seeing his brother Arthur that night. When I left around 10 pm, we had a call at 6:00 am the next morning that the family should come in soon. We all did and he passed away at exactly 6:00 PM that night♥️🙏🏻😢
@louiseanderson1505
@louiseanderson1505 Ай бұрын
Beautiful ❤️
@rayluna7032
@rayluna7032 19 күн бұрын
My Dad passed away in July 2023 and in his final days; he was seeing and talking to loved ones and friends. Really amazing 🙏
@AvocadoesALLDay
@AvocadoesALLDay Ай бұрын
Bless his heart! calling his Mama. he's been waiting years to see her.
@renegadetherapist5664
@renegadetherapist5664 Ай бұрын
My dad saw his mother a couple of weeks before he passed. My mom passed two years later, and she was talking about her sisters and mother, who were already gone, coming to see her too. This is not brain anomalies or lack of oxygen. It's real.
@lucius4556
@lucius4556 Ай бұрын
I used to visit an old neighbour in a nursing home, she told me she had a pact with her husband that whoever died first would come back for the other when they died. I went to visit her one morning but she had died unexpectedly a couple of hours previous. The nurse asked me if I would like to see her and I felt obliged to, she pulled back the sheet and my neighbour had the biggest smile on her face, her eyes were half open and made me jump as she didn't even look dead, I guessed her smile was the joy of seeing her beloved husband comming back for her
@reddawn8230
@reddawn8230 26 күн бұрын
@@lucius4556my father had a smile after his passing, too.
@lucius4556
@lucius4556 26 күн бұрын
@@reddawn8230 Thats nice, it's quite lovely to see.
@kreh1100
@kreh1100 Ай бұрын
My dad saw my Mom standing by the front door shortly before he passed and I believe he did. Thank you Julie ❤❤❤
@carolejackson7044
@carolejackson7044 29 күн бұрын
This just brought me to tears, I lost my mom as a child, although I don’t want to leave the people that I love here… I can’t wait to see my parents ..especially my mom again🙏🏻❤️
@lisatingley8953
@lisatingley8953 Ай бұрын
I want to do something in hospice. I’m a retired 58 year old who worked for CHP for 25 years. I lived with my grandad for 3 years when he was 97 to 100. He paid for a great friend to stay with him while I worked 12 hour shifts. I took care of him from 5 pm to 7 am everyday. Other family would take weekends when I needed them. What sort of training might I get (short training) where I could help for in home care. I love your book. I loved hospice at my grandads end of life. I sat and slept in his room the last 2 to 3 weeks of his life reading, singing,talking to him. He waited til I left the room to get a plate of food to take his last breath. He was and always will be my greatest hero. Everyone came to see him in those last few weeks. We were a family prepared. Both of my sisters were highway patrolman and I was a dispatcher, so we thrive in chaotic or stressful situations well. Do you have any suggestions of certifications or short term schooling to help me apply for a job, internship?? Any suggestions would be great!! Love your videos. Love your book. God blessing to you and your family 🙏❤️🇺🇸
@julie9528
@julie9528 Ай бұрын
My Dad kept looking to the same corner of the room and smiling and acknowledging as if people were there.
@pennyp7382
@pennyp7382 Ай бұрын
I've seen it too many times to deny it. My Mom said as she reached up with a happy look on her face...she said "Mom! Aunt Joanie! Lisa!" All very close family to her who passed to the other side of the veil. ❤
@kellyj.azania4371
@kellyj.azania4371 Ай бұрын
My Granny saw angels...a lot of them. The eve of her passing, she suddenly sat up in her bed and asked me if I could see "them". I was seated next to her...she'd been in and out of sleep for most of that day. I asked her, "Who, Granny?" She replied, "All those angels!" I got the distinct impression that she was in awe AND astonished. I told her that I couldn't see them but I believed she was seeing them. The next morning, she passed. I wasn't with her when she passed. I received the call from the hospice nurse. When I got to the hospital, they'd not begun to prepare her body. Honestly, she just looked like she was asleep. As a matter of fact, a different hospice nurse came in to check on her. She wasn't told she'd passed (it's South Florida...communication gaps are a common thing). Anyway, the nurse also thought she was asleep. My Granny had a look of peace on her face, as if she were experiencing a nice dream.
@charlesvandenburgh5295
@charlesvandenburgh5295 Ай бұрын
My father, who worked on boats most of his life and loved the water, said to me that he saw seagulls against a blue sky about a week before his death. I have no doubt from his voice and facial expression that it was very real to him. It gave me a good feeling since I knew those images meant so much to him. The night he passed away and I was at his bedside, I got this very strong image in my mind of him walking away as if into a fog and knowing he would never turn around, ever. It was a truly uncanny and vivid feeling and sensation. It was like I was coming to the end of a chapter in my life and left me with deep sadness for some time before the happier memories of my father returned.
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