A woman who was pronounced dead for 14 minutes describes what the afterlife was like, claiming she spent 'five years' there.
Dr Lynda Cramer was making her way to the toilet when she suddenly died in the early hours of the morning on May 6, 2001.
But this wasn't the end of her story, as she experienced something she claims was the afterlife, as paramedics successfully fought to save her life.
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Despite being dead for 14 minutes, Lynda described her time on the other side seemed to feel like it last for around five years.
Once resuscitated, she explained what she had seen and recalled it for viewers in an interview on the NDE (Near Death Experiences) Diary on Youtube.
She claimed to have floated above the medics who were working to bring her back to life, before she explored the 'afterlife', which could have taken any form of her choosing.
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She claimed to have seen a number of striking sights which would never have been seen on earth.
Recounting the bizarre situation, she said: "That's when I found myself standing in what I termed the the field of flowers.
"I was observing the mountain range 30,000 times huger than Mount Everest.
"There's a huge mountain range over in the back of wherever I was.
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"I could see buildings with skyscrapers.
"Dubai are like little miniature huts in comparison.
"I saw lakes, I could see everything in a panoramic view."
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"So I'm there interacting with people, talking to people, becoming them."
Lynda also said that she feels very 'blessed' to have experienced this, and wants to tell people on earth how much love there really is in heaven.
She added that our 'angels' are constantly around us, which she thought may be comforting to people as life gets 'harder'.
In the video description, NDE explained the phenomenon that Lynda may have experienced.
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It wrote: "Some People dismiss near death experiences (NDE) as dreams or the hallucinations of a dying brain, people generally do not have the same kinds of hallucinations.
"In contrast, the descriptions of near-death experiences are remarkably consistent across culture and time."
Despite the corroboration between different people who have experienced similar things, neuroscientific research suggests it is in fact a 'disturbed bodily multisensory integration', as a result of being in a life-threatening situation.