"After-Death
Contacts are Real"
by Dr. Mark Pitstick
It's been seven
weeks since my beloved Dad passed on. The
evidence from "Soul Proof" continues to
supplant my faith and has greatly eased the
sadness surrounding his death. There is no
doubt that he is alive and well in spiritual
dimensions and that I will see him again
someday. For all that, I am very thankful.
Dad has already made
his presence known several times since he
crossed over. These after-death contacts
are a fascinating
category of evidence
that humans survive bodily death.
The term ADC
describes contact with a "deceased" person
who is in a nonphysical dimension. Such
reports used to be considered weird and most
people did not share them for fear of being
considered crazy. Now more people are
openly sharing these surprisingly common
experiences. After-death contacts have
been reported by 25% of
Americans, 66% of widows, and 75% of parents
whose children have passed over.
Here are two documented
ADCs experienced by esteemed physicians:
In Love, Medicine, and
Miracles, Bernie Siegel, M.D., shares an
evidential case involving Bill, a physician
with esophageal
cancer. He had joined
an Exceptional Cancer Patient group but was
quiet and distant.
Says Siegel:
"Three months after
Bill had died of his cancer, a young college
student came to my office to interview me.
She said she'd been in a healing circle the
night before, and since they knew she was
going to see me the next day, the medium who
was directing the circle had asked if there
was any message for me. She handed me
a card: 'To Bernie from
Bill with love and peace. If I had known it
was this easy, I'd have bought the package a
long time ago and wouldn't have resisted so
much.'
When I called his wife,
she said, 'That's what he always told me
after the meetings. He would attend, but he
said he couldn't buy the package.' . . . The
people in the healing circle knew nothing
about who Bill was, yet there was the same
phrase he and his wife used. 'Love and
peace' is the closing I use for all my
letters. Who else could this note be from?
How can I help but believe and share this
belief with others?"
As reported by Raymond
Moody, M.D., Ph.D., in "Reunions", Elisabeth
Kubler-Ross, M.D., had an evidentiary
encounter with a deceased patient. She was
walking in the hallway toward her office one
day and noticed a woman standing in the
corridor.
They began talking
and Dr. Kubler-Ross led the woman into her
office. After a while, she said with
considerable amazement
'I know you!' and
recognized the woman as 'Mrs. Schwartz,' a
patient who had died several months
earlier. Mrs. Schwartz
acknowledged her
identity and the two talked for some period
of time. In an attempt to obtain verifiable
evidence of the
visit, Dr. Kubler-Ross
asked the woman to write a note to her
minister. Afterwards, analysis of the
handwriting matched samples written before
she passed over.