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September 8, 1999: Near Death Experiences - Betty Eadie | Canadian Crop Circles - Linda Moulton Howe
Published 1 year, 8 months ago
Description
Art Bell begins with Linda Moulton Howe reporting on a wave of Canadian crop formations discovered during the summer of 1999. Farmer Clint King describes finding wheat stems intricately braided and woven in a 300-foot pictogram near Hagersville, Ontario, while a neighbor reports observing a large red glowing object moving above the tree line near the field. In Saskatchewan, farmer David Robertson recounts discovering 11 circles while swathing wheat, noting perfectly bent stalks with undisturbed soil.
Betty Eadie then joins to discuss her near-death experience and new book The Ripple Effect. She describes dying from a hemorrhage after surgery in 1973, leaving her body through her chest, and traveling to her home where she observed her husband and children in specific detail later verified as accurate. She recounts passing through a darkness filled with overwhelming love before following a pinpoint of light, encountering beings in brown robes, and undergoing a life review revealing that simple acts of kindness carried far greater spiritual weight than grand gestures.
Eadie addresses the nature of God, hell, and reincarnation, explaining that hell exists as a state of mind rather than a physical place, and that cellular memory accounts for past-life recall. She emphasizes that no single religious path holds exclusive truth and that the fundamental nature of existence is love without conditions.
Betty Eadie then joins to discuss her near-death experience and new book The Ripple Effect. She describes dying from a hemorrhage after surgery in 1973, leaving her body through her chest, and traveling to her home where she observed her husband and children in specific detail later verified as accurate. She recounts passing through a darkness filled with overwhelming love before following a pinpoint of light, encountering beings in brown robes, and undergoing a life review revealing that simple acts of kindness carried far greater spiritual weight than grand gestures.
Eadie addresses the nature of God, hell, and reincarnation, explaining that hell exists as a state of mind rather than a physical place, and that cellular memory accounts for past-life recall. She emphasizes that no single religious path holds exclusive truth and that the fundamental nature of existence is love without conditions.