I promise you this isn’t a morbid post. Honestly.
Have you ever thought about what happens when you die? I hadn’t thought about it until it happened to me – twice.
I mean I literally died. That’s not to be confused with the teenager who, “like ohmygod like totes literally died” when their favourite band split.
Obviously I was resuscitated, so my story continues.
I’ve spoken to tens of thousands of people over the years in large group presentations and one-on-one. There are always a multitude of questions but one of the most frequent is, “What did it feel like when you died?” Or words to that effect.
At this point I should probably go back and explain a little of what happened.
In 2005 a rare form of the Streptococcus-A virus caused my brain to haemorrhage. I was a fit and healthy 24 years old with a successful corporate career.
One by one, all of my organs shut down and I was put in a coma for three weeks. Two heart attacks, collapsed lungs and other things that I can’t even pronounce (like Disseminated intravascular coagulation – DIC) meant that machines kept me alive for two months.
The head of the largest intensive care unit in the southern hemisphere said that I was “by far and away the sickest person there.”
Hospital staff prepared my family for the worse, warning them that my life support may have to be turned off if they couldn’t find a brain signal. Either that or I would awaken as a “vegetable” and not recognise anyone.
I only know all of this because of detailed recounts from family and a seemingly endless stream of hospital paperwork.
The truth is I don’t remember anything that happened. Zip. Zero. Zilch.
I have roughly six months of amnesia (memory loss) from both before and after my brain haemorrhaged.