Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Near death, seeing dead people may be neither rare nor eerie

-

PITTSBURGH (AP) » Beth Roncevich’s father was in his last few days of life, lying in bed in his Indiana Township home with her and her mother somberly by his side.

Though his eyes were closed while terminally ill from lung disease on that day four years ago, laughter unexpected­ly emerged from Albin Langus.

“I said ‘Dad, what are you laughing at?’ He said, ‘Oh, we’re all together.’”

The bewildered Roncevich and her mother wondered who and what he was seeing. He was even giggling.

“He said, ‘Everybody’s together and we’re all just having a wonderful time. We’re having so much fun’ ... and those were the last words he spoke,” she recounted last week between her visits to patients of UPMC Family Hospice and Palliative Care. “I said to my mom, ‘What more could we ask for than that?’ Wherever he was going, he was in a good place and happy.”

Her father’s sense of a final party with whoever it was — she’s still not sure who — occurred shortly before Roncevich became a hospice nurse. In that field, she’s become accustomed to hearing of such positive encounters from her patients — or from their relatives who describe what the patients told them.

In particular, say she and others who work with the dying, individual­s might report a vision, hallucinat­ion or dream of someone who preceded them in death. It is often a long-lost loved one — mothers are most common, but fathers, siblings, grandparen­ts and even pets also frequently show up, seemingly welcoming them to whatever lies next.

“It’s always a calming experience. I have never come across an experience that it was scary,” said Roncevich, 48. “Another thing they experience is that, even in an unconsciou­s state, their arms will lift up as though taking someone’s else’s hand, and their mouths will move as though speaking to someone.”

To skeptics, such descriptio­ns could verge on the paranormal — the type of other-worldly experience­s that make for supernatur­al thrillers in film or literature. Or they might wonder if patients are delirious from pain or medication and thus babbling in confusion.

But that is not what is described in research that was published in 2014, based on interviews with patients at The Center for Hospice & Palliative Care, located in a Buffalo, N.Y., suburb. The patients were interviewe­d about dreams they had while asleep, visions they had while awake and things they saw or sensed while in the blurry state between sleep and wakefulnes­s that is common during final days and weeks.

Of 63 patients in the analysis, 52 reported a dream or vision — and the dreams typically would be different from those of the general population with their everyday experience­s and anxieties.

“As we approach death, dreams increase dramatical­ly in frequency, and the dreams increasing most frequently have to do with the deceased — the loved ones who have passed,” said Christophe­r Kerr, CEO of The Center for Hospice & Palliative Care.

Of participan­ts in that study, more than half the time they were reported to be either awake or a combinatio­n of asleep and awake during their experience­s. In about three-fifths of cases, there was a theme of preparing to go somewhere. In fewer than one of five instances, the patient reported distress from the dream or vision.

“There’s almost like this built-in mechanism of serenity or safety, and the fear of death kind of diminishes,” said Dr. Kerr, who was involved in the research, which is being updated and broadened, and in plans for a book and film documentar­y, “Death is But a Dream,” tied to such end-of-life experience­s.

Among those who feel positive, Dr. Kerr said, “the predominan­t themes are of love and forgivenes­s.” He noted, however, that individual­s are often reluctant to volunteer informatio­n until told that what they’ve experience­d is normal among the dying. One reason the phenomenon may not be widely known is dying people — or their family members — fear the perception­s of their mental state if they discuss it.

In a 2015 Ted Talk, Dr. Kerr explained his own awakening to the topic as a relatively new doctor of hospice patients in 1999. He advised a nurse that a terminally ill patient still had quality time ahead if given IV antibiotic­s and other fluids. When the experience­d nurse, Nancy, suggested otherwise, he asked why.

“She said, ‘Because he’s seeing his deceased mother.’” Dr. Kerr related. “What Nancy knew was Tom’s endof-life experience­s had meaning. They were significan­t.”

Local nurses in the field, besides Roncevich, have had similar realizatio­ns about a phenomenon that has been referred to by different names: end-of-life experience­s, death bed visions, death-related sensory experience­s and more.

Katie Hayes, also with UPMC Family Hospice and Palliative Care, recalled an elderly woman terminally ill with heart disease whom she got to know well over a period of months.

“One day I went to her, and she was in bed. I sat down, and she said, ‘Katie, you’ll never believe what I saw last night. I saw all of my loved ones who have passed on before me. My mother, husband, sister — they were all standing right at the foot of my bed.’

“I said, ‘Wow, that is amazing,’” Hayes recalled, “and the next day she passed.”

She and others said the more comfortabl­e and familiar patients get with hospice staff, the more likely it seems they are willing to bring up such experience­s. Sightings of angels are also a common theme, which perhaps occurs more often with those who are religious.

“I’ve seen patients sit there and have a conversati­on in front of me with someone I couldn’t see,” said Melissa Brestensky, a nurse in the Cabot Inpatient Unit of Good Samaritan Hospice in Butler County. “I had one particular patient — it was hours later she passed away — she was describing the angels out in the hallway, saying, ‘Look at how beautiful they are, they’re in beautiful white gowns.’ “

David Kessler, a Los Angeles writer who has worked in hospice care, interviewe­d doctors, nurses, social workers, clergy and others to learn what terminally ill patients had told them about seeing those who had preceded them in death. It led to his 2010 book, “Visions, Trips and Crowded Rooms: Who and What You See Before You Die.”

“I thought the book would have more credibilit­y if it relied on profession­als,” Kessler explained recently, while noting his own dying father had an experience seeing his late wife, which calmed him.

“It should be in the mainstream a little more, so if you’re sitting there with your mom, and she says, ‘Grandma’s here,’ I wouldn’t want you to say, ‘Grandma died, you’re crazy,’ “Kessler said. “Maybe she’s hallucinat­ing, and maybe she’s not.”

What people make of such encounters will vary by individual, naturally, based on their views of the afterlife or other factors.

Darin Martin, 58, of Penn Hills, told of her late husband, Steve, having sightings that made him smile some weeks before his death from cancer in August 2017. First, he saw his youngest brother, who had died in 1980, sitting on the couch with them. Later, he made sure she and he stepped out of the way of their Great Dane, Czar, who he imagined passing by them in their hallway though he had died four years earlier.

 ?? STEPHANIE STRASBURG/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP ?? Beth Roncevich, 48, a nurse for UPMC Family Hospice and Palliative Care, is reflected in a mirror through a glass door at her home in Cheswick, Pa. Roncevich says she has had experience­s with patients and her own father where they described to her...
STEPHANIE STRASBURG/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE VIA AP Beth Roncevich, 48, a nurse for UPMC Family Hospice and Palliative Care, is reflected in a mirror through a glass door at her home in Cheswick, Pa. Roncevich says she has had experience­s with patients and her own father where they described to her...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States