In our time, no one will be surprised by the statement about the possibility of telepathic communication between people. According to scientific studies, this connection becomes especially strong at critical moments in the lives of people who are related by family ties, in particular at the moments of birth and death.
In one Moscow maternity hospital, an experiment was carried out, the purpose of which was to establish the possibility of telepathic communication between mother and child. During the experiment, mothers were in one wing of the hospital and newborns were in the other. Mothers could not hear their babies crying and did not know when the doctor was examining them. But when the baby cried while the blood was being taken, the mother showed clear signs of anxiety.
The telepathic connection of children and parents is carried out with special force at the moment of transition of one of them to another world. So, the famous psychic Ingo Swann once walked down the street. Suddenly, without any reason, he suddenly felt a sharp pain in the left side of his head and severe weakness. He fell and, tearing his trousers on the asphalt, tore off the skin on his left knee.
“I was not unconscious,” he later recalled, “but I was in severe half-unconsciousness, like a drunk. When I came to my senses, I decided that one of my relatives had died. But I couldn't figure out who it was. Since my grandmother was the oldest in the family, I naturally thought that she was the one who died."
However, a few hours later, Swann received a call from another city where his father lived, and was informed that his father had died of a stroke. Subsequently, Swann learned from relatives that the stroke occurred in the left hemisphere of his father's brain, in the same place where the psychic felt a sharp pain. Moreover, when falling as a result of loss of consciousness, Swann's father severely injured his left knee, the same happened with Ingo Swann.
No less interesting cases of a mysterious connection between people are cited by Dr. Moody and other foreign researchers. A dramatic case of the transmission of a painful condition from one close relative to another was the story of twin sisters Bobby and Betty Eller from the United States, who lived in the state of North Carolina.
From the very birth, the girls were so inseparable and so repeated each other that, as a result, they did not become fully independent individuals. Betty Eller was her sister's shadow in every way - in thoughts, desires, actions. Soon after the twins left school, their parents began to notice that the girls' characters were changing. Bobbie began to sit for hours, staring at one point, and refused to talk to anyone. And as usual, after a while her sister began to behave in the same strange way. Deeply attached to each other, the girls moved further and further from the outside world.
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The parents sounded the alarm, and soon the girls were admitted to a psychiatric hospital, where they were diagnosed with schizophrenia. For a whole year they were kept on medication and underwent intensive psychiatric therapy. But no one could bring the sisters back to the outside world. Finally, the doctors decided to separate the sisters and place them in different wings of the hospital building.
Doctors hoped that mental isolation would help break the strange connection between the condition of the sisters and return them to normal life. At first, the girls' condition changed for the better, and the doctors had hope. But one spring evening, Bobby had a seizure. She died shortly after midnight. Aware of the girls' unusual closeness and worried about Betty, the nurse called the department where she was.
Betty was found dead on the floor. At the time of death, both girls lay curled up in the fetal position, both on their right side. Betty followed her sister in life and death. The psychiatrists who studied this case concluded that the first death - Bobby Eller - was felt by her sister Betty, who immediately lost her will to live.
But perhaps the most amazing case of transferring feelings from one relative to another is the story of 55-year-old housewife Michelle Hosel and her 12-year-old daughter Connie. Michelle Hosel fell seriously ill with the flu. For three days she had a high temperature, she felt very bad and stayed in bed. In the evening her condition worsened especially. Her daughter Connie was lying in her bed on the top floor of the house at that time, and suddenly she had a feeling that her mother was about to die.
To speak to her mother, Connie asked for some water. Mother brought her water. Connie was so scared by her strange feeling that she never spoke to her mother. Mrs. Hosel went down the stairs from the top floor to her room, went to bed and suddenly felt that she was dying. Her husband worked the night shift, and she had no one to even call for help except her daughter.
Suddenly, Michelle was suddenly, as she herself recalled, outside of her body. “I felt myself soaring into the air. I flew faster and faster. I was not at all scared. I glanced at myself in bed, and I still remember how the white sheets shone. Suddenly I thought about my three children. " What worried Michelle most was that she had to leave the children. In addition to Connie, her family had two younger sons. Michelle exclaimed: "God, please, because my husband is a Protestant, and I am a Catholic, leave my life so that I can raise my children as Catholic." She repeated this prayer three times and then she heard the answer: “You can stay for a while. It's 4.25 now and someone else will have to take your place.” When she woke up, Michelle looked at the clock next to her bed: it was 4.25.
After recovering, Michelle ordered a funeral mass in memory of the one who died in her place. During these dramatic hours of the struggle for life, Michelle's daughter Connie felt everything that was happening to her mother. This is how Connie described it herself: “In my mind I saw that my mother was dying. I saw her rise above her body lying on the bed. I was scared and knew that I could not help.”
It was nine years before Connie and Mrs. Hosel talked about what they had experienced that night. They were amazed at the similarities between the two stories.
Intuitively, a person always feels when his loved ones are in danger. This feeling is expressed in unexplained anxiety, emotional depression, and other common signs of mental distress. All this testifies to one thing: people connected with each other by kinship or friendship feel the state of each other, and often empathize with those who find themselves in a difficult situation, as if taking on part of the suffering that befell their relatives, as happened with Ingo Swann.
Esoteric philosophy claims that potentially people can not only feel the state of their loved ones, but also help them energetically at critical moments in their lives, precisely because of invisible but effective astral connections that exist at any distance.