tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2923424816839609066.post7893704228804106015..comments2024-03-28T02:35:33.708-07:00Comments on Ken Ring Blog: Remembering Two Exceptional Near-Death ExperiencersKevin Williamshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10028779062267448624noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2923424816839609066.post-19187786585431142782023-05-31T00:51:35.117-07:002023-05-31T00:51:35.117-07:00I like reading this kind of blog. Thank you for sh...I like reading this kind of blog. Thank you for sharing. <br /><a href="https://www.anchorcrete.net/pool-decks" rel="nofollow">https://www.anchorcrete.net/pool-decks</a>Angel17https://www.blogger.com/profile/12515866684980903711noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2923424816839609066.post-16109856053142578722022-11-21T17:42:54.453-08:002022-11-21T17:42:54.453-08:00wow !! :-) Ode. wow !! :-) Ode. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2923424816839609066.post-38317770352976337252022-11-21T12:27:43.244-08:002022-11-21T12:27:43.244-08:00Thank you again, my dear Ken! You are always shari...Thank you again, my dear Ken! You are always sharing with us so interesting and moving stories! Don't stop! Olivier Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2923424816839609066.post-73212757419769990092022-11-20T14:20:54.839-08:002022-11-20T14:20:54.839-08:00Of course, Vicki could see! Believe her.
Vicki’s ...Of course, Vicki could see! Believe her.<br /><br />Vicki’s story reminded me how people view those of us with differences such as blindness and deformities as solely what they can see before them. <br /><br />When people find out I am a polio survivor, they most want a look at my polio leg. Now with the New York polio case, news commentators say “Pictures of you when you were little and now, can I see them?” It is as though they believe I am my disabilities. <br /><br />I learned as a child that we are not primarily a body housing a mind. We are first and foremost a spirit which inhabits, at times, a body with a mind of its own. I didn’t read this in a book. I don’t believe it because I was taught this in Sunday school. I know. <br /><br />I am one of the lucky ones who traveled outside their body as a very young child when polio pain became excruciating, when treatments hurt terribly. I left my body and all the pain of polio countless times. I watched from above as doctors knocked my knees with rubber hammers and shoved needles into my spine. <br /><br />Why do I say lucky? Polio gave me the understanding our growth as human beings may be assisted by all sorts of circumstances that come our way. We are surrounded by possibilities. Our task is to listen for the ones that call us. <br /><br />My out-of-body experiences gave me understanding I might not otherwise have. As a nurse, I used this information to help patients who experienced NDEs during CPR. As a nurse educator, I mentor nursing students to look beneath the skin to the heart and soul of their patients. People want you to connect with what you cannot see.<br /> <br />Vicki’s story can open eyes to otherworldliness. <br /><br />Susan L. Schoenbeck, MSN, RN<br />Author: POLIO GIRL: It Only Takes One<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com