Angie Fenimore's Near-Death
Experience
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Angie Fenimore, a wife and mother haunted by
abuse in childhood and overwhelmed by
despair, was in a desperate state of
mind. On January 8, 1991, she committed
suicide, hoping to escape her sense of
emptiness and suffering. But clinical death
didn't draw her to the light seen in so many
near-death experiences. Instead, she found
herself in a realm of darkness. The hell she
experienced was far more horrific and
personal than the old fire-and-brimstone
metaphors. Her hell was a realm of
terrifying visions and profound psychic
disconnection. Miraculously, she was
restored to life: imprinted forever with a
new sense of faith, of being subject to the
sacred will, and of being truly a child of
God.
The following is an excerpt from her
wonderful book,
Beyond the Darkness.
I was passing over into a different sphere.
My soul was disconnecting from my body with
a hum that kept growing louder, rising to a
whine as the vibration of death pulled me
deeper.
I noticed that there was a large screen
before me. I was being drawn into a
three-dimensional slide show of my life that
played out before my eyes chronologically,
while I experienced every part of it from
all points of view and all points of
understanding. I knew exactly how each
person felt who had ever interacted with
me.
In particular, however, I was being shown in
vivid detail exactly what my childhood was
really like. The pictures flew past me, but
I easily absorbed every moment, each one
triggering an entire memory or a chunk of my
life. So this was what people meant when
they said, "My life flashed before my eyes."
The closer I came to the end of my life, the
faster the pictures flew past me. It was
incredible! In an instant I had experienced
the entirety of the twenty-seven years from
my birth until the moment that I found
myself dying on the couch and passing into
the warm tunnel. Then the fast motion of my
life rushing past and through me stopped
abruptly.
Now what?
Where was I? I was immersed in darkness. My
eyes seemed to adjust, and I could see
clearly even though there was no light. The
darkness continued in all directions and
seemed to have no end, but it wasn't just
blackness, it was an endless void, an
absence of light. It was completely
enveloping.
I swung my head around to explore the thick
blackness and saw, to my right, standing
shoulder to shoulder, a handful of others.
They were all teenagers.
"Oh, we must be the suicides." |
With a laugh, I opened my mouth, but before
I could form the words, they came tumbling
out. I wasn't sure whether I had thought the
words or had attempted to say them, but they
were audible without my having to move my
lips. Then I wasn't sure if these other
people had heard me, until the guy next to
me responded.
He didn't say a word to me. He slowly looked
down at me and turned forward again. There
was absolutely no expression on his face, no
warmth or intelligence in his eyes.
Suspended in darkness, he and all the others
stood fixed in a thoughtless stupor.
Second over from the other end of the line
was a girl who looked to be in her late
teens. I was coming to see that feeling -
what some call intuition or the sixth sense
- was the preferred method of transferring
information here, where unvoiced ideas grew
audible. As I exercised my new power of
sensing/feeling, I had an inkling that I was
remembering a long-forgotten, natural,
familiar skill that had been supplanted or
subverted by words, and I quickly grew
proficient at this new way of gaining
knowledge.
But she did not connect with me. Her empty
gaze, fixed on nothing, continued
uninterrupted by my thoughts about her. She
was just like the rest of them, staring
blankly forward, with no concern or
curiosity about where we were. They were
dead, and so was I.
Suddenly, as if we had been waiting for a
kind of sorting process to take place, I was
sucked further into the darkness by an
unseen and undefined power, leaving the
teenagers behind. I landed on the edge of a
shadowy realm, suspended in the darkness,
extending to the limits of my sight.
I knew that I was in a state of hell, but
this was not the typical fire and brimstone
hell that I had learned about as a young
child. The word purgatory rose, whispered,
into my mind.
Men and women of all ages, but no children,
were standing or squatting or wandering
about on the realm. Some were mumbling to
themselves. The darkness emanated from deep
within and radiated from them in an aura I
could feel. They were completely
self-absorbed, every one of them too caught
up in his or her own misery to engage in any
mental or emotional exchange. They had the
ability to connect with one another, but
they were incapacitated by the darkness.
I gradually became aware of the sounds of a
kaleidoscopic flurry of voices, and I
realized that in this realm, thoughts were
the mode of communication. Around me I could
hear the buzz of thoughts, as if I were in a
crowded movie theater with lights down low,
picking up the sounds of hushed exchanges.
Sitting next to me was a man who appeared to
be about sixty years old. This man's eyes
were totally without comprehension.
Pathetically squatting on the ground, draped
in filthy white robes, he wasn't radiating
anything, not even self-pity. I felt that he
had absorbed everything there was to know
here and had chosen to stop thinking. He was
completely drained, just waiting. I knew
that his soul had been rotting here
forever. In this dark prison a day might as
well be a thousand days or a thousand years.
I was sure that this man, like the
middle-aged woman, had killed himself. His
clothing suggested that he might have walked
the earth during Jesus Christ's earthly
ministry. I wondered if he was Judas
Iscariot, who had betrayed the Savior and
then hung himself. I felt that I should be
embarrassed that I was thinking these things
in his presence, where he could hear me.
As my mind reached for more information, I
felt tremendous disappointment. I could feel
and completely know about everything around
me just by posing a question in my mind or
by looking in any direction. The
possibilities for learning were endless, but
I had no books, no television, no love, no
privacy, no sleep, no friends, no light, no
growth, no happiness, and no relief - no
knowledge to gain and no way to use it.
But worse was my growing sense of complete
aloneness. Even hearing the brunt of
someone's anger, however unpleasant, is a
form of tangible connection. But in this
empty world, where no connections could be
made, the solitude was terrifying.
Then I heard a voice of awesome power, not
loud but crashing over me like a booming
wave of sound; a voice that encompassed such
ferocious anger that with one word it could
destroy the universe, and that also
encompassed such potent and unwavering love
that, like the sun, it could coax life from
the earth. I cowered at its force and at its
excruciating words:
"Is this what you really want?"
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The great voice emanated from a pinpoint of
light that swelled with each thunderous word
until it hung like a radiant sun just beyond
the black wall of mist that formed my
prison. Though far more brilliant that the
sun, the light soothed my eyes with its deep
and pure white luminescence. I sensed that
the light could not (or perhaps would not -
I wasn't sure) cross the barrier into the
darkness. And I knew with complete certainty
that I was in the presence of God.
He was a Being of Light, not just radiating
light or illuminated from within, but he
almost seemed to be made of the light. It
was a light that had substance and
dimension, the most beautiful, glorious
substance that I have ever beheld. All
beauty, all love, all goodness were
contained in the light that poured forth
from this being. But there is nothing that
we are even capable of imagining that comes
close to the magnitude of perfect love that
this being poured into me.
While I was not remembering details of a
life before my mortal birth, I was
reacquainting myself with the life that I
shared with the Father, a spirit life that
seemed to extend to the beginning of the
universe.
I could see that none of the others in the
realm were aware of God's presence. The man
cowering next to me could see that I was
focused on something, but it was apparent
that he couldn't see anything beyond the
barrier. Others continued to babble unaware.
Then God spoke to me. His words were
excruciating:
"Is this what you really want?
Don't you know that this is the
worst thing you could have
done?" |
I could feel his anger and frustration, both
because I'd thrown in the towel and because
I had cut myself off from him and from his
guidance.
And I'd felt trapped. I had been able to see
no other choice but to die before I could do
any more damage in life. So I answered:
"But my life is so hard." |
My thoughts were communicated so fast that
they weren't even completed before I
absorbed his response:
"You think that was hard? It is
nothing compared to what awaits
you if you take your life." |
When the Father spoke, each of his words
exploded into a complex of meanings, like
fireworks, tiny balls of light that erupted
into a billion bits of information, filling
me with streams of vivid truth and pure
understanding.
"Life's supposed to be hard. You
can't skip over parts. We have
all done it. You must earn what
you receive." |
Suddenly I felt another presence with us,
the same presence that had been with me when
I first crossed over into death and who had
reviewed my life with me. I recognized that
he had been with us the whole time, but that
I was only now becoming able to perceive
him. Then I'd sensed his powerful, yet
gentle personality, but now I could feel him
so strongly that I could even ascertain his
shape. What I could see were bits of light
coming through the darkness, like tiny laser
beams pinpricking a black sheet or like
stars peeping through the blackness of a
cloudless night. This light was unmistakably
of the same brilliance as the glorious light
that emanated from the Father, but my
spiritual eyes were incapable of fully
beholding it. My ability to see with my eyes
was somehow linked to my willingness to
believe.
The rays of light penetrated me with
incredible force, with the power of an
all-consuming love. This love was as pure
and potent as the Father's, but it had an
entirely new dimension of pure compassion,
of complete and perfect empathy. I felt that
he not only understood my life and my pains
exactly, as if he had actually lived my
life, but that he knew everything about how
to guide me through it; how my different
choices could produce either more bitterness
or new growth. Having thought all my life
that no one could possibly understand what I
had been through, I was now aware that there
was one other person who truly did.
Through this empathy ran a deep vein of
sorrow. He ached, he truly grieved for the
pain I had endured, but even more for my
failure to seek his comfort. His greatest
desire was to help me. He mourned my
blindness as a mother would mourn a dead
child. Suddenly I knew that I was in the
presence of the redeemer of the world.
He spoke to me through the veil of darkness:
"Don't you understand? I have
done this for you." |
As I was flooded with his love and with the
actual pain that he bore for me, my
spiritual eyes were opened. In that moment I
began to see just exactly what it was that
the Savior had done, how he had sacrificed
for me. He showed me; He had taken me into
himself, subsumed my life in his, embracing
my experiences, my sufferings, as his own.
And so for a second I was within his body,
able to see things from his point of view
and to experience his self-awareness. He let
me in so I could see for myself how he had
taken on my burdens and how much love he
bore me.
And I knew where I had gone wrong. I had
doubted his existence. I had questioned the
authenticity of the scriptures because what
they claimed seemed too good to be true. I
had hoped that there was truth to the idea
of a Savior who had given his life for me,
but I had been afraid to really believe. To
believe without seeing requires a great deal
of trust. My trust had been violated so many
times in my life that I had very little to
spare. And so I had clung to my pain so
tightly that I was willing to end my life
rather than unburden myself and act on the
chance that a Savior existed. He wanted to
comfort me and to hold me, but we were
separated by my responses to the lessons of
life. He had been there for me all through
my life, but I had not trusted him.
As I watched from the Savior's perspective,
his unique comprehension of my predicament
was transferred to the Father. From my new
perspective I saw God in profile as he was
looking at my form. The Father and his Son's
communication was so rapid, so perfect, that
they seemed to think each other's thoughts
in unison. Jesus was pleading my case. There
was no conflict or argument here; Jesus'
understanding was accepted without dispute
because he had all the facts. He was the
perfect judge. He knew precisely where I
stood in relation to my need for mercy and
the universe's need for justice. Now I could
see that all the suffering in my mortal life
would be temporary, and that it was actually
for my good. Our sufferings on earth need
not be futile. Out of the most tragic of
circumstances springs human growth.
As God the Father and Jesus were teaching
me, their words picked up speed and power
and then merged, so that they were saying
the exact same things in the very same
moment. They shared one voice, one mind, and
the purpose, and I was deluged with pure
knowledge.
I learned that just as there are laws of
nature, of physics and probability, there
are laws of spirit. One of these spiritual
laws is that a price of suffering must be
paid for every act of harm. I was painfully
aware of the suffering I had caused my
family and other people because of my own
weaknesses. But now I saw that by ending my
life, I was destroying the web of
connections of people on earth, possibly
drastically altering the lives of millions,
for all of us are inseparably linked, and
the negative impact of one decision has the
capacity to be felt throughout the world.
My children, certainly, would be gravely
harmed by my suicide. I was given a glimpse
of their future, not the events of their
lives but rather energy, and the character
that their lives would have. By abandoning
my earthly responsibilities, I would
influence my children, my oldest son in
particular, to make choices that would lead
him away from his divine purpose. Before
Alex was born, I was told, he had agreed to
perform specific tasks during his life on
earth. His duty was not revealed to me, but
I felt the energy that his life would have
up until his young adult years.
I was told that my children were great and
powerful spirits and that up to this point
in my life, I had not deserved them. I
caught a glimpse of how deeply God loves my
boys, and how, with my callous disregard for
their welfare, I was tampering with the
sacred will of God.
Then I was shown how I would harm other
people close to me, such as my husband and
my sister, Tony, by taking my life; and by
extension, countless others. There were
people on the earth whom I would never meet
who would be affected by my suicide. Because
of the anger and pain I would cause them, my
loved ones would be unable to store up the
goodness that they were meant to pass on to
others. I would be held responsible for the
damages - or the lack of good - they would
do while immersed in the pain of my selfish
death. And I would pay dearly for it, since
spiritual laws dictate that all of the harm,
including lack of good, stemming from my
death be punished by a measure of suffering.
Even though I couldn't foresee the ripple
effect my death would cause, I would be held
accountable. God himself is bound by
spiritual law, and so there could be no
escape for me.
And I was shown that for me, the realm of
darkness was quite literally spiritual
time-out, a place where I was supposed to
grasp the gravity of my offenses and to pay
the price. But I had to ask, why me? Why was
it that I could see God while the vacant
husk of a man next to me could not? Why was
I absorbing light and being taught, while he
was hunkering down in misery and darkness?
I was told that the reason is willingness.
When I first looked at that man and wondered
if he had been alive during the earthly
ministry of Jesus, the question showed that
I was willing to believe in God, willing to
believe that Christ had once walked the
earth. And once I was willing to believe, I
was able to see. Willingness and ability
are the same thing. All around me on the
dark realm were people of varying degrees of
willingness, of understanding, of ability to
see that Jesus Christ was there with us the
whole time. I don't know if the others were
talking to God as I was or if they were
talking to other messengers of light that I
was not yet capable of seeing, but I'm sure
that not all of them were just mumbling to
themselves. And I could see that my
spiritual time-out could have lasted a
moment, or it could have taken me thousands
of years to progress out of that dark
prison, depending on when I reached the
point of willingness to see the light.
And what about the spiritual law that
required me to suffer for the damage I had
already done in life, up until and including
my suicide? I was told that the debt had
already been paid, that the sacrifice had
already been made. In the Garden of
Gethsemane, Jesus Christ had experienced all
the suffering that has or ever will take
place in the life of any human born on this
earth. He experienced my life, he bore my
sins, he accepted my grief. But in order for
the agony that Jesus endured on my behalf to
count, in order for him to take my place in
fulfilling that spiritual law, I had to
accept his gift.
My heart broke as I realized that I had been
not only hurting my family, who are beloved
children of God, but also causing my Savior,
who had such all-encompassing love and
compassion for me, to suffer - all because I
had allowed myself to be molded by other
people's weaknesses.
Now my perception was shifting, and the
darkness seemed to lift slightly. When I
first entered the dark prison, my vision
took in only the things and the people in
the realm of darkness. But once I had taken
enough light in from God and Jesus, my
spiritual eyes were opened to another
dimension in the darkness. Now I could see
that Beings of Light were all around me.
Hell, while also a specific dimension, is
primarily a state of mind. When we die, we
are bound by what we think. In mortality the
more solid our thoughts become, as we act
upon them - allowing darkness to develop in
others and in ourselves - the more damning
they are. I had been in hell long before I
died, and I hadn't realized it because I had
escaped many of the consequences up until
the point that I took my life. But when we
die, our state of mind grows far more
obvious because we are gathered together
with those who think as we do. This ordering
is completely natural and is consistent with
how we choose to live while we are in this
world. Our time is but a heartbeat in the
eternal scheme of creation, and yet it is
the crucial moment of truth, the turning
point. It determines how our spirits will
exist forever, into both the future and the
past.
I was becoming less and less a part of the
place of darkness with each particle of
light that I accepted. I hadn't felt myself
lift off the surface, but now I was hovering
above the field of darkness, into the realm
of the scurrying spirits of light.
I could feel the urgency in the spirits who
were scurrying about to do the work of God.
I was then told that we are in the final
moments before the Savior will return to the
earth. I was told that the war between
darkness and light upon the earth has grown
so intense that if we are not continually
seeking light, the darkness will consume us
and we will be lost. I was not told when it
would happen, but I understood that the
earth is being prepared for the second
coming of Christ. I looked down at the
pathetic souls and realized that I no longer
felt as they did. I wanted to live.
Then the powerful energy source that had
transported me to the dark prison returned
to liberate me. For a split second a rushing
sensation engulfed me. The darkness sped
past, and suddenly I was back in my body,
lying on the couch.
"When the heart weeps for
what it has lost, the soul
laughs for what it has
found."
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Sufi aphorism |
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