Download PDF Dying to Be Me: My Journey from Cancer, to Near Death, to True Healing By Anita Moorjani
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Ebook About THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!"I had the choice to come back ... or not. I chose to return when I realized that 'heaven' is a state, not a place"In this truly inspirational memoir, Anita Moorjani relates how, after fighting cancer for almost four years, her body began shutting down—overwhelmed by the malignant cells spreading throughout her system. As her organs failed, she entered into an extraordinary near-death experience where she realized her inherent worth . . . and the actual cause of her disease. Upon regaining consciousness, Anita found that her condition had improved so rapidly that she was released from the hospital within weeks—without a trace of cancer in her body! Within this enhanced e-book, Anita recounts—in words and on video—stories of her childhood in Hong Kong, her challenge to establish her career and find true love, as well as how she eventually ended up in that hospital bed where she defied all medical knowledge. In "Dying to Be Me," Anita Freely shares all she has learned about illness, healing, fear, "being love," and the true magnificence of each and every human being!Book Dying to Be Me: My Journey from Cancer, to Near Death, to True Healing Review :
I have read THOSUANDS of Near Death Experiences and THIS ONE had a very special spoiler I will not share--but it WAS the ONLY reason I bought this one book. My lover passed away a few years ago from the SAME EXACT condition and I mean right down to her (this author) being so wasted muscle wise and obvious to most people she had zero chance to live not to mention come back and have a good body again. I am female and wanted to know HOW my lover felt when he passed. Since both died of same rare disease. After reading her book and rushing to the part of her actual death and her discovery of WHY she had cancer in the first place-I was positive this is the same reason I lost my lover. Her book is VERY special more so to people losing someone to cancer. However her reason and my lovers reason does not mean it is everyone's reason who is departing w cancer. But his personality was the same as his and mental positioning.I was not with him when he died because his cell phone was left in the ambulance and he could not call me - meantime I was in another city waiting for him and seeing a big crow dancing it front of me and following me around. I will give you my spoiler--it was HIM telling he was happy. Meantime I am texting another friend I may be dying soon because this crow was dancing and following me around. We were to meet at a concert knowing he only had days so Doctors were just letting him go out and live life on tons of prednisone. That gave him all the energy in the world despite the fact he looked like our science school skeleton.I bought this on Kindle a few years ago show I hope it still shows up as a "verified" review. This is the extraordinary story of one people-pleaser’s account of her Near Death Experience (NDE) as she was in the final stages of organ failure from terminal cancer. She entered what she calls “the other realm”. It was there that she finally understood why she got cancer in the first place, why she struggled in life, and how she needed to live if she chose to come back. She describes her being given a choice to come back into a newly healed body or to stay in the “other realm”. Much of what she speaks of jives very well with Joe Dispenza’s book Becoming Supernatural and Bruce Lipton’s The Biology of Belief.So much of Moorjani’s story makes sense and feel relevant however there were parts that did not. She came from a loving family and married her”soul mate” yet she says that her cancer was caused in part by her relentless need to be a yes girl and please everyone. Yet, she did not go through with her arranged marriage. This seems at odds with her explanation.She offers a richly detailed accounting of her experiences in the “other realm”. She comes out of her coma in a fully aware state, able to recount what went on in the hospital while she was under. She recognized faces she had never seen and was able to recall conversations that took place both in and outside of the room she was in. She appears in a way “supernatural”. She knew with an utmost certainty that when she woke up, there was not a trace of the cancer that a very short time ago ravaged her body and unbelievably even allowed her medical team to submit her to painful tests and administer chemo though she was against it.Though they could find no cancer in her body, they still insisted it had to be present. I would have loved for this woman to advocate for herself more strongly. I could not understand how she would submit herself to chemo when she refused it the entire duration of her illness, opting instead for holistic and natural treatment course. Why would she continue to tax the insurance system if she was so certain she was cured? Did she honestly care what her doctors thought? Didn’t that kind of thinking get her into trouble in the first place? There was one instance where a doctor came into the room with test results that she had already stated she knew ahead of time. All it took to plant a seed of doubt in her mind was the way the doctor prefaced giving her the results. If she was so sure, where did that doubt come from? I found this all so interesting but I had a lot of unanswered questions. Speaking of unanswered questions: the Q&A at the end of the book were none of the questions I would have asked. It was disappointing.Another thing that bothered me was that in the “other realm”, Moorjani states that there is no judgment, no amends to be made or punishment. So, a serial killer and a pedophile carry the same weight as Mother Teresa. Wow! I don’t buy this at all. Perhaps it’s true that where Moorjani ended up is a place of no judgment but I don’t believe a murderer would end up in the same place. She seems certain that all come to the same place. I believe her experience is solely her experience. She believes the key to all is self-love and a murderer is just a greater degree of self-hatred. People who do great harm on earth are merely suffering the most and deserve our compassion. Maybe this is true but no matter how one suffers, they don’t have the right to knowingly inflict it on others. Victims are more deserving of our compassion. Moorjani also feels that taking a stand for a belief or system of beliefs and fighting for them ensures more of what you are fighting against because it comes from a place of fear. Her message is confusing because taking a stand for what you believe in and refusing to stay silent or take the easy way out of fear is a big part of why we are here. I have trouble with her mixed messages. She herself prefers to remain noncommittal, easy going and live and let live. This comes across as lazy thinking. She spoke of how after her NDE, she could not relate to the frivolity of thinking that plagued some of those she knew yet she talks about the pleasures of chocolates, shopping, and champagne. Couldn’t those things be viewed as frivolous as well? There were just too many contradictions.In reading a book such as this one, it is important to retain critical thinking and draw your own conclusions. What she states is food for thought and it is always a benefit to learn to listen to alternative views but the overriding message, that all people are good and our actions on earth don’t matter in the end sounds like overly simplistic liberal nonsense.BRB Rating: Read It. 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