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Nanci Danison joins us to talk about the day she died. That's right. The day she died and what she learned from the experience.

She died March 14, 1994, at the age of 43, but voluntarily returned to human life to share what she could remember of the wonders she experienced and truths she learned in the afterlife. At the time of her death, she had been an attorney practicing law in a 270 attorney regional law firm for 17 years as a litigator in the labor and employment law areas, and as a transactional and health care fraud defense lawyer in the health law field. She brought her training and skills as a trial lawyer to the evidence she encountered and challenged within the afterlife.

"Nancy brings the credibility of a trial lawyer, highly trained to evaluate evidence, to her account of the answers to our most pressing spiritual questions: What is God? Who am I? What is the purpose of this life? What happens when we die? . . . She
observed this near-death experience with the detachment of a jurist. That jury of one found no evidence to support the traditional religious model of 'heaven.' Instead, the reality she experienced was much more intricate and fulfilling. It felt like returning to a very different but familiar culture." -- June Milligan, M.Ed., CCHt, Healthy Beginnings Magazine (Sept. 2012).
Nanci Danison joins us to talk about the day she died. That's right. The day she died and what she learned from the experience. She died March 14, 1994, at the age of 43, but voluntarily returned to human life to share what she could remember of the wonders she experienced and truths she learned in the afterlife. At the time of her death, she had been an attorney practicing law in a 270 attorney regional law firm for 17 years as a litigator in the labor and employment law areas, and as a transactional and health care fraud defense lawyer in the health law field. She brought her training and skills as a trial lawyer to the evidence she encountered and challenged within the afterlife. "Nancy brings the credibility of a trial lawyer, highly trained to evaluate evidence, to her account of the answers to our most pressing spiritual questions: What is God? Who am I? What is the purpose of this life? What happens when we die? . . . She observed this near-death experience with the detachment of a jurist. That jury of one found no evidence to support the traditional religious model of 'heaven.' Instead, the reality she experienced was much more intricate and fulfilling. It felt like returning to a very different but familiar culture." -- June Milligan, M.Ed., CCHt, Healthy Beginnings Magazine (Sept. 2012). read more read less

5 years ago #afterlife, #behavioral, #health, #lawofattraction, #lifeafterdeath, #mental, #neardeathexperience, #trauma