What happens after death It is a great mystery that we will almost certainly never discover. Even though we may not need to. But in England, the case of a woman who saw her husband dead brings back the dilemma.
The widow, whose name is Carole Attle, was left in a deep coma afterwards suffer terrible injuries from being run over off a bus while shopping in his home town of Stockton-on-Tees,
The woman was taken to James Cook University Hospital after the crash and was hospitalized for her serious injuries and the prognosis made by the doctors was pessimistic.
However, after being in a coma for six weeks, the 74-year-old woman woke up causing amazement in the doctors and the nurses who cared for her.
Attle later recounted that while she was unconscious she saw her husband dead and that he She told him that “upstairs there is no room” and that he had to keep fighting to survive.
“He was basically saying there’s no room for you upstairs and we don’t want you to go anywhere else, so step aside and fight and get out of hereand I think I turned around after that,” the woman said Daily star.
Carole suffered a broken eye socket and nose, three broken ribs, and a hemorrhage in the brain after the terrible accident.
But despite the shocking injuries he sustained, after spending another 10 weeks in the hospital the woman was able to return home.
His daughter Rebecca Dowson, 50, said she was working in a library at the same hospital when she was told of her mother’s accident.
“They told me the x-rays didn’t look good and that they had done everything they could to help her, but that the chances of recovery were not highDowson said.
“He spent seven weeks in the ICU and two weeks in the trauma room, and during that time we had at least four difficult conversations where They warned me I wouldn’t make it“, hill.
Source: Clarin
Mary Ortiz is a seasoned journalist with a passion for world events. As a writer for News Rebeat, she brings a fresh perspective to the latest global happenings and provides in-depth coverage that offers a deeper understanding of the world around us.