Miss Betty nearly drowned when she was twenty-six-years old, in a little pond.
“I'd never learned how to swim,” she said. “God, It was like fighting the strongest gravity. My bodyweight just kinda sucked me under.”
Betty lost consciousness.
“All I can remember,” she said. “Is that I was somewhere else, in my mind and body. I didn't see anything spectacular. But I did feel like I was leaving one place, going to another. Does that makes sense?”
Not really.
“I heard someone talking to me. Only, it was saying stuff in MY voice."
It was saying, "It's gonna be alright, Betty."
Next, meet Phillip, he's seventy-nine years young this July, and
he talks with a Carolinian drawl so thick, it smells like possum pie.
“I KNEW I was going to die,” Phillip said. “I mean, I knew it was my time. The doctor told me flat-out, 'Phillip, you're gonna die.'"
He went home and vomited himself to sleep.
Phillip refused medical treatment, hoping to live out his final days without hair-loss or bone-crushing nausea. And he started spending his money like a man whose face was on fire. He sold his things and bought an RV.
The nice kind…