Person who died for six minutes shares haunting vision of afterlife

A Reddit user has come forward with a disturbing account of what they claim happened during the six minutes they were clinically dead—an experience they say offers anything but peace or divine comfort. The anonymous poster shared their story on Reddit’s NoSleep forum, describing how a sudden medical collapse in 2003 left them, at just 15 years old, with no heartbeat, no movement, and, according to them, no connection to the serene afterlife often imagined.

They described being revived by emergency responders en route to the hospital, but insist the time between collapse and resuscitation was far from empty. “I was dead, technically,” they wrote. “My heart stopped. EMS found me unresponsive and managed to bring me back… What I remember is what happened in between.”

What followed wasn’t light or reunion—it was torment. According to the user, they encountered something that felt intelligent yet cruel, with the demeanor of a child but the intent of a predator. “It batted me around like a cat with a caught mouse,” they explained. “Physical discomforts we imagine hell inflicting upon us pale in comparison to the torture of soul pain… Loss of a loved one comes closest.”

There were no messages of love or glimpses of eternity, just a disturbing encounter with a presence that offered a chilling ultimatum. The user claims it communicated that their “reward” for surviving would be a slightly better position among what it called a population of spiritual slaves. If they chose to speak of the experience and try to convince others, they were warned that something even worse awaited them.

Years later, now reportedly stable thanks to a pacemaker and multiple surgeries, the individual says the experience has left a scar that medical treatment can’t erase. “I don’t thank God for anything anymore,” they wrote. “Whatever I saw that day… it left me shaken, not saved.”

Their attempt to explain what happened has mostly been met with skepticism. Physicians and skeptics have attributed the visions to brain trauma, a lack of oxygen, or psychological responses to the body shutting down. But to the person who lived it, the pain and clarity of those moments still feel more real than waking life.

The story has struck a chord—and a nerve—because it doesn’t offer neat conclusions. It asks deeply uncomfortable questions instead: What if death isn’t peaceful? What if it’s not a return to love, but a confrontation with something utterly foreign and unfeeling?

Whether read as metaphor, memory, or madness, the account adds to the growing number of near-death experiences that defy comforting narratives. Instead of promising heaven, it points toward the unknown—and forces us to consider that we may not be as ready for it as we like to believe.


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