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CrowdScience

Are near-death experiences real?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 7 November 2025

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In your final moments, they say, you may walk down a tunnel of light. You might rise above your body, watching the scene below before passing into another world. Perhaps you’ll be met by glowing figures, see your life flash before your eyes, or feel a deep, unearthly calm.

These are the stories of people who’ve reached the edge of death and returned. They’re not rare, nor random, and they have a name: near-death experiences.

CrowdScience listener Steven in Chile first heard of them during a CPR class and wondered, are they fictitious?

Psychologist Susan Blackmore once had an out-of-body experience as a student in Oxford, UK — floating above herself before soaring over the rooftops and dissolving into the universe. That single moment changed everything. She’s spent her career trying to understand what happened, and she believes such experiences are explainable.

At the University of Michigan in the US, neuroscientist Professor Jimo Borjigin has done what few have dared: record the dying brain in action. Her studies show that even after the heart stops, the brain can produce powerful surges of coordinated activity, bursts that might explain the lights, the tunnels, and the sense of peace. She believes near-death experiences could become one of science’s most intriguing scientific frontiers for research into consciousness.

At University College London in the UK, neuroscientist Dr Christopher Timmermann is exploring similar states using psychedelics, pushing the boundaries between self and oblivion to identify what induces a near-death experience and what we can learn about our consciousness along the way.

Near death experiences, a paranormal mystery or explainable phenomenon?

Presenter: Caroline Steel Producer: Harrison Lewis Editor: Ben Motley

(Photo: Gap in the wall - stock photo Credit: peterschreiber.media via Getty Images)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, radio, podcasts.

0:07.3

Hello, I'm Kimberly Wilson. I'm a psychologist, and in my new podcast, Complex, I'll be your guide

0:14.4

through all the information and misinformation that's out there about mental health.

0:19.0

I'm joined by expert guests covering topics from people pleasing to perfectionism,

0:24.2

burnout to empathy, to find tangible advice so we can understand ourselves a little better.

0:30.5

Complex with me, Kimberly Wilson.

0:33.0

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:35.5

I was laying in bed, paralyzed.

0:40.4

I didn't have any feeling in my extremities.

0:44.6

And that feeling persisted and continued to the point where my, I guess you could say,

0:53.9

essence or soul or whatever felt like it was

0:56.8

slowly separating from my body.

1:04.0

And I was looking straight up at the ceiling.

1:09.3

And I kept moving closer and closer.

1:16.5

It wasn't until the ceiling became essentially right up to my nose that I turned around onto my stomach.

1:32.3

When I turned my body over, I realized I was looking down at myself, but my suffering body

1:41.7

and felt extreme pity.

1:52.0

You're listening to Crowd Science from the BBC World Service,

1:56.3

the show that answers your science questions.

1:59.3

In this episode, we're brushing shoulders with death.

2:05.4

I'm Caroline Steele, and you've been listening to Kaylee in the US, describing what it's

2:10.4

like to have a near-death experience.

...

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