It was supposed to be a mere morning appeal to daughters to school. < img src = "https://zycie.news/crrops/7809d1/620x0/1/0/2023/02/13/0kkhnj9u9u9vqphogpsqs2ywbmxbauqzoer1qwb.png" alt = "Clinical death/youtube @ku god" Style = "background-color: rgba (51.53.52.1)" > < p > Nothing announced that 50-year-old Tessa Romero, a sociologist from Spain, would stand on the verge of life and death & ndash; And he will look where most of us would not even dare to look. Her heart was not beating for 24 minutes. For doctors & ndash; It's a miracle. For her & ndash; awakening.

< P >Romero has been struggling with undiagnosed health problems for years. She was tired, exhausted, lost. She felt her body surrendered, although medicine could not indicate a specific cause. When one morning her body refused to obedience, stopping the heart, no one knew that it would be a moment that would change everything. ~ 60 > < p > When the ambulance arrived, her heart has not worked for 24 minutes. Medics did not hide the surprise of & ndash; Neither the fact that life functions, nor what the p & oacute; was heard. Because tessa & ndash; Despite the physical absence of & ndash; she remembered everything.

< p > in his book says that she did not feel b & oacute; lu. No physical suffering, no fear. Only Spok & Oacute; J. “It was like a photo of the weight of the soul” “Ndash; He recalls. She was aware of herself, but not the body. She floated above the stage in a small clinic, watching her own body and her C & Amp; Oacute; Rki waiting in the waiting room. “I was not aware that I was dead. I knew I was feeling more alive than ever before.”

< p > This experience changed her approach to life & ndash; And until death. The fear of which she wore all her life, disappeared. He was replaced by gratitude. Today, M & Amp; Oacute; Wi, that death is not the end, but the door, through which & osacute; we go to a place where everything makes sense. Where there is no b & oacute; loneliness or loneliness & ndash; only love and silence.

< p > tessa romero wr & oacute; To the children, to the world who knew it, but he sees him differently. He lives differently. And shares what she experienced & ndash; Not to shock, but to remind you that something beautiful may be waiting abroad.

Natasha Kumar

By Natasha Kumar

Natasha Kumar has been a reporter on the news desk since 2018. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining The Times Hub, Natasha Kumar worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my natasha@thetimeshub.in 1-800-268-7116