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Julie Ryan

Questions About Dying Process

Meg from London, England, asked:

Dear Julie,

After reading your Angelic Attendants: What Really Happens As We Transition From This Life Into The Next book, I have two questions I’d like to ask you please:

1) If someone wasn’t in contact nor on good terms with a parent, would that parent still show up in the horseshoe formation at the time of death of their son or daughter?

2) If an accident happens, leaving someone brain dead, but still looked after in hospital with a breathing machine, would that ‘horseshoe formation’ be present immediately after the fall, or would ‘all beings’ wait for the moment the breathing machine would be stopped in hospital, i.e. when the ‘official’ time of death takes place ?

Many thanks for your clarification on these two queries.

Have a great day.

With white light,

Meg

Hi Meg,

Thanks for reading Angelic Attendants and for your questions.

Deceased parents and/or maternal grandparents are always present when someone is in the dying process even if they didn’t have a good relationship with the person when they were alive.

Now, before you get too far with this concept, it’s important to remember that all spirits are pure love and negative personality traits stay with the body when someone dies.

Regarding what happens when someone is “brain dead” and on a ventilator (breathing machine), the Twelve Phases of Transition® begin when the person enters the dying process. That’s when their spirit exits the body and holds on to the top of the head in a speech bubble configuration. The Twelve Phases then continue to unfold as the person gets closer to exiting.

Phase Twelve is when someone’s body and spirit separate and angels escort the person’s spirit to Heaven.

It has been my experience in working with thousands of people and their families at the end of life that we all go through the Twelve Phases of Transition®. It can happen instantly like in the case of a homicide or suicide or it can unfold over days, weeks, months and has the ability to add a glorious component to what can be a heart wrenching experience.

Hope this answers your questions and comforts you.

2 thoughts on “Questions About Dying Process”

  1. I’ve asked my mom several times what number she is and she doesn’t speak or just nods her head. How does it work in the those situations?

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