
From a medical point of view, clinical death occurs when the heart and lungs stop functioning. Yet recent research suggests that the transition from life to death may not be as abrupt as once thought.
Doctors have recorded cases where patients revived after cardiac arrest described hearing conversations, sensing light, or even recalling details from the operating room. These reports imply that some level of consciousness might persist for a few minutes after the heart stops beating.
This idea challenges our understanding of where life truly ends — and what might linger just beyond that point.
What Happens Inside the Body

When the heart stops, the body begins an internal process known as autolysis — the self-decomposition of cells. Without oxygen, tissues begin to break down, a process that can last hours or even days depending on temperature and environment.
The brain, too, doesn’t switch off immediately. In 2018, researchers at Western University in Canada recorded faint electrical activity up to ten minutes after clinical death. Though not proof of ongoing thought, it raises fascinating questions about how long fragments of awareness might persist.
Consciousness: Science Meets Spirituality
Here, science and spirituality touch — but never fully overlap. Despite decades of research, no one has found a conclusive answer about whether consciousness survives after death.
Near-death experiences, reported by thousands, describe floating sensations, brilliant light, and deep peace. Neuroscientists often attribute these to a flood of chemicals such as DMT and serotonin in the dying brain — a physiological explanation for what others interpret as a spiritual passage.
Perhaps both are true in their own way: a biological event that feels profoundly transcendent.
Three Days Between Worlds

While science remains cautious, ancient traditions have long explored this in symbolic depth.
- In Hinduism, the soul is believed to begin its journey to the afterlife after three days.
In Tibetan Buddhism, consciousness passes through a series of states over 49 days.
In many shamanic cultures, ceremonies are held between the third and seventh day to guide the spirit on its way.
Different as they are, these beliefs share a common purpose — to honor the passage, comfort the living, and give meaning to death’s silence.
Where Science Ends and Mystery Begins
No scientific study has proven the existence of the soul. Yet what we do know is that death is not an instant switch — it’s a gradual unfolding, both physically and perhaps, in some unseen sense, spiritually.
Between biology and belief lies a quiet space where science meets humility, and faith finds its reason to endure.
Maybe the real mystery isn’t when the soul leaves the body — but how life, in some form, continues long after we’re gone.