The eyes do not close, I have seen dead bodies, working in hospitals and sitting with the dying as a hospice aid, even if they die in a coma or sleep, they open slightly. If they die and we have to move the body, most often it is the final caregiver that gently closes the eyes, in a wake, the undertaker glues or stitches the eyes shut, out of respect for the appearance. In a case of death from asphyxiation, the eyes are almost always open. I think he was killed, and if Gaetz is dropping hints, I would say it was the "Royals".
I cannot recall anyone speaking outloud to a person, but I have seen more than half looking past me and focusing on something I could not see, sometimes they were disturbed, sometimes just smiling. Since Hospice focuses on pain relief, the patients were on morphine and relaxed. for the most part. In Nursing homes, I clearly remember one woman who died suddenly, and she was sitting up waiting for her supper tray, eyes wide open and she looked terrified, I can still see her face to this day, her heart had just stopped, she had the tv on, and as I said, was waiting for her supper.
Thanks for sharing. I've had a friend and a family member talking to dead people before they passed. Also a friend who worked in hospice witnessed it often, so it's a subject I'm very interested in. I've seen interviews with perfectly lucid, non-drugged hospice patients speak about dead relatives visiting them and appearing real. Those can be found on youtube and rumble.
The eyes do not close, I have seen dead bodies, working in hospitals and sitting with the dying as a hospice aid, even if they die in a coma or sleep, they open slightly. If they die and we have to move the body, most often it is the final caregiver that gently closes the eyes, in a wake, the undertaker glues or stitches the eyes shut, out of respect for the appearance. In a case of death from asphyxiation, the eyes are almost always open. I think he was killed, and if Gaetz is dropping hints, I would say it was the "Royals".
As a hospice worker, what estimated percentage of patients spoke to their dead loved ones before they passed?
I cannot recall anyone speaking outloud to a person, but I have seen more than half looking past me and focusing on something I could not see, sometimes they were disturbed, sometimes just smiling. Since Hospice focuses on pain relief, the patients were on morphine and relaxed. for the most part. In Nursing homes, I clearly remember one woman who died suddenly, and she was sitting up waiting for her supper tray, eyes wide open and she looked terrified, I can still see her face to this day, her heart had just stopped, she had the tv on, and as I said, was waiting for her supper.
Thanks for sharing. I've had a friend and a family member talking to dead people before they passed. Also a friend who worked in hospice witnessed it often, so it's a subject I'm very interested in. I've seen interviews with perfectly lucid, non-drugged hospice patients speak about dead relatives visiting them and appearing real. Those can be found on youtube and rumble.