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David Roberts is staff writer for Grist. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/drgrist.
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caniscandida Posted 5:59 pm
14 Feb 2007
Michael is truly courageous, a dedicated hero, if he returns to his job as sky-diving instructor, as he says he will, in order to teach people how to do it as safely as possible.
It is interesting, and not surprising really, that so many people have been asking Michael: What does a person experience, when he is looking his death in the face? I suppose it would be nice if we were granted a momentary consoling revelation at the end, but I do not think there is any good reason that that should be the case.
Anyway, Michael did not die, did he. We might speculate that if on that same dive, with the same catastrophic failures of his equipment, he were "meant" to die, i.e. if his death in that hour were fated, inescapable, "written," then perhaps God would have afforded him a different inward experience. But of course there is no way to prove that.
Chickens are our cousins!
So are other sensitive animals!
Enough is enough!
No more factory farms!
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mihan Posted 11:58 pm
14 Feb 2007
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willa Posted 2:22 pm
15 Feb 2007
It's either too late for me to do anything but be annoyed, or else it's too demanding a situation in terms of my performance in the next split second to allow life-flashing. Either way, I seem to have survived so far, so I guess none of my experiences has been all that near to death after all.
I will say, as amazing as this guy's story is, it mostly reinforces for me the idea that you don't go around jumping out of perfectly good airplanes. But what do I know? :)
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