Following the near-death experience, Dr Cummings found that his priorities and career pursuits had shifted.
Neuropathologist Dr. Peter Cummings, who was once convinced that all aspects of consciousness, including near-death experiences (NDEs), could be explained by science, had a life-altering experience when he had an NDE of his own. According to a report by The Epoch Times, Cummings, a successful doctor and assistant professor at Boston University School of Medicine, suffered an accident during whitewater rafting in Costa Rica that altered his views completely.
Cummings had always been afraid of water and had practiced holding his breath, feeling that it might come in handy someday. When the raft he was in flipped, he found himself in the water, fearing that he would drown. As he struggled to stay afloat, he experienced a moment of calm and acceptance, "There was a point where I was drowning. And I knew it," said Cummings in IANDSvideos. "I thought about the autopsies I’d done on people who had drowned. This is supposed to be a very peaceful way to die. And then I’m thinking well, ‘What the heck is taking so long?'"
At the bottom of the river, Cummings had what could be considered a hallucination from a neuroscience perspective. He saw a bright light and felt an overwhelming sense of love. He heard a voice reassuring him that his family would be okay, stating that they didn't need him. At that moment, he also knew that his wife and son had already been pulled out of the water and were safe. Cummings' scientific mind then kicked in, dismissing the experience as a result of hypoxia and encouraging him to hold his breath and beat his record. With that thought, the light vanished. Eventually, Cummings was pulled out of the water, and he discovered that his heart had stopped during the ordeal, as indicated by his Apple watch, which recorded eight minutes of unrecorded heart rate.
Following the near-death experience, Cummings found that his priorities and career pursuits had shifted. "I became very uncomfortable with my career pursuit. Those things weren’t important to me anymore. I say I’ve written a couple of very bad novels. And I couldn’t identify with that any of those things," said Cummings. After his own NDE, he said, "The number one question I’ve always been asked is ‘Did they suffer?’ And as a physician, you always say ‘No, of course not.’ But I always felt like a liar. Because I don’t know."
Cummings' perspective on death transformed, and he realized that it should not be a topic avoided in conversations. He believes that the experience of dying is a profound transformation, and society should celebrate and embrace it rather than keep it behind a sterile curtain. Talking about death without being in discomfort he concluded, "We’ve made it so sterile and kept behind this curtain. That we don’t get a chance to really experience and celebrate the transformation that is happening."