"They were avoided, insulted, no one was honest with them." She would sit with them for hours, listening to what they had to say. In 1969, she published the book "Death and Dying" (in which she discussed, among other things, the stages of dying), which brought her international fame.
At the same time, she offended many of her colleagues.
Especially when in 1974 she publicly admitted: "When I started working with dying patients, I didn't believe in life after death. Today, however, I have no doubt that it exists." Elizabeth has spoken with many patients who were brought back to life. She herself had a similar experience in the early 1970s. After a long shift, she fainted, her pulse disappeared, and her breathing stopped. They thought she had died. When she "returned," she remembered what she had experienced: being separated from her body and a voice commanding her to return. Dr. Kibler-Ross gave lectures describing the cases of her patients. She wrote over twenty books, which have been translated into 25 languages.
Yet, she almost gave up and gave up her work. She was devastated, discouraged by the attacks from the medical community. And then Mary Schwartz, a patient who had been dead for several months, appeared in her office. She begged the doctor not to resign. As she left, at Elizabeth's request, Mary signed a note with the date. Experts later compared the signature with samples of Mary's handwriting—and deemed it authentic!
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