PHYSICIAN
OBSERVES TRANSFIGURATION
Early in her
medical career, the late Barbara R. Rommer, M.D. realized that most of her
patients were unable to fully experience the joy of life because of their
fear of dying. “That fact stabled at my soul,” Rommer, then a Fort
Lauderdale, Florida internist, told me in a 2000 interview. It also
explained the motivation underlying her research in the field of near-death
experiences (NDEs). From 1994 until her death in 2004, Rommer interviewed
more than 500 people who had reported NDEs. She was the author of
Blessings in Disguise, a book reporting on her research of the NDE.
Rommer said that her
most intriguing interview was the fifty-seventh, conducted on February 7,
1996. Her interest in the afterlife implications of the NDE prompted her to
take a course in mediumship at the Arthur Ford Academy, part of Delphi
University in Georgia. Two friends, a registered nurse and a psychiatrist
accompanied her. During one of the classes, Marshall Smith, an instructor,
contacted Arthur Ford, a well-known medium who had crossed over to the Other
Side in 1971.
“It blew me away,”
said Rommer. “I have to tell you that I am not easily led by the nose, not
at all, but I’m telling you that Marshall Smith physically changed, visibly,
right in front of the class. It was astounding. I had never seen anything
like it and I was in awe.”
Rommer later asked
about the possibility of a one-on-one interview with Ford, with Smith as the
medium. The request was granted.
“Marshall ceased to be
Marshall as Arthur ‘came in’,” Rommer recalled. “Marshall is a tall person
and fairly thin. I know this sounds ludicrous, but he became shorter and
wider. As I had seen the transformation in the class, I was prepared for
it, but still it was absolutely totally unbelievable.”
At the time, Rommer
did not know what Arthur Ford had looked like in his earthly shell, but she
later saw pictures of him and said that Smith looked just like him.
Moreover, Smith’s voice also changed.
Ford, speaking through
Smith’s vocal cords, began to tell Rommer about dying and death.
“Transition is one of the most simple of all things,” he told her. “The
minute the spirit leaves the body it goes into a transformation. It follows
the thought of that person, the general thought of that person.”
After several minutes
of listening to Ford talk about dying and transition, Rommer asked him about
people who had had NDEs and were told it was not yet their time. She wanted
to know if they had actually died. “I had one exactly as you say,” Ford
replied. “I died, went over, and into a building. There were four men
sitting as this big desk. They looked down at me and started talking about
me. They told me it was not time for me to come across. I protested and
said, ‘I don’t want to go back.’…They said, ‘You must go back.’ I decided
there was no choice That’s when I entered back into my body.”
Ford explained that
he came to the conclusion that he still had work to do. Rommer then asked
him who does the judging in life reviews. “It comes primarily from within
oneself,” Ford responded, adding that the individual soul is the most severe
judge of all.
Midway into the
interview, Ford announced that someone else was present – Rommer’s father.
“Did your father like rocking chairs?” Ford asked.
“Sure, he loved them,”
Rommer enthusiastically answered. “He watched television in them, read the
newspaper, read journals.”
Ford then said: “What
does he mean when he says, ‘I told you so’? There’s something about a
ribbon or reward, a multicolored ribbon. A reward hangs on this ribbon. Do
you recall anything like that?”
Rommer was startled
again. “That blew me away,” she admitted, explaining that in 1973, after
she had been married for two years, her father gave her husband, Sonny, an
engraved medal with a red, white, and blue ribbon for having survived two
years with his daughter.
“Believe me, that was
not in my obvious consciousness. If Marshall, Arthur Ford, whoever was
right in front of me, was reading my energy, there would not have been the
thought of what Papa gave Sonny in 1973.
“I never had an
experience like that before,” Rommer concluded. “I repeat that I am not
easily led by the nose. But I believed it and saw it with my own eyes.”
– Michael E. Tymn
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