Across a dark hospital room, a broken woman says she slipped out of her body and into blinding light.
Angels, a prophecy, a deadline for humanity. Is it delusion, or a warning we’re too afraid to hear? As old systems crack and trust erodes, her vision of a coming Gol… Continues…
Julie Poole’s experience sits in that uneasy space between miracle and metaphor. A survivor of brutal childhood abuse,
she describes her near-death experience not as an escape from life, but as a summons back into it. In the “spirit realm” she recalls,
there was no judgment, only an overwhelming sense that her existence still mattered, that her suffering could become seed rather than scar.
Her later vision of a “Golden Age” between 2012 and 2032 can be read as prophecy, but it can also be understood as the desperate hope of a world on the brink.
As institutions falter and hidden abuses surface, her claim that corrupt systems must fall feels less like fantasy and more like a moral demand.
Whether or not one believes in angels, Poole’s story insists on a quieter miracle: that choosing to stay, to heal, and to act with conscience may be the most powerful afterlife we ever touch.