Relatives or friends that die before we do greet us at the moment of our death. These greeters serve two incredibly important functions for the dying.
It is easier to leave our body behind if we have something to move toward.
Our attention is then drawn away from our body to someone else.
The greeters, as I call them, represent something warmer,
more inviting, or perhaps safer and brighter than our physical body.
Most of the deceased I spoke with who crossed over with ease
were moving toward ancestors, predeceased parents, spouses or children.
The predeceased relatives are not just a figment of dying person’s imagination.
Our ancestors greet us by choice and with purpose.
These disincarnate people who greet us are the midwives of our death.





