Where the Light Begins

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New Age / Esoterics

Daniela Klose

Ralph Klose

Sacred Stories

Language of origin

Publication date

Stories of Near-Death Experiences and After-Death Communications by Children and How They Experience Them Differently Than Adults

Explores one of the most subtle and yet profound frontiers of human experience: children’s near-death experiences.

When children come close to death, some return with memories that defy easy explanation. They describe a light that feels like home, presence without form, and connection beyond language. Their accounts are not shaped by doctrine or beliefs; their words are simple and expressed with calm certainty. They do not speculate. They remember.

Based on real-life cases, hospice encounters, and years of listening to children and families, this book offers a rare and deeply human, child-centered perspective within near-death research. Each story is told with warmth and care, followed by interdisciplinary commentary and reflection drawn from psychology, neuroscience, and consciousness studies.

Rather than attempting to prove or disprove the existence of an afterlife, Where the Light Begins poses a more compelling question: What do these experiences reveal about the nature of consciousness itself? Time and again, the children who return describe not fantasy but clarity, experiencing a shift in perception that remains long after the medical crisis has passed. Fear softens. Compassion deepens. Identity expands.

Written in thoughtful and accessible language, this book provides reflections without dogma and wonder without sensationalism. It gently invites readers to approach the topic thoughtfully and with an open mind.

At its heart, this is not a book about dying. It is a book about consciousness, the boundaries of life, and the possibility that children, in their clarity and sincerity, may be among our most honest guides to the deeper dimensions of being.

Daniela Klose

Daniela is a medical writer and translator specializing in neuropsychology and transpersonal psychology.

Ralph Klose

Agence Schweiger