Remember about death, and you will not sin. People are born to die, and it is a simple fact of life. The topic that I chose for my research is about life after death and how it is relevant. When I was growing up in a little village in Ukraine, I would sometimes go to awake. I was always wondering what happens to dead people. Can they hear and see us when we go to a funeral? What do they feel, where are they going? When I am dead, what would happen to me? These thoughts and questions prompted me to do this research. Up until now, I have collected different genres. These are the teaching of the major religious traditions about the afterlife. Philosophical arguments about the same question, personal accounts of the people who have experienced NDE (near-death experiences.) I also recently came across the article “‘Afterlife’ feels ‘even more real than real,’ researcher says,” by Ben Brumfield. It is a CNN article about the topic from the point of view of neuroscience. This last source has a lot of exciting perspectives on what medical doctors say. It is also interesting to know what non-religious sources say about the afterlife. Doctor Laureys heads the Coma Science Group at the university hospital in the city of Liege. According to his research, people who had NDE and returned to everyday life say the experience was something they will never forget. Laureys noted that he and his group of scientists wanted to find out what happened with the brain when it was dead, and there was no consciousness activity. It is difficult to do this research when a patient experiences clinical death to determine the brain’s state. These scientists decided to do a survey and ask people the most vivid memories in their lives. Among those who participated in the survey, people who had NDE said that it was the most extraordinary real event that they ever lived through. In this article, the author also calls upon the authority of the American Psychological Association. APA defines near-death experiences as “profound psychological events with transcendental and mystical elements, typically occurring to individuals close to death or in situations of intense physical or emotional danger.” I am pleased I have this valuable input from the point of view of neuroscientists. In my research of the topic, I hope to appeal to academics and philosophers, to people who try to verify the truth in sense experience, the logical positivists, agnostics, and even atheists. This last genre can be of particular interest to them since there is no religious bias here, and the data is understandable. This article also has a helpful photo. It shows the human brain’s three images: ordinary consciousness, cardiac arrest, and brain death, which also adds some extra useful information. It has been quite a journey in the research that I have made. Now I know a lot more than before. The thought of death became a reality of something that should not be frightful.