WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Life Doesn’t Always End at Death-the Third State

This posting is inspired from My Science Readings This Week
Life doesn’t always end at death, scientists may have uncovered something completely new. A groundbreaking discovery has stunned the scientific community. Researchers have identified what they call a third state of life that emerges after death. Unlike life as we know it, this state begins once the body stops functioning in the conventional sense.
The findings suggest that certain biological processes continue or even activate in new ways after death. Scientists observed specific molecular and cellular activities that were previously unknown. This post-mortem state may involve energy transfer, microbial activity, or chemical changes that challenge traditional definitions of life.
While life and death have always been considered binary, this discovery adds a new layer of complexity. It could have profound implications for medicine, biology, and even our understanding of consciousness. Forensic science might benefit, giving researchers new ways to study decomposition, post-mortem changes, and even preservation.
Experts emphasize that much more research is needed. The phenomenon raises questions about what life truly is, how it ends, and whether aspects of living processes persist beyond death. Philosophers, scientists, and curious minds alike are now debating what this post-mortem state means for the nature of existence.
This discovery reminds us that life is more mysterious than we ever imagined. Even in death, biological processes may continue in ways that reveal hidden secrets about the living world. Scientists are only just beginning to explore this astonishing new frontier.

Meanwhile, here's more detailed reflection and write-up on this topic- A Third State of Life: Science Meets the Spirit Beyond Death

My Personal Reflection

Over the years, I’ve read countless studies on the mystery of life and death. Yet every so often, a discovery emerges that challenges even the most established ideas — and invites us to think differently about what it means to be alive.
As someone who has spent much of his life reflecting on health, science, and the unseen threads connecting mind and body, I find this new conversation deeply moving: the possibility that there exists
third state of life — something that begins when life, as we define it, appears to end.


The Emerging Science of Life After Death

Scientists are beginning to recognize that death, like birth, may not be a single event, but a gradual biological and energetic transition. New research has shown that after the heart stops and breathing ceases, the brain can remain active for several minutes — sometimes producing structured waves resembling those seen in conscious states.

In 2023, teams at the University of Michigan and the University of Louisville recorded unexpected bursts of gamma brain activity in patients declared clinically dead. These brain waves, associated with heightened awareness, memory recall, and perception, appeared moments after cardiac arrest — defying the assumption that consciousness ceases instantly.

Some researchers now describe this phase as a transitional consciousness, a window where awareness might persist even as the body shuts down. While scientists still debate its nature, the findings raise profound questions about what actually happens at the moment of death — and whether life’s boundary is far more flexible than we once believed.


Near-Death Experiences: Glimpses of the Third State

For decades, survivors of cardiac arrest and other close calls have reported experiences that are strikingly similar across cultures and beliefs. These near-death experiences (NDEs) often include:

  • A sense of peace and detachment from the body

  • Heightened clarity or panoramic life review

  • Encounters with light or luminous beings

  • A profound feeling of love and connection

  • Reluctance to return to physical life

In one major study published iResuscitation (2014), over 40% of cardiac arrest survivors described some form of conscious awareness during their period of clinical death. A few even recalled details from their surroundings that were later verified by medical staff — a finding that science still struggles to explain.

Neurologists suggest that NDEs may result from a surge of brain activity during oxygen deprivation. But others, including quantum theorists and consciousness researchers, propose that these experiences may point to the independence of consciousness from the brain — a notion echoed by many ancient spiritual traditions.


Where Science and Spirit Converge

What’s remarkable is how modern findings are beginning to echo ancient wisdom. Traditions from Egypt to Tibet have long spoken of a “transitional state” — a phase in which the soul, or life energy, separates gently from the body, retaining awareness for a time.

If this third state is real — not just a poetic metaphor but a measurable phenomenon — it suggests that death may be less an ending than a transformation. Just as matter converts to energy, consciousness may too shift its form, continuing in ways science is only beginning to glimpse.

Perhaps, in this mysterious in-between state, the essence of who we are — memory, emotion, awareness — is briefly unbound, free to perceive reality from a higher, timeless vantage point.


Final Reflection: Finding Peace in the Mystery

For me, this discovery offers both comfort and perspective. It reminds me that life’s beauty lies not just in its beginnings or endings, but in the continuity of its unfolding.

If there truly exists a third state between life and death, then perhaps we are never fully gone — only transformed. Energy becomes light, awareness becomes peace, and what we call “the end” may simply be the next breath of existence in another dimension of being.

That understanding brings me a quiet sense of peace. It invites me to live each day more fully — to appreciate the warmth of touch, the kindness of others, and the healing power of calm — knowing that all of it, in one form or another, continues.

Meanwhile, 
Research in quantum physics's challenging what we think we know about death-and reality itself. A growing theory called biocentrism suggests that life and consciousness aren't just random accidents of the universe, but its very foundation.
According to this view, death may not be the end. Instead, it could be a shift in conscious experience, shaped by the observer and happening within a vast multiverse. In simple terms, what we see as "reality" might be deeply tied to how we perceive it.
Biocentrism draws support from strange but well-documented quantum effects-like entanglement, the observer effect, and even retrocausality, where particles seem to influence events in the past.
These experiments hint at a universe where consciousness plays a key role in shaping what's real.
If this theory holds true, then death might not be a full stop, but a transition to another version of existence -beyond time and space, in a multiverse where all possibilities exist side by side. While still controversial, this idea is gaining attention among scientists and philosophers as a new way to think about life, consciousness, and what happens after we die.

Finally, Have You Heard of Dirty Boxing?

Panantukan — often called Filipino boxing — is an empty-hand striking system that uses close-range, "dirty" tactics like elbows, headbutts, short punches, and forearm smashes.
It emphasizes trapping, limb-destruction strikes to nerves and muscles, and clinch work to disable an opponent’s arms and mobility. Rooted in Filipino martial arts (especially arnis/kali), it’s the logical empty-hand continuation of weapon drills and is designed for real-world, brutal efficiency rather than sport.
Modern fighters and self-defense instructors borrow its techniques for close-quarters combat because of how quickly it can neutralize an opponent.

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