Woman who ‘died for 17 minutes’ says she saw something she couldn’t imagine

The mystery of what happens when we die has puzzled humanity for centuries. Despite all scientific advancements, we remain uncertain about what lies beyond. Death remains elusive and unexplained—no one returns to describe the experience without crossing the line between life and death.

Yet near-death experiences provide rare glimpses into this unknown. Some report peace and light; others recall only darkness. Victoria Thomas’s story is one such account that offers a different perspective on life after clinical death.

At age 35, Victoria collapsed during a workout at her local gym in Gloucester, UK. Moments before, she told a friend she felt dizzy. Suddenly, she hit the floor and went into cardiac arrest. For 17 minutes, she had no pulse and wasn’t breathing.

During that time, Victoria says everything went black—until she became aware of floating above her body, watching as paramedics worked to revive her. “I didn’t see a light or feel peace,” she said. “I was just watching, seeing the yellow machines around me.”

Paramedics didn’t give up. After 17 minutes, they restarted her heart. She was placed in a coma for three days and later fitted with a defibrillator to control her heart rhythm.

Eventually, doctors diagnosed her with Danon disease, a rare genetic condition affecting the heart, muscles, and other organs. By 2022, her heart function dropped to just 11%, a level considered terminal.

In 2023, she received a life-saving heart transplant. Now 41, Victoria is alive to tell her story—one that challenges our understanding of consciousness and death.

Her experience didn’t match popular near-death visions. Instead, it showed a detached awareness—proof that there may be more to life, and death, than we know.