MovieChat Forums > Somewhere in Time (1980) Discussion > Christopher Reeve had an out-of-body exp...

Christopher Reeve had an out-of-body experience IRL!


I'm currently reading Christopher's autobiography Still Me (great book, btw), and in it he writes about having had an actual out-of-body experience almost exactly like the one in this movie! The only difference is that he never made it back into his body in the movie. Creepy!

Here's the excerpt:

I had nearly died a week after I arrived at Kessler, on the night of July 5. I may still have been reacting to the terror of that night.

It began with a drug called Sygen, which many people who are spinal cord injured have been taking, although it hasn't been approved by the FDA. You need to have it flown over from Italy or Switzerland, and it's very expensive. But there is a theory that Sygen helps reduce damage to the spinal cord. Some people who have tried it think it has helped them tremendously, while others say it's done nothing. There is no conclusive proof.

But I was willing to try anything. My family ordered it, and a month's supply arrived from Italy. On the afternoon of July 5, I received my first injection of about 400 milligrams.

At about six-thirty that evening, I was in bed. Patty was in the room. I began to feel constriction in my lungs, wheezing, and difficulty breathing. It quickly got worse, and breathing became even harder. Patty went to get Dr. Kirshblum, Dr. Green, and a few more nurses. Before long emergency medical teams from two towns had arrived. I was in anaphylactic shock, and my lungs had shut down. I couldn't breathe at all.

I realized this was happening, although I could do nothing about it. My heart rate went way up, while my blood pressure dropped to about 40 over 20. I had never experienced anything like it. They boosted the oxygen supply to 100 percent, but I still couldn't take in any air. I was struggling, the doctors were shouting. It was pandemonium.

Everything was closing down. Things seemed more and more surreal as I fought for air. I felt like I was going to drown, the way you feel if you’re diving and are down, and you need to make it to the surface but you know you can’t. Everything around me went gray. I could still hear the people in the room; they were giving me various drugs, arguing about whether they should speed me up or slow me down. They were worrying about a histamine condition I have, known as mastocytosis. Dr. Kirshblum took over.

Then I had one of the eeriest experiences of my life. I had often heard about near-death and out-of-body experiences but had always discounted them. I'd never given any credence to seeing the white light and the tunnel and all those kinds of things. But now something very strange happened to me. I struggled and struggled, fighting for air. Then, after a while, I couldn't fight anymore. And I clearly recall thinking or perhaps even saying aloud, "l'm sorry, but I have to go now." I remember the words very specifically. Again, I had that feeling of embarrassment, that I had to apologize because I'd failed. I had fought as hard as I could but hadn't made it.

And then I left my body. I was up on the ceiling. There was no white light, but I looked down and saw my body stretched out on the bed, not moving, while everybody - there were fifteen or twenty people, the doctors, the EMTs, the nurses - was working on me. The noise and commotion grew quieter as though someone were gradually turning down the volume. I watched myself lying still and saw everyone swirling around with blood pressure cuffs, stethoscopes, and needles.

There was a crash cart because they had called a code. A decision was made to give me a massive dose of epinephrine. It jump-started my heart, and my pulse shot up to some astoundingly high number, maybe 175. And then, with a jolt, I was down from the ceiling and back in my body. I felt my heart racing, my face turning crimson, my whole body pounding as though my pulse was everywhere.

Air started to come back, and I gulped it in. My blood pressure began to rise, and my mind cleared. I was seeing things again from my normal perspective, from within my body. Sounds were incredibly loud, and everything was chaotic. The epinephrine had gotten me going again. I was back.

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I feel for everyone with a spinal cord injury, but CR's hit me really hard.

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