For six long minutes, Sarah Mitchell was clinically dead.
A car accident on a quiet highway sent her vehicle crashing into a ditch. Paramedics arrived quickly, but by the time they pulled her out and checked her vitals, her heart had already stopped. She was gone. But what happened next has left even the most skeptical doctors stunned.
“I remember floating,” Sarah recalls. “At first, it was darkness—but not scary. It was peaceful. Then I felt myself being pulled, gently, toward this warm, golden light.”
She says she passed through what looked like a tunnel, but it didn’t feel like movement—it felt like being embraced. And when she emerged, what she saw was unlike anything she could explain.
“There was a meadow. Endless, glowing flowers. Colors I can’t even describe. And a presence—I didn’t see a face, but I knew it was someone who loved me. Someone who had always loved me.”
But the most powerful moment was still to come.
“I heard a voice,” she says. “Not with my ears—somehow deeper than that. It said, ‘You’re not done yet, Sarah. Go back. Tell them it’s real.’ And just like that… I was back.”
Six minutes had passed. Her heart started again.
Doctors call it a miracle. Sarah calls it a mission.
Since her recovery, she’s been sharing her story—on podcasts, in hospitals, and in support groups. She says it’s not about religion or fear. “It’s about love,” she says. “What’s waiting for us is love. That’s all we need to know.”
Many have dismissed near-death experiences as brain activity or hallucinations—but Sarah insists: “I didn’t imagine it. I was there. Heaven is real.”