
The Courage to Speak: Doctors Near Abanotubani Share Their Secrets
Crisis apparitions — the appearance of a person at the exact moment of their death, often to someone miles away — have been documented since the founding of the Society for Psychical Research in 1882. What makes the accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories so remarkable is that they come from physicians, people trained to distinguish hallucination from reality, subjective experience from objective observation. Dr. Scott Kolbaba presents these crisis apparition accounts alongside other unexplained phenomena witnessed in hospitals, creating a mosaic of mystery that speaks to something fundamental about the human condition. For Abanotubani readers, these stories are more than curiosities; they are invitations to reconsider what we know about the bonds between people and whether those bonds can transcend death itself.
Ghost Traditions and Supernatural Beliefs in Georgia
Georgia's (the country in the Caucasus) spirit traditions reflect one of the world's oldest and most deeply rooted Christian cultures, combined with pre-Christian Caucasian beliefs that have survived in the mountainous regions for millennia. Georgia adopted Christianity as its state religion in 326 CE — making it one of the first nations in the world to do so — and the Georgian Orthodox Church has profoundly shaped the nation's relationship with the supernatural. Georgian folk Christianity maintains beliefs about angelic beings, demonic entities, and the active presence of saints that blend official theology with ancient Caucasian spiritual traditions. In the mountain regions of Svaneti, Tusheti, Khevsureti, and Pshavi, pre-Christian nature spirits and deities have been syncretized with Christian saints, creating a unique spiritual landscape.
The practice of kidveba (calling the dead) exists in Georgian folk tradition, in which the spirits of the recently deceased are believed to return to their families during specific rituals. The supra — Georgia's famous ritualized feast — traditionally includes toasts to the dead (modzmalo!), and the tamada (toastmaster) serves as a bridge between the living and the deceased during these ceremonies. Georgian funeral traditions are elaborate, and the mourning period includes specific rituals at which the deceased's spirit is believed to be present.
In the mountainous regions, the tradition of jvari (sacred cross shrines) combines Christian symbolism with pre-Christian sacred sites, creating locations of intense spiritual power where villagers communicate with both God and the spirits of their ancestors. The Svan people of Upper Svaneti maintain particularly archaic spiritual practices, including rituals conducted at ancient stone towers that have been used for both defensive and spiritual purposes for a thousand years. The tradition of curative thermal springs, particularly in Tbilisi (whose name derives from the old Georgian word "tbili," meaning "warm," after its sulfur springs), has ancient roots in both the physical healing and spiritual renewal associated with sacred waters.
Near-Death Experience Research in Georgia
Georgian perspectives on near-death experiences are shaped by the Georgian Orthodox Church's teachings about the soul's journey after death. In Georgian Orthodox theology, the soul separates from the body at death and undergoes a 40-day journey during which it visits both heaven and hell before reaching final judgment. Memorial services (panashvidi) are held on the 3rd, 9th, and 40th days after death, corresponding to believed stages of this journey. Georgian accounts of near-death experiences, shared within families and communities, often describe encounters with saints (particularly St. George, the patron saint of Georgia, and the Virgin Mary), deceased relatives, and experiences of light and peace. The Georgian tradition of the supra (feast), with its ritualized toasts to the dead, reflects a culture in which communication with the deceased is ritualized and valued. These cultural practices suggest that Georgian society maintains an active and ongoing relationship with death and the afterlife that provides a natural framework for understanding NDE phenomena.
Medical Fact
The femur (thighbone) is the longest and strongest bone in the human body.
Miraculous Accounts and Divine Intervention in Georgia
Georgia's miracle traditions are deeply embedded in its 1,700-year Christian heritage. The country's churches and monasteries are associated with numerous miracle accounts, from the founding legends of ancient churches — such as the story of the Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in Mtskheta, built on the site where Christ's robe was allegedly buried — to contemporary reports of weeping icons and miraculous healings. The Tbilisi sulfur baths have been credited with remarkable cures for centuries, combining their documented therapeutic properties (for skin conditions, arthritis, and other ailments) with spiritual associations that elevate the bathing experience to a healing ritual. The Georgian Orthodox tradition of myrrhstreaming icons — icons that are reported to exude a fragrant oil with healing properties — has produced accounts of miraculous recoveries. Traditional Georgian medicine, including the use of Caucasian herbs, honey, and wine for therapeutic purposes, has also generated accounts of remarkable cures, particularly in the mountain communities where access to modern medicine has historically been limited.
What Families Near Abanotubani Should Know About Near-Death Experiences
Pediatric cardiologists near Abanotubani, Tbilisi encounter childhood NDEs with increasing frequency as survival rates for congenital heart defects improve. These children's accounts—simple, unadorned, and free of religious or cultural overlay—provide some of the most compelling NDE data in the literature. A five-year-old who describes meeting a grandmother she never knew, and correctly identifies her from a photograph, presents a research challenge that deserves more than dismissal.
Transplant centers near Abanotubani, Tbilisi have accumulated a small but growing collection of cases where organ recipients report experiences or memories that seem to originate from the donor. A heart transplant recipient who suddenly craves food the donor loved, knows the donor's name without being told, or experiences the donor's final moments in a dream—these cases intersect with NDE research at the boundary between individual consciousness and something shared.
Medical Fact
The first CT scan was performed on a patient in 1971 at Atkinson Morley Hospital in London.
The History of Grief, Loss & Finding Peace in Medicine
The Midwest's tradition of barn raisings—communities gathering to build what no individual could construct alone—finds its medical equivalent near Abanotubani, Tbilisi in the fundraising dinners, charity auctions, and GoFundMe campaigns that pay for neighbors' medical bills. The Midwest doesn't wait for insurance to cover everything. It passes the hat, fills the plate, and does what needs to be done.
Midwest physicians near Abanotubani, Tbilisi who practice in the same community for their entire career develop a population-level understanding of health that no database can match. They see the patterns: the factory that causes respiratory disease, the intersection that produces trauma, the family that carries depression through generations. This pattern recognition, built over decades, makes the community physician a public health instrument of irreplaceable value.
Open Questions in Faith and Medicine
Evangelical Christian physicians near Abanotubani, Tbilisi navigate a daily tension between their faith's call to witness and their profession's requirement of neutrality. The physician who silently prays for a patient before entering the room is practicing a form of faith-medicine integration that respects both callings. The patient never knows about the prayer, but the physician believes it matters—and the extra moment of centered attention undeniably improves the encounter.
Native American spiritual practices near Abanotubani, Tbilisi are increasingly accommodated in Midwest hospitals, where smudging ceremonies, drumming, and the presence of traditional healers are now permitted in some facilities. This accommodation reflects not just cultural competency but a recognition that the Dakota, Ojibwe, and Ho-Chunk nations' healing traditions—practiced on this land for millennia before any hospital was built—deserve a place in the healing process.
Hospital Ghost Stories Near Abanotubani
There is a profound loneliness in witnessing something you believe no one else would understand. For physicians in Abanotubani who have experienced deathbed phenomena, this loneliness can be particularly acute. Their professional culture values certainty, their colleagues may be dismissive, and the broader public often swings between credulity and mockery on these topics. Physicians' Untold Stories addresses this loneliness directly, creating a community of shared experience that transcends geography and specialty.
Dr. Kolbaba's book has become, for many physicians, the permission they needed to acknowledge their experiences — first to themselves, and then to others. And in Abanotubani, where this book has been passed from physician to physician, from nurse to chaplain, from bereaved family to curious friend, it has sparked conversations that were long overdue. These conversations are not about proving the supernatural; they are about being honest about what we have witnessed and what it might mean. For Abanotubani residents, the existence of these conversations is itself a sign of cultural health — a sign that a community is willing to engage with the deepest questions of human existence rather than avoiding them.
The architecture of hospitals seems to play a role in these experiences. Older facilities — the kind that exist in many Tbilisi communities, buildings that have served generations of patients through births, surgeries, epidemics, and deaths — report higher rates of unexplained phenomena. This observation is consistent across Dr. Kolbaba's interviews and across published surveys of healthcare workers.
Modern hospital construction, with its emphasis on clean lines, abundant natural light, and single-occupancy rooms, may reduce the frequency of reported experiences — but it does not eliminate them. Even in Abanotubani's newest medical facilities, physicians and nurses report unexplained phenomena. The common factor is not the building itself but the nature of the work done within it: the daily proximity to death, suffering, and the profound transitions of human life.
The cultural diversity of Abanotubani means that its residents approach questions of death and afterlife from many different traditions — Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, secular, and others. What makes Physicians' Untold Stories so valuable for this diverse community is its universal appeal. The book does not advocate for any particular religious interpretation of its accounts; it simply presents what physicians have witnessed and allows readers to draw their own conclusions. For Abanotubani's interfaith community, the book can serve as a meeting ground — a place where people of different beliefs can discover that their traditions may be describing different aspects of the same reality, and where the shared human experience of facing death can become a source of connection rather than division.

Applying the Lessons of Hospital Ghost Stories
What makes these accounts remarkable is not their supernatural character — it is their source. These are not stories from paranormal investigators or ghost hunters. They are accounts from board-certified physicians, surgeons, and intensivists who have spent decades trusting evidence and data. When a physician in Abanotubani tells you they saw something they cannot explain, the weight of their training makes that testimony impossible to dismiss.
Dr. Kolbaba himself struggled with this tension. As a Mayo Clinic-trained internist practicing at Northwestern Medicine in Wheaton, Illinois, his professional identity was built on evidence-based medicine. But the sheer volume and consistency of the stories he collected forced him to reconsider assumptions he had held since medical school. His willingness to publish these accounts — under his real name, with his credentials on full display — is itself a form of medical courage.
The night shift in any hospital is a liminal space — a threshold between the ordinary rhythms of daytime medicine and something altogether more intimate and mysterious. Physicians who work nights in Abanotubani's hospitals know this well: the quieted hallways, the dimmed lights, the peculiar intensity of caring for the critically ill when the rest of the world sleeps. It is during these shifts that many of the experiences documented in Physicians' Untold Stories occur. A nurse hears a patient call her name from a room where the patient died two hours ago. A resident physician sees a figure standing at the foot of a dying patient's bed — a figure that vanishes when approached.
These night-shift encounters are not unique to any one hospital or city; they are reported across the medical profession with a consistency that is difficult to attribute to coincidence or fatigue. Dr. Kolbaba presents these accounts with sensitivity to the professionals who experienced them, many of whom spent years questioning their own perceptions before finding validation in the similar experiences of colleagues. For Abanotubani readers, these night-shift narratives offer a glimpse into a world that exists alongside our own — a world that becomes visible only when the noise of ordinary life quiets enough for us to perceive it.
The Society for Psychical Research (SPR), founded in London in 1882 by a distinguished group of scholars including Henry Sidgwick, Frederic Myers, and Edmund Gurney, was the first organized scientific effort to investigate phenomena that appeared to challenge materialist assumptions about consciousness. Among the SPR's earliest and most significant projects was the Census of Hallucinations (1894), which surveyed over 17,000 respondents and found that approximately 10% reported having experienced an apparition of a living or recently deceased person. Crisis apparitions — appearances that coincided with the death or serious illness of the person perceived — constituted a statistically significant subset of these reports. The SPR's meticulous methodology, which included independent verification of each reported case, set a standard for research that subsequent investigations have sought to emulate. Dr. Scott Kolbaba's Physicians' Untold Stories draws on this tradition by applying similar standards of verification to physician-reported experiences, ensuring that each account is firsthand, named, and professionally credible. For Abanotubani readers interested in the historical foundations of this research, the SPR's work demonstrates that the investigation of unexplained phenomena has a long and intellectually rigorous history — one that is far removed from the sensationalism often associated with the topic.

Miraculous Recoveries Near Abanotubani
One of the most poignant aspects of "Physicians' Untold Stories" is the impact that witnessing miraculous recoveries has had on the physicians themselves. Several contributors describe their experiences as pivotal moments in their careers — events that fundamentally altered how they practice medicine, how they communicate with patients, and how they understand their role as healers. For some, the experience deepened an existing faith. For others, it sparked a spiritual journey they had never anticipated.
For physicians practicing in Abanotubani, Tbilisi, these personal testimonies are perhaps as valuable as the medical cases themselves. They demonstrate that witnessing the unexplained does not require abandoning scientific rigor. Instead, it can deepen a physician's commitment to honest inquiry while expanding their compassion and humility. Dr. Kolbaba's book shows that the best physicians are not those who have all the answers but those who remain open to questions they never expected to face.
The relationship between stress and disease has been extensively studied, with research consistently showing that chronic stress impairs immune function, accelerates cellular aging, and increases susceptibility to a wide range of illnesses. Less studied, but equally important, is the relationship between stress relief and recovery. Some researchers have hypothesized that the sudden resolution of chronic stress — whether through spiritual experience, psychological breakthrough, or changed life circumstances — may trigger healing processes that were previously suppressed.
Several accounts in "Physicians' Untold Stories" are consistent with this hypothesis. Patients who experienced dramatic recoveries often described concurrent changes in their psychological or spiritual state — a sudden sense of peace, a release of long-held fear, a transformative spiritual experience. For psychoneuroimmunology researchers in Abanotubani, Tbilisi, these accounts suggest a possible mechanism for at least some spontaneous remissions: the removal of chronic stress as a barrier to the body's innate healing capacity.
Abanotubani's media professionals — journalists, broadcasters, and content creators — find "Physicians' Untold Stories" a rich source of material for stories that combine medical science with human interest. The book's documented cases of miraculous recovery offer the kind of compelling, verifiable narratives that responsible media professionals seek: stories grounded in medical evidence, told by credentialed witnesses, and carrying the emotional power that makes great storytelling. For media professionals in Abanotubani, Tbilisi, Kolbaba's book demonstrates that the most extraordinary stories are sometimes the truest ones — and that rigorous reporting and sense of wonder are not incompatible.

How This Book Can Help You
Libraries near Abanotubani, Tbilisi—those anchor institutions of Midwest intellectual life—have placed this book where it belongs: in the intersection of medicine, spirituality, and human experience. It circulates heavily, is frequently requested, and generates more patron discussions than any other title in the collection. The Midwest library recognizes a community need when it sees one, and this book meets it.


About the Author
Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD is an internist at Northwestern Medicine. Mayo Clinic trained, he spent three years interviewing 200+ physicians about their most extraordinary experiences.
Medical Fact
Insulin was first used to treat a diabetic patient in 1922 by Frederick Banting and Charles Best in Toronto.
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