Here. Christa describes in great detail the shuttle explosion and her own transition.
Christa: Our mission ended in midair due to a complication and an explosion. It was more of an implosion than an explosion, really.
Me: Okay.
Christa: And I remember clearly knowing that something was wrong. It was not a surprise. There was a lot of panic in the hub, and we all had our things to do. It was just so quick, so fast, but my main focus, my main goal was to do this, to be in space. Not only was I able to complete what I was supposed to do in spirit, I got to see all the planets, all the celestial bodies. I have never been so pleased. You would never, as a mother, say that –
(Pause)
Jamie (tearing up): She’s getting a little choked up.
Christa: You would never say you would trade your family and your children for that one thing that you always wanted to do.
(Jamie is crying, struggling to repeat what Christa says.)
Christa: I knew that everything would be okay. I was told everything would be okay—verbally! By voice.
Me: When?
Christa: Before I passed, after the explosion. I was told to relax and that everything would be okay.
Jamie: Gosh, I feel like I need to get her a glass of water or something.
Me: Aw. Well, did you get out of your body before any harm came to it—before you felt any pain?
Christa: I don’t remember any harm coming to my body. I remember being in my suit; I remember relaxing my grip and uncurling my toes, and I had pressure against the floor. I was pushing my feet against the floor. I heard someone telling me to relax, so I sort o let go and opened up and when I was told everything was going to be okay, I really knew that they meant every word of it. My kids, my family, my life, and the finances—all of my goals and dreams were safe.
Me: Well, can you tell me about your transition? What was the moment like when you left your body and found yourself in a new dimension?
Jamie listens.
Christa: I don’t know if people will believe me!
Jamie (laughing): It’s okay, Christa; I think we’ll believe you.
Me: Oh, we’ll believe you.
Jamie: Oh, yeah, we will!
Christa: Well, I was escorted by two huge beings.
Jamie: She’s using the word “angelic” and Erik is asking her, “How big?”
Christa: Like nine or ten feet and probably about four feet wide. There was one on either side of me.
Me: Okay.
Christa: And we continue the launch; we go into space, and I continued to complete what I started; yet I was in spirit. I saw nothing of the shuttle; I saw nothing falling away from me; I heard no noise, no explosion. I felt no fire, no heat. I didn’t have any fears about anything and I wasn’t falling. So there I was, continuing to soar upwards, and I have these two beings next to me. I’m no longer in my suit.
Me: Did you leave your body before the explosion tore the shuttle apart? Or did you work in spirit to complete your mission in the hub, so to speak?
Christa (sincerely puzzled): I don’t know! I don’t know if I left beforehand! I remember the implosion part; I remember my hair being pulled in and then pulled out away from my body, but I didn’t have any pain.
Me: Oh, good. Good.
Christa: So I don’t know if it was just such an instant death that there was nothing to it or if I was taken before. I just don’t remember seeing any of the other astronauts that were on the mission with me. I’m just going up and my thought was, ‘I don’t have my suit on! Will I be able to breathe?’ That was one of my first thoughts—‘Where is my suit? Will I be able to breathe?’
Me: Aw.
Jamie giggles quietly.
Christa: It goes to show you that it’s hard to let go of that human train of thought.
Me: Yeah.
Christa: And it’s not a quick and easy adaptation.
Me: I bet not.
Christa: So, we soared up and around the moon; I remember seeing planets; I remember space being so dark yet so warm. It wasn’t as cold as I had imagined. And when it was over—I don’t know about the time; I don’t know how long it took or anything—I just knew that I wanted to see these things and I was doing it. Then, I remember being able to go to Earth afterwards—
Jamie (chuckling): She calls it “land.”
Christa: –to see my family.
Me: Good!
Christa: I was able to say my goodbyes, and I was aware, then, that it was truly death and not a dream.
Me: Oh.
Christa: I remember hearing—
Jamie: Oh, well, there’s your timeframe right there, then!
Jamie listens for several seconds
Jamie (to Christa): Oh, yeah. I guess it could have been up to a week’s time.
Christa: I remember seeing on TV about the shuttle explosion when I was in my home.
Me: Oh, boy. How painful for your family to watch.
What a courageous woman, and how wonderful to have fulfilled her mission on the earthly plane. Now, in the afterlife, to be able to explore the universe without that uncomfortable and unflattering jumpsuit!
Watch this video of her life and death.
Be sure to join the CE Facebook group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/ChannelingErik/405597066163669/?notif_t=group_activity) and also friend Erik and me. Have a wonderful weekend, peeps.