We present a longitudinal case study documenting spontaneous awakening following near-death experience (NDE) in a currently 57-year-old male subject (pseudonym: Elias Lumen) with a lifelong history of sleep architecture abnormalities including Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome, Restless Legs Syndrome/Willis-Ekbom Disease, and parasomnia. The index event occurred in June 2022 following approximately nine months of escalating sleep disruption secondary to a workplace injury, culminating in six days of total sleep deprivation, acute psychosis, and psychogenic cardiac arrest. The subject reported a classic void-type NDE characterized by formless awareness without sensory content, followed two weeks later by a spontaneous Kundalini awakening involving whole-body energetic phenomena, an eight-hour period of apparent Unity consciousness, and complete remission of chronic pain. A subsequent three-year integration sequence included multiple cessation-fruition events, an extended Dark Night of the Soul, and stabilization into what the subject describes as permanent witness consciousness, confirmed on December 18, 2024. Consumer EEG data collected via Muse S and Mind Monitor across 22 formal sessions and 7 live video sessions from July 2025 to April 2026 documents an anomalous post-integration neural baseline characterized by waking Delta dominance during the integration phase, subsequent transition to stable Alpha dominance with near-perfect bilateral hemispheric coherence, trait-level regulatory stability under adverse conditions, and preserved meditative access across all conditions including sleep deprivation, physical pain, emotional stress, and high-intensity cognitive load. The dataset includes the first consumer EEG documentation of the two-pathway model of effort dissolution — distinguishing meditative surrender from hypnagogic drift on the basis of post-release Alpha stability — alongside mobile real-world recordings, flow state architecture mapping, binaural beat comparison, and REM-edge lucidity capture. We propose that lifelong sleep architecture abnormalities may have produced neuroplastic compensatory mechanisms that primed this subject for rapid and complete awakening rather than gradual contemplative development. The case presents significant implications for consciousness research, clinical neuroscience, and the development of accessible pathways to post-conventional states.
Elias Lumen (Mon,) studied this question.