An ICU nurse has revealed what everyone says before the day, according to her experience.
Kirstie Roberts has spent the last four years helping patients through their final moments, usually in intensive care.
The 29-year-old has now lifted the eerie lid on a “spiritual shift” that happens in a human’s last few hours alive.
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The nurse shared the revelation online in a clip that racked up a whopping 561,200 views and 102,100 likes.
“Every single person who passes away says the same thing,” Kirstie, from Florida, told Need To Know.
“They always say, ‘Can you please tell my family I love them?’, ‘I don’t feel good’ and ‘I know I’m going to die’.

“But how do they know? There’s a shift that happens, that’s spiritual – that nobody can explain.
“Their vitals may be stable, their condition may be the exact same way it was when they came in.
“There’s nothing inherently dangerous that’s screaming ‘This is going to kill them.’”
The ICU nurse claimed that every patient she has spent the last few moments with knew when they are going to pass.
Despite her four years’ experience, she has still not found a medical explanation as to how and why they know this.
Kirstie stated that no matter how much medicine they give or how many tests they do, the person who utters those words always dies.
Kirstie said: “It never truly gets easier to deal with experiencing patients passing away.
“We spend a lot of time caring for patients and building relationships with them and their families.
“Over time, you learn to accept it’s a huge part of our reality in this setting, and we learn to cope with it by knowing the work we’ve done is enough.
“Life is inherently spiritual.
“It is not just about amassing all these things that we one day leave behind.
“Love the Lord, love others, and live grateful for all you have.”
Members of the public were left spooked by the revelation.
One person said: “This is not helping with my anxiety.”

Another person added: “As a former hospice nurse she’s right.”
A third viewer said: “They always know.”
Another person said: “Fellow nurse, can confirm – amen sister.”

And a fifth person added: “My uncle knew, even though his vitals were good.”
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