By: Natasha Archary

Reflecting on their lives, the Drive 959 team recounted how they’re lucky to be alive, having dodged death at least once.
It could have been as casual as nonchalantly leaving the house 5-minutes earlier or later than usual and avoiding a messy pile-up on the highway, or turning down a lift and using your own car instead, to literally walking away from a tree seconds before lightning struck it.
These were all some of the scenarios that the Drive 959 evaded the Grim Reaper, delaying death for a little longer.
Near-death experiences have struck most people at some point in their lives, some more often than others, and it usually shakes one to their core.
The concept of “escaping death” was introduced to moviegoers with the Final Destination movie franchise, which established that no one cheats death.
In the movies, a person gets a premonition of their impending death which is usually a mass catastrophe that claims the lives of others too.
Trusting their intuition, the one who envisioned their deaths, hysterically convinces as many people as they can to get off the plane, or bus, etc.
Minutes after taking off, or departing, boom, they crash or the vehicle explodes killing everyone who didn’t get off when they were told to instantly.
This leaves the survivors, who death eventually comes after, one by one because nothing and no one can stop death.
Listen to the conversation on Drive 959:
Also read: Forgetfulness affecting your life: What to do to boost your memory



