In No Such Thing as Death, Sarmina Rutter takes readers on a personal, heartfelt, and empowering journey through the grief she experienced in losing her husband and then the amazing life-affirming moments that followed when he revealed to her that he was not dead at all but simply existing on another plane.
mangabuddy.com that surprising event, Sarmina realized that all her life she'd had strange, unexplainable, and intuitive experiences.
In the early chapters of the book, Sarmina tells us her life story. How she was raised by parents from Bangladesh who constantly traveled and lived in various places in the world because her father was a doctor. Her father was also an entrepreneur, and when Sarmina got older, she worked in one of his convenience stores where she almost lost her life during a robbery.
And then she moved to Hawaii and met her husband, Kenji. Kenji was from Japan and he was a free spirit who loved life and taught Sarmina how to enjoy it as well. Together, they had a daughter and everything seemed to be going wonderfully until it was discovered that Kenji had a life-threatening tumor. I won't go into all the details here-Sarmina tells them in the book-but ultimately, Kenji died and Sarmina was left grieving.
And then some amazing things happened-things that cannot be explained in any way other than to believe that Kenji was trying to communicate with her from beyond the grave. Sarmina provides plenty of evidence in the book that this communication occurred. I won't list all the amazing occurrences here, but one of them was that after death, somehow Kenji's Facebook account began "Liking" photos Sarmina posted to her own account. After making certain Kenji's account was not being hacked, Sarmina had to believe her husband was communicating with her.
But No Such Thing as Death is so much more than just one woman's story of communicating with her husband who is now part of the afterlife. It is full of food for thought about life and its spiritual side and the workings of the universe.