Thought this to be interesting... @Mr. Potter
What was Sam Kinison's last words?
"Those who are on their deathbeds seem to have a kind of privileged connection to God, or Source, or all of creation.
Some might ask, “Why do we assume final words to be somehow closer to God’s truth?” And that is a good question. A large amount of literature answers this in spiritual terms: when we approach death, we are returning to Source, and our thoughts and words are therefore elevated because of this shift in dimension. The findings of the Final Words Project suggest that this may, indeed, be true.
Numerous are accounts, including one from Raymond Moody about his own father’s final words, that report not only of unseen beings, loved ones or angels, but also of a beautiful place, a place of well-being and contentment. Thomas Edison’s final words “It’s beautiful over there,” have been uttered by others before him and since. Could it be that Steve Jobs may have witnessed the same beauty that Edison described when he uttered these final words, “Wow! Wow! Wow!” ?
Comedian Sam Kinison who died in a head-on collision in 1992 said to no one in particular: “I don’t want to die. I don’t want to die.” But then there was a pause as if Kinison were listening to someone. Then he asked, “But why?” and after another pause “Okay, Okay, Okay.” A friend who was with him said, “Whatever voice was talking to him gave him the right answer and he just relaxed with it.”
For a few days before his death, songwriter George Jones lay in a hospital bed, suffering from complications from a respiratory infection, unable to speak. But just before he passed, as his wife was conferring with a doctor at his bedside, the Country-Western legend spoke.
“We were standing at the foot of the bed, and George just hadn’t said nothing, and all of a sudden, he opened his eyes, and I was fixin’ to go toward him, and the doctor kind of held me back, and George said, ‘Well, hello there.’ He said, ‘I’ve been looking for you... ‘My name’s George Jones.'”
Within moments, the 81-year-old was gone."
“He closed his eyes, and that was the end of it,” Nancy Jones explains. “So, in my heart, I know he was talking to God.”