EPISODE · Jan 13, 2026 · 16 MIN
A Conversation Thought Lost: Sebastian Junger | Engel Angle
from The Sunset Lounge DFW · host Stolen Water Media LLC
Mac brings back something he thought he had lost - an interview with best-selling author Sebastian Junger. In 2024, Junger's book, "In My Time of Dying," which covered his near death experience. There was one part to Mac's interview with Junger that stuck out, and it should resonate with all of us who question a life after our death. Sometimes the most meaningful conversations are the ones you thought were gone forever. In this episode of Engel Angle, Mac Engel shares a rediscovered interview with acclaimed author and journalist Sebastian Junger — a conversation pulled from the digital archives that feels even more powerful today than when it was first recorded. Junger, best known for The Perfect Storm, War, Tribe, and Freedom, opens up about a near-death experience caused by a ruptured aneurysm — an event that nearly ended his life and fundamentally challenged how he understands existence. Despite identifying as an atheist and skeptic, Junger describes a vivid moment in which his deceased father appeared to him as he was slipping toward death, urging calm as everything went dark. What follows is a deeply thoughtful discussion about near-death experiences, shared patterns among people on the brink of dying, and the uncomfortable questions that arise when science, neurochemistry, quantum physics, and human consciousness begin to overlap. Junger doesn’t claim answers — instead, he explores possibilities, acknowledging that both life itself and the idea of life after death may be equally “preposterous.” Mac reflects on curiosity, aging, memory, and why gathering meaningful experiences matters — especially when they force us to admit we may not understand nearly as much as we think we do. This isn’t a religious discussion or a scientific lecture. It’s a calm, honest exploration of uncertainty — and why that uncertainty might make existence itself even more remarkable. Chapters 00:00:00 – Rediscovering a conversation thought lost 00:01:25 – Why curiosity still drives the podcast 00:02:31 – Interviewing people beyond sports 00:03:33 – Why Sebastian Junger mattered to Mac 00:05:12 – Asking the unanswerable questions about the afterlife 00:07:15 – The interview that almost ran out of time 00:10:00 – Junger’s ruptured aneurysm and near-death experience 00:10:28 – Seeing his deceased father as death approached 00:11:51 – Why near-death experiences are strangely consistent 00:12:20 – Neurochemistry vs. something we don’t understand 00:12:59 – Quantum physics, shamanism, and alternate explanations 00:13:52 – Did the experience change Junger’s beliefs? 00:14:34 – The “preposterousness” of existence itself 00:15:18 – What the experience ultimately changed 00:15:50 – Final reflections on life, memory, and mystery Contact us: [email protected] Instagram: @macengelprof x: @macengelprof Tiktok: macengelprof Check us out: patreon.com/sunsetloungedfw Instagram: sunsetloungedfw Tiktok: sunsetloungedfw X: SunsetLoungeDFW FB: Sunset Lounge DFW
What this episode covers
Mac brings back something he thought he had lost - an interview with best-selling author Sebastian Junger. In 2024, Junger's book, "In My Time of Dying," which covered his near death experience. There was one part to Mac's interview with Junger that stuck out, and it should resonate with all of us who question a life after our death. Sometimes the most meaningful conversations are the ones you thought were gone forever. In this episode of Engel Angle, Mac Engel shares a rediscovered interview with acclaimed author and journalist Sebastian Junger — a conversation pulled from the digital archives that feels even more powerful today than when it was first recorded. Junger, best known for The Perfect Storm, War, Tribe, and Freedom, opens up about a near-death experience caused by a ruptured aneurysm — an event that nearly ended his life and fundamentally challenged how he understands existence. Despite identifying as an atheist and skeptic, Junger describes a vivid moment in which his deceased father appeared to him as he was slipping toward death, urging calm as everything went dark. What follows is a deeply thoughtful discussion about near-death experiences, shared patterns among people on the brink of dying, and the uncomfortable questions that arise when science, neurochemistry, quantum physics, and human consciousness begin to overlap. Junger doesn’t claim answers — instead, he explores possibilities, acknowledging that both life itself and the idea of life after death may be equally “preposterous.” Mac reflects on curiosity, aging, memory, and why gathering meaningful experiences matters — especially when they force us to admit we may not understand nearly as much as we think we do. This isn’t a religious discussion or a scientific lecture. It’s a calm, honest exploration of uncertainty — and why that uncertainty might make existence itself even more remarkable. Chapters 00:00:00 – Rediscovering a conversation thought lost00:01:25 – Why curiosity still drives the podcast00:02:31 – Interviewing people beyond sports00:03:33 – Why Sebastian Junger mattered to Mac00:05:12 – Asking the unanswerable questions about the afterlife00:07:15 – The interview that almost ran out of time00:10:00 – Junger’s ruptured aneurysm and near-death experience00:10:28 – Seeing his deceased father as death approached00:11:51 – Why near-death experiences are strangely consistent00:12:20 – Neurochemistry vs. something we don’t understand00:12:59 – Quantum physics, shamanism, and alternate explanations00:13:52 – Did the experience change Junger’s beliefs?00:14:34 – The “preposterousness” of existence itself00:15:18 – What the experience ultimately changed00:15:50 – Final reflections on life, memory, and mystery Contact us: [email protected]: @macengelprofx: @macengelprofTiktok: macengelprof Check us out: patreon.com/sunsetloungedfw Instagram: sunsetloungedfwTiktok: sunsetloungedfwX: SunsetLoungeDFWFB: Sunset Lounge DFW
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A Conversation Thought Lost: Sebastian Junger | Engel Angle
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