I'm not 100% sure, but am open to it. If our physical world is more of an interpretation of what is, then there would be more available to the soul than to our eyes or senses. Some people believe that our physical world comes down to a phenomenon called quantum probability collapse. If stimulus in the universe can have multiple states or outcomes for its energy, then a physical state could be the most likely representation of that energy.
Our eyes for example will take in data and form assumptions. This is also why you may be able to udnertsand ecah wrod in tihs snetnece eevn thuogh I hvae scarmlbed the lteters in msot wrods.
You may also know of the scenario where you see something and you KNOW it is Thing A, but when you look again at the details, it is different. Our eyes take in data, and our brain normalizes this to the most likely outcome, on its own. This is why my incorrect spelling is not as obvious. Your brain reads the scrambled letters of my bold sentence above, and assumes it is words it already knows. Our brains do this with shadows, shapes, etc.
So, when thinking of near death experiences, we can consider that perhaps death is only a physical outcome and the soul lives on. Once we can accept that we're able to normalize data into an assumed physical state (eyes/brains examples), we can possibly also accept that anything physical is just an assumed state of what truly is, therefor death may not be an end in entirety, but only an end to what is physically observed.
I didn't always think this way, but lately I've been thinking that our universe is a case of mind over matter, and if we pay too much attention to matter, we may lose sight of what we can do in our mind. Perhaps this is why we're told to let go of material possessions, to live in the moment, to love all, and to be mindful. If Jesus' or anyone's goal is for us to realize our true potential, than any recognition of what's physical is an obstacle, including the material possession of our own bodies. Letting go of the concept of death can bring life, either literally or figuratively in how we choose to live.
I haven't had an NDE, so I do not know the true answer for myself let alone anyone else.
I have had experiences that lead me to believe there is more to this universe than meets the eye.