Trump Reportedly Already Has Plans For Where He’ll Be Buried After He Came ‘Millimeters From Death’—He’s ‘Dying to Go to Heaven’

Making plans for what happens after you die is pretty normal, especially if you’re rich, famous, or both. According to reports, President Donald Trump has been thinking a lot about this lately, including where he wants to be buried and how people will remember him once he’s gone.
This conversation picked up after Trump sent a dramatic email to his supporters in which he said he was “dying to go to heaven.” In that message, he talked about a recent moment when he believes he narrowly avoided death, saying a bullet missed killing him by just millimeters. He described his return to the White House as something that “was never supposed to happen,” framing it as part of a bigger, almost divine plan.
Sources who spoke to columnist Rob Shuter say Trump has become deeply focused on his legacy. One insider claimed that Trump often compares himself to major historical and religious figures, mentioning people like Napoleon, Abraham Lincoln, and even saints, and then putting himself in that same category. According to these sources, he’s constantly thinking about how history will judge him.
In the fundraising email, Trump said he believes God saved his life so he could continue his mission to “make America great again.” He told supporters that surviving what he described as an assassination attempt meant he now had a duty to keep going, but that he couldn’t do it without their help. The email quickly shifted into a call for donations, urging people to give $15 during a 24-hour fundraising push and promising that this was a defining moment where supporters must never give up or surrender.
Behind the scenes, sources say this isn’t just Trump being dramatic for fundraising purposes. He’s reportedly making real plans for after his death. One person close to him said Trump wants Mar-a-Lago to become something like Elvis Presley’s Graceland a place where supporters can visit, honor him, and remember his life and presidency long after he’s gone.
At the same time, Trump has often joked, and sometimes not joked, about whether he would even make it into heaven. According to insiders, he laughs about not “qualifying,” but privately he seems shaken. Facing his own mortality has started to feel more real to him than before.
This isn’t the first time Trump has talked about heaven in a public way. Last year, while speaking to a reporter on Air Force One, he said he wasn’t sure he was heaven-bound and joked that maybe flying on the presidential plane was heaven itself. He added that even if he didn’t make it to heaven, he believed he had made life better for many people.
In earlier interviews, he flat-out said he didn’t think he would ever get into heaven because he didn’t qualify. Later, he brushed those comments off as sarcasm and said he was only kidding. Still, he’s brought up the topic many times over the years.
When you put all of this together the near-death comments, the repeated talk about heaven, the focus on legacy, and the reported burial and memorial plans it paints a picture of a president who is clearly thinking about his health, his future, and how he will be remembered when he’s no longer around.





