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Eastern religions embrace the belief that the soul does not die, but is born into another body, lives a life, dies and is reborn again and again. This is the theory of reincarnation. The East Indian Hindus used the word “karma,” to describe the purpose of reincarnation; the concept that each individual's soul has lessons to learn in order to grow spiritually and it returns to earth again and again to learn moral lessons from past transgressions and become more spiritual.
Lending credence to this belief, there are many recorded instances of children recalling other time periods from the viewpoint of someone who died prior to the child's birth. The child voices thoughts as memories of this other person's personality and experiences. Most of the time these children's memories are spontaneous. No one knows what triggers them. In other instances, adults sometimes have very vivid, detailed dreams, which seem to recall experiences in another era as well.
In an altered state of consciousness, similar to hypnosis, it is possible to envision what seems to be a memory from a time other than the life you are presently living. Many of these experiences appear to give credence to the theory of reincarnation.
To experience this, the therapist guides the client backward in time, through the birth experience and out the other side - usually entering another life time, usually as a witness to their own apparent death. The client may find they are looking out from the perspective of someone else's eyes.
“I am looking down. I am wearing something like black, high-buttoned shoes. My dress is long, almost to my ankles. My hair is also long and dark.” This individual may never have heard of high buttoned shoes. Their hair may be other than the color they envision under hypnosis. In some instances, the observer may not even be of the same sex observed.
The psychological makeup of this person may also be dramatically different. Someone who, in their present life is meek, sensitive and non-assertive, may have been ruthless, an unfeeling person, who victimized people in a past life. They have the opportunity to feel the inner feelings of the central character as their own. It becomes clear why they have been destined to live the life of “the victim” in this life, since it appears they had previously lived the life of a “victimizer.”
A profound sense of this purpose can occur as the individual views a former life as it impacts this one. You might say, “Now I know why I am continually victimized. I no longer need to do this.” Empowerment results.
If you believe in karma, you believe our souls have been born into subsequent bodies, and will continue to do so until we “get it right!” Yet our conscious minds do not recall previous lives, so how are we to know what the lesson is that we are here to learn?
Can you imagine the value of a “shortcut” to learning what our karmic lessons might be? New methods are now more readily available to the average person than ever before, allowing mankind access to self-awareness that was never previously available. Could it be that this may provide us with the option to speed up the karmic process, allowing us to make quicker strides towards the ultimate spiritual lessons we need to learn, whatever the lesson might be.
This may be why coming out of Past-Life regression therapy, the client typically says, “Oh! That is the reason why I have always felt that way,” (or behaved that way). Insights have deep fundamental impact on the individual and many times moral and spiritual enlightenment takes place.
Even if you do not believe in reincarnation, there is value in Past- Life Regression Therapy. Sometimes we find ourselves repeating behaviors that are not productive, sabotaging career opportunities, or having relationships that seem damaging. In a comfortable relaxed state, we get to view “scenarios” that the mind plays for us - if not real memories - then miniature life lessons, which are illustrated in story format, with the individual experiencing being the key figure.
These scenes are very vivid and may include not only sights, but sounds, smells, impressions and strong emotions. It is almost always a story with a moral at the end and its usefulness is in the way it calls attention to patterns in the present life. Many individuals come out of the sessions able to interpret what they saw, without the assistance of the therapist.
These illustrations often appear to be scenes “explaining” the cause of current problems that do not seem to have any other explanation. People with phobias about water, for instance, may have a Past-Life Regression session and “see” a scene where they appear to drown in a “former” life. They view the death experience and find that afterwards, they are no longer afraid of water. This is another use of Past-Life Regression Therapy, and regardless of where the images come from, they frequently serve the purpose of laying fears to rest.
Whether this is proof of past lives or not, it is astonishing that many therapists have recorded cases of birthmarks located on the same part of the body as the wounds apparently received as illustrated when viewing, during regression, what appears to be former lives. Regardless of your belief system, examples of such events are documented many times over by professional clinical regressionists.
My own experience on the receiving end of at least thirty Past-Life Regressions, impacted my life to such a degree that I became aware of and learned to avoid the pitfalls of life-long, harmful patterns of behavior.
I highly recommend Past-Life Regression Therapy if you are presently on the path toward self-awareness.