www.pastlifehypnosis.us
Past Life Therapy
Mystic and the Doctor
Reincarnation Past
Life Memories
Where do Past-life Memories Come
From?
I. Introduction
Have you ever had an experience in which you were looking for
something and could not find it? You searched and searched. You even
looked in places you had looked before, All to no avail! Then you
went on to other things and, quite suddenly, you discovered the very
thing you were seeking earlier. Memories are sometimes like that;
you cannot force your memory; you just allow it to happen. Perhaps
you have found that if you give your mind a break, your relaxation
will do the work for you.
II. Childhood Memories
While watching children at play, it’s so easy to say, “They’re
imagining things!” Perhaps they are imagining things, or are they
reliving memories? Where do such memories come from?
Do you remember playing as a
child---making up things? Of course, you do; however, it you think
back, you might realize that some of those made-up playtimes seemed
as real
as the life you were living every day. *
Children’s play is a type of
trance state. As you played and acted your parts, alone or with
other children, who were you? What were you doing? Were you cooking
a meal or rocking a child? Were you a queen on a throne or a cowboy
on a horse? Did you live in a castle, in a cabin, or in a thatched
hut? Were you young or old? Was your skin dark or fair? Were you
happy or sad? Perhaps, sometimes, you might have acted the part of a
boy or a man; at other times, you might have played the role of a
girl or a woman. It is common for children to switch roles as they
play. It seemed real, didn’t it? Perhaps, just perhaps, it once was.
Children, particularly those
under five years of age, are able to recall past lives easily. Could
the childhood creative imagination have been what was happening?
Many people have dreams and flashes of memory about other times and
other places. Such activity is normal and can be very helpful. If
you are recalling a past life, you can learn from it. The experience
you had at that time can teach you a lesson now, if you will let it
happen.
III. Learning from Memories
If you accept the idea that you just might have had past lives, then
it makes sense that those lives, the life you are living now, and
future lives are all one very long life. You awake (are born), sleep
(die), and awake again to learn and to grow. All of your lifetimes
are connected as part of a greater life.
If you allow yourself to
remember those past lives--or, segments of the whole journey of the
soul--, and if you take from them the lessons, skills, talents, and
gifts which they contain, each separate life will be enriched. Then,
each life will be more fulfilling and more
useful both to yourself and to others. Past, present, and future are
all interconnected. They are ONE. If you choose not to learn your
lessons, you might have to face them over and over again--in this
life and in others--until you learn. Life seems to be about
learning, changing, and growing.
IV. Using Two Types of
Memory
Since, as a child, you might have been remembering and re-enacting
past lives during play, you might begin to think that memory is
strong. There are two kinds of memory. Your short-term memory tells
you what is happening to you in your current life. (Over the long
journey of the soul, a single lifetime can be called short-term
memory.). Moment by moment, you have to use it. Long-term memory
reminds you about things you learned long ago--even thousands of
years ago. From short-term (current life) memory, you can learn
lessons now. Long-term memory reminds you of events and feelings
from the past and you can grow through learning the lessons.
From an exploration of the past,
you can find talents and special skills which you can bring forward
to use now. It is like being an explorer. You are exploring one or
more of your lives as an adventure in time! When you explore .past
lives, you can use a professional guide to help you to find your way
and to help you to appreciate what you find.
There are two ways to use what
you find in past-life exploration.
One way is to take what you see
and to use it as a form of spiritual discovery for personal
development. That method would be called personal exploration. You
might find special knowledge or talents that you can use now to help
you to become a better person and to add more joy to your life.
People around you might benefit from your personal exploration
because what you learned from the past allows you to discover new
ways of expression. You influence friends, family, and acquaintances
because you become a happier, healthier, more successful individual.
Your prosperity increases and your relationships blossom because you
are able to bring forward your beautiful parts which were hidden in
the past.
A second way to use what you
find in your long-term memory is your ability to look deeply for
healing lessons. Time is a great teacher and a great healer.
Everything you have learned and stored is waiting to be
rediscovered. The answers to problems you are experiencing now could
be found by exploring your past-life memories for the wisdom you
once had in consciousness but, now, it is stored, seemingly
forgotten. Painful issues, anxiety, and confusion--lack of
harmony--in the present life can be readjusted or eliminated by
remembering a lesson from a past life. The way you handle things now
will depend upon how much you are willing to learn from the past and
how deeply you are willing to go to discover those answers.
V. Recalling Past Lives
At birth, you had the gift of two types of memory, current life and
past life. You also had the gift of having a veil dropped over the
past. That veil can be lifted, should you choose to do so.
Perhaps it is easy for children
to recall past lives because their minds are not cluttered by
confronting the lessons and challenges of their current lives. By
the time children reach adulthood, they will have experienced many
things that might cloud past-life memories, including admonishment
by some adults that it is only creative imagination. A wise parent
who realizes that a child is recalling past life memories can
provide encouragement by asking the child to make up a bedtime
story. The child’s reaction can be surprisingly straightforward.
Sometimes, a child might ask, “Do you remember when I was the mommy
(or daddy) and you were little like me?” In a playful way, a child
might describe a past-life event as a personal story. By talking
with the child just before sleep, parents can learn much about the
past-life experiences that went into the making of that soul’s
character--their little child.
Parents who punish their child
for play-acting what~the child believes to be realistic could hamper
the emotional and spiritual life of that child who is simply
remembering the past. Such an unwise approach on the part of the
parents could cause serious problems to develop later as the child
develops and must deal with issues rooted in a past life. The
freedom to remember is essential.
VI Traveling through
Time: Three Steps
Since the work of memory involves collection and distribution, you
should use what you have collected. As an adult, you might have
difficulty in recalling scenes because your mind is occupied with
many current issues. Somehow, you recall and use the feelings but
the precise events seem to escape you. With the help of a trained
professional, significant experiences from past lives can be brought
to conscious memory. There are three steps involved in looking back
at the journey.
The first step guides you back
to any age in the current life. It is called age regression.
Regression means examining past behavior to determine its influence
on current issues. Perhaps the facilitator will ask you to select
any age and to recall a memory from that time period. Usually, when
working with a specific issue, the facilitator will ask you to
select a time when a similar event occurred or to recall the
earliest memory.
Should the source of the issue
not be located, you will be guided to go to the second step. After
examining the birth process for possible trauma, pre-natal memory,
the womb experience is reviewed. Often, you need to go back beyond
the womb and to look for a memory of something which happened before
that time. What is recalled at that stage is past-life memory.
Regression guides, facilitators,
encourage you, the traveler, to speak without thinking. Such
spontaneously uttered memories can be clues which will take you
deeper into pastlife memory. The results of the experiences in time
travel can be amazing. The healing memories which you discover can
make your life more meaningful.
At first, when you begin to
reach back into the past, you (as many other people do) might
believe that you are just imagining things. It seems so because the
conscious mind claims to know nothing except that which it has
gathered as sensory information in the current life. Sometimes
current-life memories seem unreal or unclear. The inner mind always
remembers. You might have to start with creative imagination because
it can serve as a doorway to deep memory. Start with whatever pops
into your mind and then let the story tell itself.
VII. Analyzing the Data
Many people wonder if they were famous in a past life. Only
occasionally do we find famous personalities who made significant
contributions to society. Past-life work has been criticized by
people who say that everybody reports being Cleopatra, Napoleon,
Jesus, or Mary. Perhaps the people who report the experiences
actually believe that they have had true memories. Much depends upon
the way in which the session is guided. If you are told to go to a
past life in which a certain feeling was experienced, then, you
might go to any past life, not necessarily your own. Lately, hearing
so many past-life stories of people who report a sense of having
been Mary, the mother of Jesus, has led facilitators to be more
specific in guiding clients through their own souls’ journeys.
Your journey is important in
understanding your spiritual development. You have the right to
learn about your past and to use the knowledge in a positive,
helpful way in your current life, When you explore your past lives,
you often find that you have reconnected with someone in the present
life. Sometimes the roles are reversed; sometimes they are the same.
You might recognize friends or relatives. Past-life regression can
lead to many happy and interesting discoveries. There can be
surprises, too, The soul, the part of us which lives and journeys on
after the close of each earthly life, might travel form country to
country and from continent to continent.
In past lives, you have had
other roles, other professions, and other relationships. You might
have been involved in activities other than your current interests.
You might have done hurtful things; you might have harmed other
people. If so, perhaps your role now is to heal that relationship. A
soldier in a past life might return as a doctor who saves lives.
Enemies in past lives might become friends. You might have attained
a high level of spiritual development; if so, perhaps your role now
is to help other people by your example of the positive human
attributes. It is all part of the rich adventure of soul learning
and soul growth.
VIII. Conclusion
When exploring past lives, it is encouraging to know that you can
build upon past accomplishments and you can make amends to reconcile
past negative behavior and attitudes. You can rekindle past
friendships and you can heal old wounds. All possibilities work
together to create a more harmonious and fulfilling lifetime.
Nothing is lost. All that you
have learned or have gained from past lives travels with you through
time to make each lifetime the best you want it to be. Memories can
be triggered by what you see, hear, taste, feel, and smell. The
sense of smell seems to be one of the strongest doorways. Memories,
the records of your experiences, are available to you and they serve
to remind you of your past thoughts, words, and actions. Memory is
eternal.
(The above article may be
published freely.)
by Henry Leo Bolduc C.H. and
Marjorie V.Reynolds, B.A. Ed, M.Ed., C.Ht., M. Ht.
Henry Leo Bolduc, P.O. Box 88,
Independence, Va. 24348
Marjorie V. Reynolds, 202-237 Wellington Cres. Winnipeg, Mb. R3M OA1 mvreynol@mb.sympatico.ca
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