From an early age, I believed in past-life regression as a panacea for the masses. I was always drawn toward a powerful belief in it, so the work I chose to do seems all empowering to me. It answers such fundamental questions such as "Who am I?" and "What is my purpose?", and opens up possibilities at the same time. My mind attempts to imagine infinity and feels a connection, a belonging.
I have a need to let others remember, as I have done, yet those who wish to journey within, are often not clear on why, how, or where past-life regression therapy affects their current life. So I start by letting them know what Dr. Edith Fiore brilliantly stated years ago: "There is not one aspect of character or human behaviour that cannot be understood through an examination of past-life events....for we are the sum total of all that we have been before." My chosen field of work is therefore vital, alive and beneficial to all.
When Dr. Denys Kelsey and his prolific wife Joan Grant wrote the book, Many Lifetimes, in 1967, it brought past-life regression to a cultural awareness level. Since then, more and more prestigious medical doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists, and other practitioners, researchers and laymen have contributed their experiences to the masses. Belief in reincarnation rose from 20-30 percent from 1970-1980, and then another 15% in the next decade, with one third of all adult women professing to be believers.
Yet still, the mention of past-life regression has that unmistakeable hush in a crowd. Eyebrows go up, debaters take aim, a few whisper snide remarks, and very little awareness, much less enlightenment, has ever been achieved. I know. I continue to experience those reactions in the 21st century.
I believe past-life regression is not a fringe interest, but rather an obvious branch, and therefore extension of psychology, theology, and medicine. I like the way author Karl Schlotterbeck explains its role in society: "It appears that past-life therapists are, in the truest sense of the word, the best current expressions of ministers and psychotherapists - caretakers of the soul."
But past-life regression therapy has been kept in the wrong closet for too many years. It's association with other non-mainstream practices keeps it akin to an old-fashioned parlor game in the minds of many. Connected so strongly to hypnosis, it still bears the impressions of all the old, badly made movies and ghost stories of Hollywood's earlier years.
I'm going to blog more about past-life regression history, its power, and its potential, in the weeks and months to come. I want to go from "I don't believe in past-life regression" to "Why does my teenager know more about this that I do?" to "I don't understand what karma is" to "How can this help my relationship?" to "What happens in a session?" to "Was I really there?"
Join me if you're ready to take past-life regression seriously. (And if you're interested in training to become a past-life practitioner too, here's all the details.)
I have a need to let others remember, as I have done, yet those who wish to journey within, are often not clear on why, how, or where past-life regression therapy affects their current life. So I start by letting them know what Dr. Edith Fiore brilliantly stated years ago: "There is not one aspect of character or human behaviour that cannot be understood through an examination of past-life events....for we are the sum total of all that we have been before." My chosen field of work is therefore vital, alive and beneficial to all.
When Dr. Denys Kelsey and his prolific wife Joan Grant wrote the book, Many Lifetimes, in 1967, it brought past-life regression to a cultural awareness level. Since then, more and more prestigious medical doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists, and other practitioners, researchers and laymen have contributed their experiences to the masses. Belief in reincarnation rose from 20-30 percent from 1970-1980, and then another 15% in the next decade, with one third of all adult women professing to be believers.
Yet still, the mention of past-life regression has that unmistakeable hush in a crowd. Eyebrows go up, debaters take aim, a few whisper snide remarks, and very little awareness, much less enlightenment, has ever been achieved. I know. I continue to experience those reactions in the 21st century.
I believe past-life regression is not a fringe interest, but rather an obvious branch, and therefore extension of psychology, theology, and medicine. I like the way author Karl Schlotterbeck explains its role in society: "It appears that past-life therapists are, in the truest sense of the word, the best current expressions of ministers and psychotherapists - caretakers of the soul."
But past-life regression therapy has been kept in the wrong closet for too many years. It's association with other non-mainstream practices keeps it akin to an old-fashioned parlor game in the minds of many. Connected so strongly to hypnosis, it still bears the impressions of all the old, badly made movies and ghost stories of Hollywood's earlier years.
I'm going to blog more about past-life regression history, its power, and its potential, in the weeks and months to come. I want to go from "I don't believe in past-life regression" to "Why does my teenager know more about this that I do?" to "I don't understand what karma is" to "How can this help my relationship?" to "What happens in a session?" to "Was I really there?"
Join me if you're ready to take past-life regression seriously. (And if you're interested in training to become a past-life practitioner too, here's all the details.)

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