“While it is surely a comforting idea, reincarnation remains a challenge to scientifically prove, although some intriguing evidence does.”
Diane Goldner
A belief in reincarnation is not vitally important for therapy or even exploration to take place. The process of going through and working out an experience is all that is necessary.
Some people doubt the validity of reincarnation before the initial session, and some will still doubt it after one or more experiences.
It’s not my purpose to prove or disprove the concept of reincarnation. Even with all the cases of reincarnation that have been recorded, there are still people who will doubt its validity. And that is every persons right.
If a client books a session with me for exploration, they are not necessarily going to feel contentment at the end, as much as a feeling of infinity. A door has been opened. One that they knew was there, and one they could have kept closed by their own choice. After a successful session however, the door that leads to an infinite amount of possibilities in their lives has forever been removed.
Reincarnation is not so much a belief as it is a philosophy. It’s a philosophy of life. The Oxford dictionary defines philosophy as “seeking of knowledge concerning the ultimate reality”. Therefore reincarnation is not so much a commitment to a fact, as much as it is a commitment to an opening up – an understanding that there is more to life than meets the eye.
In a therapeutic setting, simply allowing the experience to exist, is all that is initially required. Regression therapy is a powerful addition to conventional therapy, and it is used both to remit symptoms speedily and effectively, and to purge and harmonize the original cause of the conflict.
This process of assisting a client in bringing their energy field into a state of balance, is necessary work, and is realized only when acknowledgement is made that the presenting problem is never the real and complete issue. There is a core psychological issue beneath the presenting problem - a core issue with a constellation of past lives clustered around it.
What changes - what heals - are the emotions, for it is the emotions that create our reality. They are the special characteristics of physical experience. I do not have to believe I am sad to produce tears. A belief, in this instance, is often an intellectual denial. The emotions are ruling my physical and psychological self, no matter what I choose to believe.
Through regression therapy, a healing - an understanding - can take place by reliving an experience with the benefits of hindsight. This deeply affects the emotions the same way it affected them the first time.
We do not have to believe it is true and accurate recall, or even that it is part of us. We can simply use it as a metaphor offered up for our examination, and leave it at that.
The efficacy of regression therapy is agreed upon by therapists and practitioners, simply because of its truth. The results are the same, whether belief is there or not.
Diane Goldner
A belief in reincarnation is not vitally important for therapy or even exploration to take place. The process of going through and working out an experience is all that is necessary.
Some people doubt the validity of reincarnation before the initial session, and some will still doubt it after one or more experiences.
It’s not my purpose to prove or disprove the concept of reincarnation. Even with all the cases of reincarnation that have been recorded, there are still people who will doubt its validity. And that is every persons right.
If a client books a session with me for exploration, they are not necessarily going to feel contentment at the end, as much as a feeling of infinity. A door has been opened. One that they knew was there, and one they could have kept closed by their own choice. After a successful session however, the door that leads to an infinite amount of possibilities in their lives has forever been removed.
Reincarnation is not so much a belief as it is a philosophy. It’s a philosophy of life. The Oxford dictionary defines philosophy as “seeking of knowledge concerning the ultimate reality”. Therefore reincarnation is not so much a commitment to a fact, as much as it is a commitment to an opening up – an understanding that there is more to life than meets the eye.
In a therapeutic setting, simply allowing the experience to exist, is all that is initially required. Regression therapy is a powerful addition to conventional therapy, and it is used both to remit symptoms speedily and effectively, and to purge and harmonize the original cause of the conflict.
This process of assisting a client in bringing their energy field into a state of balance, is necessary work, and is realized only when acknowledgement is made that the presenting problem is never the real and complete issue. There is a core psychological issue beneath the presenting problem - a core issue with a constellation of past lives clustered around it.
What changes - what heals - are the emotions, for it is the emotions that create our reality. They are the special characteristics of physical experience. I do not have to believe I am sad to produce tears. A belief, in this instance, is often an intellectual denial. The emotions are ruling my physical and psychological self, no matter what I choose to believe.
Through regression therapy, a healing - an understanding - can take place by reliving an experience with the benefits of hindsight. This deeply affects the emotions the same way it affected them the first time.
We do not have to believe it is true and accurate recall, or even that it is part of us. We can simply use it as a metaphor offered up for our examination, and leave it at that.
The efficacy of regression therapy is agreed upon by therapists and practitioners, simply because of its truth. The results are the same, whether belief is there or not.

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