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Unlock The Secrets Of Your Hidden Past Lives “30 Days To Past Life Memories” Lesson 5 How to interpret Past Life information and use it to help you nowadays - Part 2 One you’ve written down the initial notes of your experience and then expanded on it by ‘Capturing The Mood’, as described in Lesson 4, you can begin to extract more useful information. This is not always necessary, because sometimes the meaning and relevance is blatantly obvious. However, when a regression experience seems vague or to have no apparent meaning, the simple process that follows can bring about some remarkable results. Underline the feelings and emotions Go through what you’ve written down for your expanded experience and underline all the ‘feeling’ or ‘emotion’ words. To illustrate this more clearly I’ll use my Polynesian regression as an example. The expanded version, with the feeling and emotion words underlined thus becomes:
Relate these ideas to your current life. Once you’ve identified the various feeling and emotional elements, look at them by themselves and see how they relate to your current life. For example, when I looked over this experience of my own, pretty much all of the underlined elements seemed to ring true in my current life. I noticed how overprotective I was at times, but also how this seemed to make me feel stronger and more worthwhile in some way. I noticed how in my current life I had allowed myself to take this role too far, and was actually weakening the people I was trying to protect by not allowing them to be themselves. What I began to realise was that I could ‘lighten up’ a bit and still feel OK. It was OK for me to look out for people but it didn’t mean I had to be continuously on duty. I also became aware that having my self-esteem and self-worth being dependant on others needing me was not a particularly ideal situation, and needed to be rectified. Through conversations that followed, I also came to realise that the people I thought wanted and needed me, would actually have preferred me to stop worrying so much and relax more. The result was that a relatively innocuous Past Life Regression, that could have been dismissed as a simple ‘scene from a beach’, actually gave me some great insights into the limitations of my current life attitude and, in becoming aware of those limitations, allowed me to change and become more free. (No long, drawn out therapy - just a momentary realisation and the decision to act upon what I had discovered.) If you are interested in the therapeutic, life-changing effects of such a regression, later on we’ll go through common issues that people encounter and look at ways of guiding the regression to help you resolve them more specifically - finances, relationships, self-esteem, fulfilling potential, etc. If, however, you are just interested in a bit of fun to satisfy your curiosity, that’s fine also, and very often quite intriguing discoveries can be made, as follows... “I don’t want to be 7” One of the first people to use and review the Mypastlife regression was a girl called Melanie. You can see her initial write up by following the testimonials link at the top of the page, but there is some fascinating information that she told me some time afterwards. In one of the regressions she was a young girl who had a relatively comfortable life, but who died of an illness at the age of 7. In her current life, her mother reminded her that all the while she was 6 years old, she was anxious and worried about being 7. She just did not want her 7th birthday to come. I’ll leave you to ponder the implications of this, but it’s the kind of mystery and intrigue that pops up all over the place when you start getting involved in this subject. Now, this lesson is relatively short because I just wanted to finish off getting the idea across to you about...
Now you are ready... Now that you know what to do with them when they arise, you are ready to start accessing your own Past Life Memories. In the next lesson we’ll now start looking at some practical exercises to begin this process. So until the next time, Very best wishes,
Andrew Parr
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