Guest guest Posted June 18, 1999 Report Share Posted June 18, 1999 Melody, How sweet your note of appreciation! And how much courage! I wish you well in these endeavors. There's a kind of therapeutical approach that I've heard has good results with traumatic memories. That's past-lives therapy. I have several books at home that I could recommend, there are specific events that your memory can be guided to. Instead of re-living it, one is led to see it from a non-identified vantage point. Thus you come to undertand and have compassion for both parties in that interaction. Others on the list probably have more info on this than I. But one time I myself saw this technique in action one time. It successfully gave clarity and a loving feeling to a friend that had a rage reaction whenever he heard the word "God." The healer was a clairvoyant with an ability to see into past lives. She led my friend Jimmy through a visualization, basically that he had experienced a past life as an Old Testament prophet who died in martyrdom for God. But he died resentfully, thinking that God had betrayed and abandoned him. There were tears, contractions, he was yelling, "Yes!! Yes!!" After Jimmy saw this and came back to the present, he no longer felt anger when he heard the word God. Sounds possibly hokey, but the important part is the impartial, impersonal seeing of the event (whether is it one's "own" event or another's is moot, and less important). Putting yourself in the shoes of the players of the scene allows compassion for them and for the present person looking. If you're interested in books along these lines, let me know. Others might post a list before I even get home! Regards! --Greg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 18, 1999 Report Share Posted June 18, 1999 On Fri, 18 Jun 1999 11:30:19 Greg Goode wrote: >There's a kind of therapeutical approach that I've heard has good results >with traumatic memories. That's past-lives therapy. I have several books >at home that I could recommend, there are specific events that your memory >can be guided to. Instead of re-living it, one is led to see it from a >non-identified vantage point. Thus you come to undertand and have >compassion for both parties in that interaction. That is a very good exercise for all kinds of memories. >Others on the list probably have more info on this than I. But one time I >myself saw this technique in action one time. It successfully gave clarity >and a loving feeling to a friend that had a rage reaction whenever he heard >the word "God." > >There were tears, contractions, he was yelling, "Yes!! >Yes!!" After Jimmy saw this and came back to the present, he no longer >felt anger when he heard the word God. > >Sounds possibly hokey, but the important part is the impartial, impersonal >seeing of the event (whether is it one's "own" event or another's is moot, >and less important). Yes, the lesson in what is important and whether it leads to a lessening of the negative emotions. >Putting yourself in the shoes of the players of the >scene allows compassion for them and for the present >person looking. Again, that is the main point with knowledge of "past lives". What they lead to, not what they show in and of themselves. At the start of getting overtly K active, I had a similar experience as your friend. I used to be very annoyed at most aspects of Christianity and was atheist from the age of 6. (Born atheist, perhaps ? ) I couldn't find any reason to believe in any of the stuff being fed from certain lines. When K started to become active I thought I would wander into Buddhism. One afternoon I went home early from work and had a lot of K related pain. Then something loosened and I had the realization of a past life in which I had the classical "God why hast thou forsaken me ?" experience, hitting rock bottom. There was a lot of crying and shaking and the visions more colorful than I care to remember. It was like a taught string had come loose and now snapped back to original position. In that meditation, I got to the point, when I perceived the K energy as God incarnate (externalized), I wanted to finish myself then and there to become united with god once again after having "been away for so long". (Of course suicide would have been no solution) This is the only time K has been seriously dangerous. Talk about turnaround, huh ? I still don't call myself a Christian, but any notion of religion being negative per se has absolutely vanished. It was a definite block for K and caused by "karma" from a past life. It had to be let go of. Best regards, Amanda. Angelfire for your free web-based e-mail. http://www.angelfire.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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