Past Life Regression Therapy (PLRT)
What is Past Life Regression Therapy?
How does Past Life Therapy work?
How does one come to relive the original trauma?
To be in an expanded state of consciousness is to be in touch with the soul. In that state it is possible to bring into the habitual consciousness the traumatic experience responsible for the current problem. By reliving the original traumatic event the person feels and experiences in his body all the sensations and emotions as if he were there. If a lance was driven into him, he feels the pain as the lance enters his flesh. If they fall off a cliff, they experience the vertigo of the fall and the impact of hitting the ground. If you died in a mine collapse you must experience the choking, the despair, the panic and the suffocation until all those sensations are gone. It is not enough to remember. It is the revival of the traumas of the past, with all its burden of emotions and sensations, that purifies the soul and erases the symptom. When the energy is released, the symptom disappears.
While it is true that the essence of Past Life Therapy is working with our past lives, the therapeutic experience does not end here. As a general rule, past life incidents are reactivated by traumatic circumstances that occur during fetal life, birth, and early childhood. If in a past life a person died by hanging and in his current life he was born with the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck, at the moment of birth he will have experienced the same choking he experienced in his previous death. This episode is what reactivates the emotional memory at an unconscious level that will later manifest as a physical symptom for which no solution can be found. In the regression, experiences from the early stages of life today that could have reactivated the emotional memory of the previous past must be explored and worked on.
What can be worked with Past Life Therapy?
Basically everything that is a usual reason for a psychotherapist to consult. Phobias, fears, anguish, depression, blockages, feelings of guilt, repeated failures either on an affective or material level, behavioural disorders, sexual disturbances, relationship conflicts, suicidal tendency and psychosomatic illnesses such as allergies, bronchospasm or psoriasis among others.