[cs_content][cs_section parallax=”false” style=”margin: 0px;padding: 45px 0px;”][cs_row inner_container=”true” marginless_columns=”false” style=”margin: 0px auto;padding: 0px;”][cs_column bg_color=”hsl(0, 11%, 91%)” fade=”false” fade_animation=”in” fade_animation_offset=”45px” fade_duration=”750″ type=”2/3″ style=”padding: 0px;”][cs_text]Past Lives and Children 

One of the most controversial and stimulating aspects of Past Lives is those experiences recounted by children.

Invariably, and tantalisingly, their stories include detail seemingly at odds with their young lives. Their innocence ads credibility to their tales, their imagination may cast doubt on that credibility.

This report in psychology today expands on the subject.

The ultimate ‘truth is stranger than fiction’ accounts are to be found in Return to Life:

Extraordinary Cases of Children Who Remember Past Lives, a book published last year by Jim Tucker, a psychiatry professor at the University of Virginia.

Tucker follows in the footsteps of the late Ian Stevenson, who for decades scrupulously investigated cases in which young children around the world spontaneously volunteered – in great detail – recollections that seemed to be about someone else’s life.

Much of the time, the person being spoken of had died violently or unnaturally. (In a prior post, I referenced one such instance, where a two-and-a-half-year-old girl became distraught over her inability to find ‘her’ children and described ‘her’ having lost her life in a road accident.)

Between them, Stevenson and Tucker have compiled more than 2,500 cases and 70% of them fit this pattern.

In many of these cases, the person being spoken of could be identified through the specificity of information volunteered.

Here’s a look at two very impressive (and recent) instances.

For the first, I’ll quote directly from a story done for the University of Virginia Magazine by Sean Lyons.

It conveys, among other things, a sense of how befuddled parents are in such a situation:

“When Ryan was 4, he began directing imaginary movies. Shouts of ‘Action!’ often echoed from his room. But the play became a concern for Ryan’s parents when he began waking up in the middle of the night screaming and clutching his chest, saying he dreamed his heart exploded when he was in Hollywood.

His mother asked his doctor about the episodes. Night terrors, the doctor said. He’ll outgrow them. Then one night, as his mother tucked Ryan into bed, Ryan suddenly took hold of her hand. ‘Mama,’ he said. ‘I think I used to be someone else.’

“He said he remembered a big white house and a swimming pool. It was in Hollywood, many miles from his Oklahoma home. He said he had three sons, but that he couldn’t remember their names. He began to cry, asking his mother over and over why he couldn’t remember their names.

“‘I really didn’t know what to do,’ she said. ‘I was more in shock than anything.

He was so insistent about it.

After that night, he kept talking about it, kept getting upset about not being able to remember those names.

I started researching the Internet about reincarnation. I even got some books from the library on Hollywood, thinking their pictures might help him. I didn’t tell anyone for months.’

“One day, as Ryan and his mum paged through one of the Hollywood books, Ryan stopped at a black-and-white still taken from a 1930s movie, Night After Night.

Two men in the centre of the picture were confronting one another. Four other men surrounded them.

His mother didn’t recognize any of the faces, but Ryan pointed to one of the men in the middle. ‘Hey Mama,’ he said. ‘That’s George. We did a picture together.’ His finger then shot over to a man on the right, wearing an overcoat and a scowl. ‘That guy’s me. I found me!’

“The book didn’t provide any names of the actors pictured, but she quickly confirmed that the man Ryan said was ‘George’ in the photo was indeed a George – George Raft, an all but forgotten film star from the 1930s and 1940s.

Still, his mother couldn’t identify the man Ryan said had been him. She wrote Tucker, whom she found through her online research, and included the photo.

Eventually it ended up in the hands of a film archivist, who, after weeks of research, confirmed the scowling man’s name:

Martin Martyn, an uncredited extra in the film.

“Not long afterward, Tucker and the family travelled to California to meet Martyn’s daughter, who’d been tracked down by researchers working with Tucker on a documentary.

Tucker sat down with the woman before her meeting with Ryan. She’d been reluctant to help, but during her talk with Tucker, she confirmed dozens of facts Ryan had given about her father.

“Ryan said he danced in New York. Martyn was a Broadway dancer. Ryan said he was also an ‘agent,’ and that people where he worked had changed their names.

Martyn worked for years at a well-known talent agency in Hollywood – where stage names are often created – after his dancing career ended. Ryan said his old address had ‘Rock’ in its name.

Martyn lived at 825 North Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills. Ryan said he knew a man named Senator Five. Martyn’s daughter said she had a picture of her father with a Senator Ives, Irving Ives, of New York, who served in the U.S. Senate from 1947 to 1959.

And yes, Martin Martyn had three sons. The daughter of course knew their names.”

The second case is equally remarkable. It involved two-year-old James Leininger, a Louisiana boy who loved toy planes.

But he started to have repeated nightmares of a horrible plane crash. He would kick his legs up in the air, screaming “Airplane crash on fire, little man can’t get out.”

Then during the day, he would slam his toy plans into the family’s coffee table while yelling ‘“airplane crash on fire,” to the extent that there were dozens of scratches and dents in the table.

James talked about the crash, relating that ‘he’ had been a pilot and that ‘he’ had flown off a boat. His father asked him the name of the boat and he said “Natoma.”

When his father remarked, “That sounds Japanese to me,” James replied “No, it’s American.” James went on to say that ‘he’ had piloted a type of plane called a Corsair, that ‘his’ nickname was Little Man, and that ‘he’ had a friend on the boat named Jack Larson.

After years of painstaking research, James’ father learned that an American aircraft carrier, the USS Natoma Bay, had supported operations at Iwo Jima during that World War II battle – and that it had lost one pilot there, a young man from Pennsylvania named James Huston.

His plane crashed almost exactly as described: hit in the engine, exploding, crashing into the water and quickly sinking.

And the pilot in the plane next to his when this happened was named Jack Larson.

It’s nearly impossible to conceive how children so young should have such vivid ‘memories’ or how they (or anyone connected with them, for that matter) could have known anything about such obscure figures from the past, whether it be Martin Martyn or “Little Man” James Huston.
Nor do such children appear to be abused or suffering from any trauma connected with their current life.

Furthermore, the families in these cases are firmly believing Christians for whom the concept of reincarnation is foreign.

The parents, besides being vexed in the extreme, are inevitably reluctant to have their children’s cases publicized for fear of being mocked.

These types of memories typically fade, by the way, around six years of age, according to Tucker.

The kids involved usually express a desire as well to fully embrace the life they’re in now.

However, the degree to which these children show heightened emotion in recounting these apparent memories is a tipoff, to me, that something truly significant is going on.

A boy like James Leininger shows all the hallmarks of PTSD at age two; why should he?

We can get a sense for the answer by realizing how fear – that most elemental of feelings – puts our entire being on red alert.

The pupils dilate, muscles are tensed, and respiration is increased as the body prepares to fight, flee, or freeze.

Meanwhile, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis springs into action by releasing a cascade of hormones that serve to marshal bodily energy.

If we are indeed in mortal peril, our entire body-mind tenses like a spring ready to snap. Our senses are honed to a fine edge: we notice every detail that could affect our existence.

But consider what would ensue if all that energy had no outlet – if, because of a sudden accident or foul play, someone could neither fight nor flee but were trapped in freeze mode?

We know that rats that are given even a mild shock somehow transfer the fear associated with the particular stimulus on to their pups, and even to their pups’ pups.

Could there be a mechanism, somewhere between life and death, where memories associated with the struggling person’s circumstances are preserved?

It would be akin to the echoes, preserved down the eons, of the Big Bang observable through faint but distinct background radiation.

Except in the cases we are considering, the intensity of the person’s feelings – his or her life energy, self-awareness and being – might somehow be captured in a fusion of space and time.

This ‘imprint’ might become available for another, nascent life form – not “his” or “her” memories (as in reincarnation) but a transmutation just the same.

For a past life regression session email jane-osbornembs@outlook.com

https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/feeling-too-much/201412/children-who-seemingly-remember-past-lives[/cs_text][/cs_column][cs_column fade=”false” fade_animation=”in” fade_animation_offset=”45px” fade_duration=”750″ type=”1/3″ style=”padding: 0px;”][x_image type=”none” src=”https://jane-osborne.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/past-life-6.png” alt=”” link=”false” href=”#” title=”” target=”” info=”none” info_place=”top” info_trigger=”hover” info_content=””][/cs_column][/cs_row][/cs_section][/cs_content]

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Using introspective hypnosis, uncover the mysteries that may lie behind your physical and mental issues. Uncover the unique essence within each of us that goes deeper than our personalities. 

Releasing old patterns and thought forms brings you back into alignment. Awaken your soul, encourage your awareness and protect your boundaries in particular situations. 

I work one to one or in groups and offer sessions online via zoom and Whatsapp. 

Understanding the past, healing the trauma in a safe environment, releasing pain, it is all part of the journey.

Releasing Attachments and Shadows 
Many people feel that there is something holding them back- but they are not sure what it is. Repetitive behaviours, irrational fears and phobias, emotional paralysis, and unexplained illnesses can all be manifestations of attachments and shadows – events and encounters from the past which continue to haunt us. 

My regressions can target and uncover these attachments and shadows and  help you to understand them, enabling you  to let them go, thereby healing past traumas. 

Past-horizons

Are you ready for your Journey? 


There is no way of knowing what you will experience during regression therapy.

People’s experiences can be very different. Some people may see glimpses of several past lives, whilst others may delve into one life in more detail, unearthing repressed memories that no longer serve them.

You may have been described by friends as an old soul or feel you have lived before. Some people can visit a place for the first time, yet instantly feel that it is familiar. Others speak of meeting someone for the first time yet feel as if they have known them all their lives.

A sound, smell, dream, or reaction to a situation can trigger memories of a past life experience. The smell of a perfume that your mother wore.

Some clients talk of souls that have chosen to reincarnate together such as partners, siblings, or friends to carry out tasks. An example would be a daughter who acts like the mother of the family or a strong connection with a relative who may have been your brother in a past life.

Some people may try past life regression out of curiosity, to see who they were in the past.

Others are in search of a path for personal growth and healing. Both are equally valid reasons for embarking on this therapy.

If you are feeling stuck in certain ways of thinking, feelings and behaviours, hypnotherapy can help enormously. It assists you in reframing negative thoughts and behaviours and encourages you to understand the reasons for this. It can help tip the feeling of loss upside down and allow you to view it in a positive way as you move to a higher understanding of situations. For example, instead of feeling like a relationship was a failure, hypnotherapy can help you see how the relationship helped you learn, understand, grow, and become more compassionate.

You hold the key to release yourself from past trauma, dreams and attachments from past lives locked in your memory. You will see things from a different perspective and realise you are more than what you see .
Opening the doors to past life records and working with them helps to release the chains of the past.  

As a client, you are fully awake and aware of everything going on around you. When I ask you a question, you have control of your mouth and body and express through words, what you are sensing (feeling, seeing hearing, knowing), what you are experiencing in your memory or what feels like your “imagination”.


To traverse through these memories, we discuss the issues that you would like to address at the beginning of the session.During my hypnosis sessions, there may be times when loved ones, lost souls, extra-terrestrials, or other beings have a message for my clients. You may just be curious but for those looking deeper for answers – there is soul work to do.