Past Life Regression is becoming popular, as people strive to uncover their suspicions of having had a previous existence. 

Some of my more recent clients have found themselves in the Victorian era, leading very ordinary lives!  Others have been recounting their life and times in the 18th century rural England. 

Why not take a voyage of discovery yourself?

The mystery of past life regression

In 1824, a nine-year-old boy named Katsugoro, the son of a Japanese farmer, told his sister that he believed he had a past life.  According to his story, which is one of the earliest cases of past life recall on record, the boy vividly recalled that he had been the son of another farmer in another village and had died from the effects of smallpox in 1810.  Katsugoro could remember dozens of specific events about his past life, including details about his family and the village where they lived, even though Katsugoro had never been there.  He even remembered the time of his death, his burial and the time he spent before being reborn.  The facts he related were subsequently verified by an investigation.  Past life regression is one of the most fascinating areas of unexplained human phenomena.  As yet, science has been unable to prove or disprove its genuineness.  Even many who have investigated claims of past life recall are unsure whether it is an historical recollection due to reincarnation or is a construction of information somehow received by the subconscious.  Either possibility is remarkable.  It’s important to be sceptical about such extraordinary claims, but the stories are nonetheless intriguing.

 

Virginia Tighe / Bridey Murphy

Perhaps the most famous case of past life recall is that of Virginia Tighe who recalled her past life as Bridey Murphy.  Virginia was the wife of a Virginian businessman in Pueblo, Colorado, who, while under hypnosis in 1952,  told Morey Bernstein, her therapist, that over 100 years ago she was an Irish woman named Bridget Murphy who went by the nickname of Bridey.  During their sessions together, Bernstein marvelled at detailed conversations with Bridey, who spoke with a pronounced Irish brogue and spoke extensively of her life in 19th century Ireland.  When Bernstein published his book about the case 'The Search for Bridey Murphy', in 1956, it became famous around the world and sparked an excited interest in the possibility of reincarnation.  Over six sessions, Virginia revealed many details about Bridey’s life, including her birth date in 1798, her childhood amid a Protestant family in the city of Cork, her marriage to Sean Brian Joseph McCarthy and even her own death at the age of 60 in 1858.  As Bridey, she provided numerous specifics, such as names, dates, places, events, shops and songs - things Virginia was always surprised about when she awoke from the hypnosis.  But could these details be verified?  The results of many investigations were mixed.  Much of what Bridey said was consistent with the time and place, and it seemed inconceivable that someone who had never been to Ireland could provide so many details with such confidence.  However, journalists could find no historical record of Bridey Murphy - not her birth, her family, her marriage, nor her death.  Believers supposed that this was merely due to the poor record keeping of the time.  But critics discovered inconsistencies in Bridey’s speech and also learned that Virginia had grown up near - and had known well - an Irish woman named Bridle Corkell, and that she was quite likely the inspiration for “Bridey Murphy.”  There are flaws with this theory too, however, keeping the case of Bridey Murphy an intriguing mystery.

 

Monica / John Wainwright

In 1986, a woman known by the pseudonym “Monica” underwent hypnosis by psychotherapist Dr. Garrett Oppenheim.  Monica believed she had discovered a previous existence as a man named John Ralph Wainwright who lived in the southwestern U.S.  She knew that John grew up in Wisconsin, Arizona and had vague memories of brothers and sisters.  As a young man he became a deputy sheriff and married the daughter of a bank president.  According the Monica’s “memory,” John was killed in the line of duty - shot by three men he had once sent to jail - and died on July 7, 1907.

 

Sujith / Sammy

Born in Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), Sujith was barely old enough to speak when he began to tell his family of a previous life as a man named Sammy.  Sammy, he said, had lived eight miles to the south in the village of Gorakana.  Sujith told of Sammy’s life as a railroad worker and as a dealer of a bootleg whiskey called arrack.  After an argument with his wife, Maggie, Sammy stormed out of his house and got drunk, and while walking along a busy highway was struck by a truck and killed.  Young Sujith often demanded to be taken to Gorakana and had an abnormal taste for cigarettes and arrack.  Sjuth’s family had never been to Gorakana and hadn’t known anyone that fitted Sammy’s description, yet, being Buddhists, were believers in reincarnation and therefore not completely surprised by the boy’s story.  Investigations, including one conducted by a professor of psychiatry from the University of Virginia, confirmed as many as 60 of the details of the life of Sammy Fernando who indeed had lived and died (six months before Sujith’s birth) just as Sujith had said.  When Sujith was introduced to Sammy’s family, he surprised them with his familiarity with them and his knowledge of their pet names.  This is one of the strongest cases of reincarnation on record.

 

Graham Huxtable / Arnall Bloxham

Another fascinating case of past life regression took place in Wales where Graham Huxtable, a mild-mannered swimming instructor, was placed under hypnosis by hypnotist Arnall Bloxham.  In a trance, Huxtable not just recalled a past life, he seemed to actually become a man named Ben, a boisterous gunner on an 18th century British frigate called Aggie.  While inhabited by the personality of Ben, Huxtable would call out orders to the men on the ship in a heavy accent and use obscure nautical terminology.  He even relived every moment of a battle in which he eventually suffered an injury to his leg.  Bloxham had difficulty bringing Huxtable out of trance, but when he did, the man complained of a pain in his leg.  And when Bloxham replayed a recording of the session, Huxtable was astonished at what he heard, recalling nothing of his experience under the trance.  Although experts could verify the terms and language that “Ben” used, they could not find records of a ship named Aggie nor of the ship’s captain he had named.  Past life recall... or a case of multiple personality?

 

T.E. / Jensen Jacoby

In 1958, a woman who in this case was identified only as T.E., underwent hypnosis by her husband, a medical doctor and experimenter with past life regression.  Once in a trance state, T.E.’s voice deepened to one that was distinctly male and she declared in broken English that she was a farmer named Jensen Jacoby who lived in the 17th century.  T.E.’s speech was peppered with Swedish words, a language that she and her husband swore she did not know.  After six hypnotic sessions, T.E. was talking exclusively in Swedish, even conversing fluently with several Swedish persons that her husband had brought in to witness the phenomenon.  These native Swedes confirmed that she was speaking a somewhat archaic form of Swedish that would have been spoken at the time Jensen said he had lived.  These are just a few of the more well known examples of past life regression.  Many therapists today maintain the benefits of past life regression.  They believe it can shed light on present life personal issues and relationships and can even help to heal the wounds suffered in a past life.  I have a personal opinion which is having seen the changes and manifestations of regression therapy there is a benefit.  I would say to sceptics that you have your opinion but I am mindful of a personally handled case of a man who during a regression session went back to the Second World War as a hurricane pilot and physically experienced his own death.  He awakened and remembered that as a small boy his first trip to the dentist where the anaesthetic had been applied by gas and air had reminded him of a strong smell which he now knew to be burning oil.  I would also ask anyone to consider past life with an open mind: that if something as simple as a journey through the past in a comfortable chair using nothing more than the sub conscious mind can resolve pain and emotional discomfort then why should It be a subject of ridicule by the so called professionals who have themselves from time to time been hard pressed to explain some of the phenomenon in their own areas of endeavour?  The concept of past lives is also one of the beliefs of Scientology which states, “Past lives are suppressed by the painfulness of the memory of those former existences.  To restore the memory of one’s whole existence, it is necessary to bring one up to being able to confront such experiences.

 

Can a blind man see?

A Blind Man Describes Visions of a Previous Life. If you doubt the existence of Past life, consider the following case and try to explain it away. It’s one of the most fascinating stories in favour of regression we have heard.  It was the experience of professional hypnotherapist, Elizabeth Bowen, BA, Dip Ed, CC, CHP (College of Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy).  This case came to Elizabeth Bowen’s attention in the early 1980s and it concerns a young healthy man in his 20s who was totally blind and had been so since birth.  As a newborn baby he’d been placed in an oxygen tent and too much gas had been delivered, which caused the blindness the boy had suffered all his life.  He approached Mrs Bowen because of ‘unsettling dreams’ he’d been experiencing, which seemed to ‘centre around the brilliance of the sun’.  She regressed him and much to her amazement he exclaimed: ‘I can see!’ and then went on to vividly describe scenes of trees and fields and a job of carpentry he had held in a previous lifetime.  He began to describe colours and shapes that he had never seen before so he had no point of reference and then told her about an ancient tribe of which he was a member.  They were ‘worshipping the sun’ and had been instructed by the elders ‘not to look upon the disc’ as it rose.  He further related how, being ‘curious’ in that lifetime, he had disobeyed the law and was seized and then ‘sacrificed on a stone altar’.  These scenes were so real to him that he described them graphically.  But at the end of these incredible experiences, upon returning to normality the young man was once again completely blind.  “It’s one of the most interesting and baffling cases I’ve ever come across” quotes Mrs Bowen.  She ended by challenging all sceptics:  “How can this be explained, except that my client must have had some kind of previous existence in which his eyes had functioned correctly?”