Tuesday, February 17, 2009

2 cases of hypnotic regression

WARSAW, Poland—I just had two extraordinary cases of clients who came to me for past life hypnotic regression. I have changed their names to protect their privacy.

Rina, 40, is a tall, attractive woman who works as a receptionist in a small service company. Over dinner the previous evening before I did regression on her, I asked her if she has had a traumatic experience in childhood and she said, no. She asked why the question?

“Because your eyes look sad,” I told her, she just smiled. “Why are you always serious and quiet?” I asked her again, and she said she has always been like that, but she also said she had a happy childhood.

The next day, I was surprised that she wanted me to do a regression on her because she didn’t believe in reincarnation or past lives. So I told her, “Let us just chat for a while and see what happens. Let’s not do regression right away.”

As customary with me, I never do outright regression even when requested to do so. I first ask why a client wants to be regressed and then I also ask the client’s subconscious mind if it will permit us to do this. If the client’s subconscious mind says no, I don’t proceed with the regression. I do this with a simple technique using finger movements.

Past life in ancient Rome
Quite unexpectedly, Rina went into relaxation very fast and her subconscious mind cooperated fully. It answered right away and allowed me to put her into a deeper state of hypnosis.
In the regression she saw herself as a young woman of 20 in ancient Rome waiting for her lover who was out at sea.

A storm developed and the boat capsized drowning everybody inside. The next scene she saw was of her lover lying dead being watched by a large crowd. She cried.

The next scene was still in Rome and this time she had another lover. But he was accused of a serious crime and she saw him surrounded by a big crowd watching his execution. She saw her lover being beheaded. The colors red and blue were vivid in her memory.

The next scene, she was looking out the window waiting for her lover to come but he never did.
I asked her to go to the time of her death. How did she die? She said she jumped out of the window into the sea and drowned.

During her present life, Rina is always waiting for her true love. Her current boyfriend is in jail accused of a crime. She is afraid of water that’s why she never learned how to swim. She loves to wear golden armbands or bracelets just like Roman women did in the past and Rina has Romanesque features.

She said what she saw were so vivid it really shocked her. For a long time after I woke her up, she just sat there on the chair immobilized. I had to tap her shoulder three times before she could completely get out of trance.

“Now,” she said, “I understand why I am like this. Thank you very much.”

Depossession process
The second case was not a regression, although that was what she came to me for. It was more a case of depossession, that is, the removal of a benign entity that attached itself to her without her knowing it.

Let’s call her Anna, 55, and a psychotherapist by profession. She came to me for consultation she said, because she was slowly losing control of her life, somebody is controlling her and she thinks it’s her lover whom she wanted to separate from but could not.

Anna has been separated from her husband for a long time now. Her daughter acted as interpreter. I asked since when she noticed her life changing and her being out of control, she said “about a month or two ago.”

I asked her what happened to her during that time. She couldn’t think of anything special, except that she had been trying to get away from this relationship with a man for years now, because she felt it was a destructive relationship.

During my attempt to talk to her subconscious mind, it would not cooperate. It responded negatively to the question of whether it would allow us to probe into her past life. Then I asked if it would allow this to be done later. Again, it said, no. Then I asked if something was blocking it, and it said, yes. Is it her mind? It replied, no.

I thought for a moment what to do next. Then I suddenly asked, “Is it a spirit that’s blocking this?” It said, yes. That was a breakthrough! I knew then what to do. I said, “I want to speak directly to the spirit within Anna’s body.” To my relief it said, yes.

“Are you a relative of this woman?” It said, no. “How long have you been with her? Have you been with her a long time?” It said, no. Then I asked, “One month?” No, “One and a half months?” Yes.

Then I told the spirit that he no longer belongs to the earth plane, that he should seek the light in the spirit world. There are relatives of his waiting for him.

“Look for the light,” I said. “Can you see a light? It said, yes. “Good,” I said. “Then go towards the light and leave this woman in peace. She has suffered enough. Are you willing to do this?” It said, yes. Go now into the light and be at peace.”

After a few moments, I woke up the client. She was completely amazed. I told her that the spirit would not bother her anymore. It will not be controlling her life. She will regain control over herself. She was so relieved but asked what she should do when it comes back. “How can I protect myself from such entities?”

I told her to strengthen her will power. She will be able to end the destructive relationship she has with the man she wants to leave, now that the entity has stopped controlling her. It is significant to note that she began feeling that she was losing control of her life at the time the entity or spirit entered her body. This confirmed it was the spirit, which was behind her losing control of herself, not the man she wanted to separate from.

She came out of the room with a big smile on her face, quite a contrast from when she entered it.
Note: The next Inner Mind Development seminar will be held Feb. 21-22, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at Rm. 308 Prince Plaza I Cond., Legaspi St., Greenbelt, Makati. Call 8107245 or 8926806; e-mail jaimetlicauco@yahoo.com.

source: http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090217-189625/2-cases-of-hypnotic-regression

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Blogger 168 said...

Inner Awareness
Feeling the energy in Jordan

By Jaime Licauco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:34:00 04/07/2009

I never imagined I would set foot on the very spot which the Bible records as the land where God first manifested Himself to Jordan.

The name evokes memories of great personages in the Bible who lived or taught in Jordan, such as the prophets Abraham, Moses, Elisha, Elijah, Job, Ruth, John the Baptist, Paul and Jesus Christ Himself. Some biblical scholars even claim that Adam and Eve’s Garden of Eden was located along the Northwest bank of the River Jordan known as Baysan (Beth-shean).

According to an official brochure of the Board of Tourism of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, “The Plains of Moab” in the Bible’s Old Testament and “Peraea” in the New Testament cover the lands to the east of Jordan ’s famous river of baptism and along the Dead Sea in the western part of Jordan. “It is the only area within the Holy Land that links the lives of Moses, Joshua, Elijah, Elisha, John the Baptist and Jesus Christ.”

Almost every place one travels in Jordan reminds one of the great events recorded in the Christian Bible. “This is where Jacob wrestled with the Angel of God, where Lot’s wife was turned into a pillar of salt, where Job suffered and was rewarded for his faith, and where Elijah ascended to heaven. It is the place where Moses led the Israelites on their flight from Egypt to the Holy Land, and where he delivered God’s Law to mankind. It is where Jesus was baptized by John and anointed by God, where he called his first disciples and where the Holy Trinity, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, manifested itself.”

It is indeed a land of numerous miracles and supernatural happenings. But I went to Jordan the last week of March, accompanied by my wife Yoly, not in search of a religious or spiritual experience, but for a very mundane or down-to-earth reason. I was invited by the Jordan Chapter of the Young Presidents Organization (YPO) to give a two-hour lecture on stress control and self-healing through visualization to its members. YPO is a prestigious worldwide association of highly successful and dynamic top-level business executives below 50 years old. I have been a speaker for YPO in various parts of the world for many years now.

The event was held in one of the newest and most luxurious hotel resorts in Jordan, the Kempinski Hotel Ishtar located along the banks of the Dead Sea, which is 400 m below sea level. It is called the Dead Sea because it is so salty no living thing survives there.

After my presentation, which ran to three hours, I led a smaller group who stayed behind in a meditation on the grassy lawn facing the majestic Dead Sea as the sun was setting down. It was, for most of the members, a memorable experience. The chairman of the education committee of YPO’s Jordan chapter said, “This is one of the best events we have ever had.”

YPO Retreat
I was invited to come back to Jordan in October for a YPO Retreat and to be a possible resource person during the YPO University (a gathering of members from the world over) in Jordan next year.

Since we only had three brief days in Jordan, half of which were spent on the plane, we had a chance to visit only the Baptism Site in the Jordan River. But it was worth the trip.

For almost two millennia, this area, which runs along the east bank of the Jordan River, opposite Jericho, has been known to be the place where Jesus Christ was baptized by John. “But in 1996,” according to an official brochure, “stunning archaeological discoveries identified the exact site where John had been living and carrying out his baptisms as Bethany Beyond the Jordan.

“Also identified was the cave where John the Baptist lived and carried out his work. Early pilgrims noted that water flowed from the cave, which John drank and used for baptism.”

However, what we learned on this trip was that the Baptism site is no longer what it probably was during the biblical times. Now the water in the site is dirty and does not flow. It is also not for baptism. This is done somewhere else in the river Jordan, further away from this site.
Nevertheless, I felt the Baptism site radiated strong energy. I tested it with my pendulum and it gyrated strongly and widely. So I got a small plastic bottle and tried to fill it with holy water. But I slipped and my left rubber shoe got stuck in the mud. Never mind, that shoe is now a baptized Christian.

The other little but important thing I was able to do was to walk on the Dead Sea on our last evening. My wife took pictures of me while on the Dead Sea, and when we looked at the photos taken, I was surrounded by so many orbs or globe-like lights. It was an exhilarating feeling and I felt the very strong energy of the place.

Note: For inquiries on books, paranormal services, seminars on Inner Mind Development, ESP, Intuition Development, and Soulmates, Karma & Reincarnation conducted by this writer, call 810-7245/892-6806; fax 815-9890; e-mail jaimetlicauco@yahoo.com.ph.
Source: http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090407-198268/Feeling-the-energy-in-Jordan

5:33 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Pagan origins of the Christian faith

By Jaime Licauco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 18:11:00 04/13/2009

I OFTEN GET ANGRY letters from conservative Christians when I write on religion and/or the Christian Bible. They point out that my interpretation of the Bible is wrong and that I’m confusing people, as if their interpretation is the only correct and valid one.

A reader named Diana was incensed by my column title, “Psychic abilities are gifts of the Holy Spirit,” saying I am completely mistaken and that I should keep my opinion to myself.

Another opposed my statement that “anybody can be possessed by evil spirits,” saying a “true Christian can never be possessed.”

These reactions merely amuse me. I have come to the inevitable conclusion that one’s degree of certainty about his or her religion is inversely proportional to his or her knowledge of the facts about that religion. The more dogmatic or fanatical a person is about religion, the more ignorant he is about the origin or basis of his beliefs.

I used to think that way, too. Having been raised and educated in a conservative Catholic school, I have been brainwashed into believing that the Catholic religion is the only true and correct one.

We were taught, during that time anyway, that “outside the Catholic faith there is no salvation.” We were also forbidden to visit or attend non-Catholic churches or services. I also remember that in our theology class, other religions like Buddhism, Hinduism and Taoism were considered “adversaries” of the Catholic religion.

Divisive

Fortunately, Catholic and other Christian schools no longer teach students this false and divisive doctrine. But habits of thinking and centuries of mental conditioning really die hard, especially in this conservative medieval-thinking Christian country. Ultra-conservative Christians still think the Christian Bible is the only source of knowledge about God and that it was God Himself who wrote or dictated it.

When you ask these people how they know it to be so, they inevitably reply, “because the Bible says so.” Have you ever seen a more perfect example of tautological reasoning?

I usually avoid discussions about two topics: religion and politics. Because there will be no end to arguments. But if I don’t speak out and point out other views aside from those we have always heard from the priesthood, the evangelists, and their followers, we will never grow in our knowledge of these matters.

All will follow blindly what Church authorities tell us, and accept only their interpretation of the scriptures, as if theirs is the only correct and valid interpretation.

So, at the risk of again being bombarded by angry letters, let me point out some historically verifiable facts about the true origins of the Christian religion as we have never known it.

Not unique

Scholars now agree that Christianity was not a unique religion founded or established by a religious teacher and prophet called Jesus, whom his followers consider to be a God. I tried to find out where the basic ideas of Christianity originated. And what I discovered shocked me.

The story of Christ—I mean, the story of a God becoming man, by being born of a mortal virgin and then dying, going to hell and resurrecting, is not new at all. It did not begin with Jesus Christ. There were many stories like this even before Jesus Christ was supposedly born.

This story has its roots in ancient and pagan mystery religions. In other words, Christianity had a pagan origin. And it’s not original at all except for one thing. The ancient pagan people did not think of the story of their dying and resurrecting God to be a real person, but was accepted by them as a myth or symbol.

Christianity, however, insisted that Jesus Christ actually lived as a real and historical person, and Christian theologians took laborious and meticulous pains to prove his historical existence.

According to authors Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy, in their thoroughly researched book “The Jesus Mysteries,” the story of the “dying and resurrecting god” is the same story found in all ancient mystery schools, from Asia Minor (Attis) and Persia (as Mithras) to Greece (as Dionysus) and Egypt (as Osiris).

In that book, the authors cite incontrovertible parallels between the ancient teachings of pagan religion and those of Christianity.

Why don’t we know this? According to the authors, the early Roman Catholic Church did everything in its mighty power to prevent the truth from coming out. It systematically and mercilessly destroyed and eradicated all teachings and literature of pagan origin.

Isn’t this the same attitude some Christians still have today, destroying all beliefs that are different from or opposed to their own? So nothing has changed. Except that now not everybody is willing to accept everything the Church dishes out.

This does not diminish the importance of Jesus Christ as far as I am concerned. The story of Jesus is the story of every man. We are the gods that came down from heaven as Jesus did. We will all die, but will live again as He did. Isn’t that where the power of the Jesus story really lies?

For inquiries on books, paranormal services and seminars on Inner Mind Development, ESP and Intuition Development, and Soulmates, Karma & Reincarnation conducted by this writer, call 8107245, 8926806; fax 8159890; e-mail jaimetlicauco@yahoo.com.

Source: http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090413-199109/Pagan-origins-of-the-Christian-faith

8:34 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Inner Awareness
Readers cheer, jeer last week’s column

By Jaime Licauco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 20:21:00 04/20/2009

MANILA, Philippines – As I had expected, reactions to my column last week on the pagan origins of Christianity were quick and varied. But what I did not expect was that majority of those who responded to it supported my views.

This seems to show that we as a people are at last beginning to learn to think and research for ourselves rather than relying entirely on religious authority figures.

First, some excerpts from positive e-mail responses:

“A most excellent article, thank you. It is through articles like this and books like ‘The Jesus Mysteries’ and ‘Jesus and the Goddess’ that we awaken and grow spiritually.” Anna Stenvert (anina@stenvert.com.za)

“I just had the good fortune to stumble upon your article about the pagan origins of Christianity. I wanted to take a moment and give you some very positive feedback to help offset all of the conservative backlash which is sure to come your way.”

“I, too, was raised a Catholic, and I strongly considered joining the priesthood for a few years. Thankfully, I came to my senses.I am now happily married with three kids and I am also a Kundalini Yoga teacher who delights in expanding people’s notions of religion and spirituality.I fancy myself a Taoist, and it was a keyword search for ‘Taoism’ in the news that turned up your article.”

“Many blessings on your excellent work and writings!” Jim Earles (yogaspectrum@yahoo.com)

“I fully agree with you that many of the practices and ‘doctrines’ of the Christian faith originate from the pagan societies that surrounded it throughout history. This is also true for the Hebrew Faith, which is the root of the Christian Faith.”

“I believe people who think they are correct and all the others are wrong are the most un-Christian people around. If there is one word to summarize the whole Bible, this is the word LOVE.” Reshley Canlas (edcpbsa@yahoo.com)

“I bet if you undertake more thorough research, you would find out about the Council of Nicea, Emperor Constantine’s accommodation to preserve the kingdom; that December 25 is not the correct date of Christmas; that even the crucifix is not new; that Christianity is a merger of Roman Paganism with Christianity; that the Bible is not written by God, not even by people who lived with Jesus Christ; that even the word ‘Christian’ is foreign at the time of Jesus; and that Jesus himself never claimed to be God.”
“You have a good article though. And Godspeed. Wow—you have the courage.” Akmad Donia (akmadgdonia@yahoo.com)

“I read your article. Thanks for having the courage to write it. As the author of four books exploring the origins of Christianity, including a bestseller called ‘The Christ Conspiracy,’ I thought you would benefit from my work. You will need more back up than ‘The Jesus Mysteries’ when the harpies start attacking you. I particularly recommend my new book, ‘Christ in Egypt,’ because of its wealth of primary-source material and its degree of scholarship.”

“Keep up the good work.” Acharya S. (acharya_s@yahoo.com)

“Congrats on a courageous and insightful article.” Larry Litchfield of New York City and Manila (larrylitch@mac.com)

I also received very encouraging and highly supportive text messages from Prof. Grace De Vora of UP, painter E.R. Tagle, Dr. Dennis Lumabi, Baguio businessman Tato Malay and Ciudad Verdaderos’ Supremo, Art Cataquiz.

Negative responses

“You are out of your mind writing this column. Your own words reflect you know nothing about this topic, just somebody trying to amaze people. Better find another topic.” Joselito Valera (joselito.valera@philcoastal.net)

“I don’t agree with you on the above-mentioned subject. What you’re saying is that the first 12 disciples of Christ are pagans. And worst is, it includes the One whom Christians believe as their God. No no no, that could not be. They are Jews who became believers of Jesus Christ.” Jojo dela Cuesta (jojo_dptech@hotmail.com)

Another letter-writer just took the last paragraph of my article and started a lengthy sermon in Filipino mainly quoting the Bible to show I was wrong.

These readers obviously did not understand what I was trying to say in that article and only read what they wanted to attack, taking my words out of context. As Jesus Christ said on the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”

Let me quote the following statement from “The Pagan Christ” by spiritual author and TV host Tom Harpur:

“The evidence of close similarities between Christianity and other ancient world faiths is massive, detailed, extremely specific and quite far-flung, stretching from the Vedic wisdom of India to the Norse myths of Scandinavia, the legends of the Incas and the original spirituality of the indigenous peoples of North America.”

“The Spanish conquistador Hernando Cortez (1485-1547), after his conquest of Mexico in 1519-21, complained in his diaries that the Devil had positively taught to the Mexicans the same things that God had taught to Christendom: Early explorers in contact with North American natives had similar experiences.

“Every element of the allegedly ‘new,’ uniquely revealed religion was extant before the first Christian century in tradition, practices, and literature of many other lands and people.”

Source: http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090420-200449/Readers-cheer-jeer-last-weeks-column

8:35 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Inner Awareness
‘Desperate’ questions from a reader

By Jaime Licauco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 21:18:00 04/27/2009


HERE are “desperate” questions from Jenny (not her real name), a sensitive, 18-year-old regular reader of this column.

1. She dreamt of 17th-century Europe, which could have been England or France, she said. “I was wearing 17th-century peasant working clothes. I think I was a milkmaid. My family was poor. I had three brothers whom I despised. Our parents were dead.”

“My brother did something wrong to an official but they pointed to me as the wrongdoer. As the magistrate was about to sentence me, I cried to my brothers, who were laughing at me idiotically, and I shouted to them, ‘I hate you! I hate you! I wish mother never died!’”

“It seemed so real! I was really there. I could smell the hay and damp soil. I could remember the gallows where they hang criminals. I could also remember the prison cells and the dungeon with wet floors, torches and damp wells, chairs hanging from the walls and ceiling, and the rusted bars.”

“I woke up before I knew what happened to me.”

Dreams can mean any number of things, depending on the background and life issues of the person dreaming. Dreams can tell us things not only of the present or future but also of the past.

Some dreams may refer to a memory of a person’s past life. If your dream has any relevance to you in your present life, if it helps explain your attitude towards certain people or places, this could be a reincarnational dream.

Try to see if this dream holds any meaning for you in terms of your attitude toward or interest in 17th-century Europe.

You don’t have to believe in reincarnation to have dreams of your past lives. There were several young Catholic monks I met years ago who dreamt of their past lives, and it bothered them because they were not supposed to believe in reincarnation. But it happened, they “saw” their past lives, and they told it to me in confidence.

2. “I also dreamt of the planets aligning,” Jenny continued. “They were close enough for me to see the details of every planet. Pluto was even there. The Tuesday after I had that dream, I read your article about the Mayan prophecy (which talked about the alignment of four planets taking place on December 21, 2012). It really freaked me out – the dream, and then your article right after that.”

Nothing happens by accident. Being a sensitive and psychic person, you probably anticipated reading that article. Our dreams sometimes tell us things that will happen. This only shows you have precognitive abilities manifested in your dreams.

3. “Is it true that when someone is intensely thinking about you, you are also thinking about that person?”

It is possible, because of telepathy and the law of attraction. We are connected to one another in our subconscious minds. And when you think of somebody intensely, it is likely that person will receive your thoughts telepathically. It is not uncommon to hear of two people living apart and dreaming of the same thing at the same time. So why not in the waking state?

4. “How would you explain this? You see someone you don’t know but there’s a strong sense of familiarity in his or her aura. You feel you know that person. You feel not just a tug in your heart, but something like your heart is in your throat, and it’s palpitating like crazy and your stomach contracts, etc. You sense a deep connection when you look into each other’s eyes, a feeling you must have known him or her in a past life.”

Well, as the great American psychic and prophet, Edgar Cayce (who died in 1945), said, “We seldom meet a person by accident.” Therefore, a feeling of such strong connection with a person you never met before in this life could only mean you’ve met him or her in some previous life or lives.

There’s nothing uncommon or unusual about that. It happens to many. But since they can’t explain the feeling, especially if they don’t believe in reincarnation, they just dismiss it as a product of their imagination. But is it?

5. “Lastly, I had dreams of evil creatures lurking in our house. I don’t know if they are negative spirits or just negative energies. The first I saw really shocked my whole system.”

“Sorry to badger you with these silly questions. But I am desperate for answers.”

On your last question, I suggest you ask someone with clairvoyant vision, a reliable healer, exorcist or espiritista, to take a look at your house and cleanse it of evil spirits, if any. You should not take such dreams of evil spirits in your house lightly. They can do some harm to the residents, if they are really negative.

I hope these answers help you understand better the things happening to you.

The next Soulmates, Karma and Reincarnation seminar will be on May 9, Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Interested parties may call 8107245 or 8926806. E-mail jaimetlicauco@yahoo.com.

http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090427-201783/Desperate-questions-from-a-reader

10:44 AM  
Blogger 168 said...

Inner Awareness
What dreams tell about previous life

By Jaime Licauco
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 19:41:00 05/04/2009

MANILA, Philippines -- “I love reading Inner Awareness at INQUIRER.net and at blogspot.com. I found an article similar to what I’m experiencing. It’s really scary! Please help me understand what’s happening to me.

“Several times after falling asleep, I could see everyone in the room, but I couldn’t move, speak or scream. I have difficulty breathing. It scares me because the harder I try to move or shout, the more I can’t. I just stay frozen in bed.

“As soon as I become awake, I would instantly fall back into the same state and see everything in the room again. I would try changing my position but it doesn’t help.

“My husband told me after waking up fully from this experience that I was moaning, but he ignored me because I looked like I was only dreaming.

“I told him in detail what he was doing for the past minutes while he thought I was in deep sleep. He was surprised to hear that I was completely aware of my surroundings at that moment, even the television show he was watching and the commercials.

“Is this normal? Or am I just having bangungot [nightmare]?” (name withheld upon request).

There’s really nothing you should be worried about. You’re just having spontaneous astral projection or out-of-body experience (OOBE) during sleep. This is a fairly common and natural occurrence. It happens to a lot of people. It has happened to me, too, but not as frequently.

You see, when a person is asleep, his astral body (also called energy body or subtle body) goes out of the physical body and sometimes travels away from it. Most of the time, it just hovers above the physical body. When the person wakes up in the astral plane, he sees everything happening around him. He can see 360 degrees and can hear everything including what other people in the room, or even outside of it, are thinking of.

If you don’t panic and just keep your mind quiet and still, if you don’t try to struggle, you will naturally and easily get back to your physical body. If you panic or try to move or shout, you create a disharmony between the vibrations of your physical and your astral bodies. They are not in sync. Therefore, the harder it will be for you to get back.

“Bangungot” happens when you go to the lower astral plane, where monsters and evil spirits lie in wait for astral bodies that stray into their world where it will surely be difficult to get out. As long as your thoughts and emotions are positive you will not get into those lower planes. Remember “like attracts like in the mental and spiritual realms.”

Is it a dream of a past life in Egypt?

A reader from Azerbaijan named Musa Musayer, who now lives in Angeles City, relates two extraordinary experiences.

“I read your articles and I’m intrigued,” began Musa. “I want to ask you about my dreams, which to me are very real like I’m awake.

“Many times I see myself as a pharaoh in Egypt, dressed in gold and living in a very big palace. I see myself standing in the palace looking at the desert. I have many slaves.

“One time in the dream, I was standing on a rock in the mountain. Lightning struck in front of me and a sword appeared. I took it and felt it had so much energy that I became powerful.

“At another time, I was walking on the beach and again a lightning struck and a king’s chair made of stone fell from the sky to the beach and I felt it was for me.

“I also want to tell you a true story which happened to me in my country. I was then 16 years old (I am now 27). I was at home during the celebration of my birthday which was also my graduation from school. I was sitting near a table. On it was a glass of soft drink. When I reached for it, the glass suddenly disappeared. Everybody saw it happen. As soon as the glass disappeared there was a booming sound as well as other strange sounds. The glass was never found. And there was no fluid anywhere.”

Your dreams could be telling you who you were in the past. Our past incarnations sometimes surface in our dream state, when our critical or rational faculties are asleep, allowing our subconscious mind to give us information which are otherwise inaccessible during our waking state. I would, however, be very careful in believing I was an important personage in the past. Sometimes, it is just our ego that gives us that impression. Try to see if your dreams relate to your present life or if they help explain certain aspects of your present life. If they do, then they are likely to be true.

Although not really impossible that a person was once a pharaoh, it would be easier to believe if he dreamt he was a poor, unknown slave, rather than an important personality in history.

Regarding your other experience when you were 16 years old: What happened to the glass of soft drink is called “dematerialization.” That’s the opposite of “materialization,” which is when something appears out of nowhere. Materialization of objects happen more often than dematerialization, but both do happen.

Note: The next Soulmates, Karma & Reincarnation seminar will be on May 9, 1 p.m.-
7 p.m. Interested parties may call 8107245, 8926806; fax 8159890; e-mail jaimetlicauco@yahoo.com.

http://showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/lifestyle/lifestyle/view/20090504-203063/What-dreams-tell-about-previous-life

9:22 AM  
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10:56 PM  

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