Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Starseeds

Introduction
Some spiritualists believe that they are not normal. They don't just believe that they are not normal, but they 'know' it. Such people believe that they were born onto Earth with a spiritual mission to fulfill. They believe that they are not REALLY from this world. They believe that they are "starseeds".

What are starseeds?
"Starseeds" is the term that refers to "indigo children", "rainbow children", "system busters" and "crystal children". These particular labels refer to people born within a particular time period, who are believed by proponents of the "starseed" idea to have been born onto Earth with a spiritual mission. According to http://www.drboylan.com/strkidsigns.html,  starseed children '... display skills, such as: telepathy (mental communication), precognition (knowing the future), telekinesis (moving objects by mental concentration), clairvoyance/remote viewing (mentally seeing things distant in space or time), "downloading" information (from off-planet consciousnesses), cross-species communication, penetrating intuitiveness (just "knowing" something without being told), affecting electrical devices (e.g., devices turn on or blow out as the kid goes by), remote-influencing others (telepathically), inter-dimensional viewing, aura-reading (learning about another's health, intentions, etc. by observing the energy field surrounding them), psychic diagnosis ("reading" the person's energy field fluctuations), psychic or bioenergetic healing (transferring helpful energy to a person), invisibility work (making self "invisible" (mentally), teleportation (moving self or object from one locale to another by mental effort), levitation (rising from the ground by mental effort), mental influencing (telepathically causing another to "feel" like doing something the Star Kid wants) , earth energy adjustment work, time dilation or contraction (causing events, trips, etc. to take longer or shorter time than ordinary), pre-sensitivity to earthquakes or human disasters like car crashes, interdimensional awareness, astral (out-of-body) travel, channeling (serving as a conduit for a person not present to speak through), shared consciousness (with a Star Visitor guide), operating in close mental connection with their Star Visitor guides, and physically summoning and connecting with one's Star-Visitor and other guardians.'

Rainbow children

 According to http://www.starchildren.info/rainbow.html,  "The rainbow children are the third generation of special children that have come to help humanity evolve. Different from the Indigo and Crystal children, Rainbow children have a few more interesting characteristics. The Rainbow children are generally born in the year 2000 and above. In some cases, there might also be a few scouts that came to earth before 2000. The few Rainbow children that are here today are born from early Crystal scouts that were born in the 1980’s." 
   Furthermore, "As many people might have experienced it, the Rainbow children bring joy and harmony to their families. Unlike the Indigo and Crystal children, the Rainbow child is born to smile, which is accompanied by their huge hearts that are full of forgiveness.
The Rainbow child generally recovers from the state of negative emotion quickly. This is also an important key that they hold, emotional mastery. Rainbow children are psychic and have the ability to read people’s feelings. This gift is usually revealed, as they grow older.
Rainbow Children are psychic. Beyond this and perhaps more so, they have strong wills and strong personalities. Their gifts do not stop there. They are known to be natural healers and instant manifesters. It is said that whatever they need or desire they can instantly manifest.
As would be expected, they have a connection to color. In fact they resonate with the colors around them. They are drawn to color, colorful surroundings and brightly colored clothes. Their energy is expressed in other ways too, as they are high-energy children. Their enthusiasm is demonstrated in their creativity. The Rainbow children are thought to be the builders of the New World, using Divine will."

Indigo children

According to http://www.angeltherapy.com/article1.php, Indigo children  "...share some characteristics with the Crystal Children. Both generations are highly sensitive and psychic, and have important life purposes. The main difference is their temperament. Indigos have a warrior spirit, because their collective purpose is to mash down old systems that no longer serve us. They are here to quash government, educational and legal systems that lack integrity. To accomplish this end, they need tempers and fiery determination." Furthermore, Indigo children refers to such children of approximate "...ages 7 through 25".

Discussion

Indigo children are children who are said to possess extraordinary supernatural powers. In order to identify such children, questionnaires or quizes about the personality of the child are normally answered. These diagnostic questionnaires work through cold reading, because they comprise of vague, general statements which could equally apply to anyone - and so the attributes which diagnose the children as being "starseeds" may be mere attributes that most children have an are not linked in any way or are uniquely significant for children that are so-called "starseeds": "indigo" children and adults, "rainbow children" or"crystal children". Interestingly, the attributes that may make indigo children and the like seem unorthodox as compared to 'normal' children are attributes which autistic children may tend to show - more that children without autism. For example, the idea that the children "think differently", or that they have an extremely good imagination, or that they daydream a lot or mix reality with their inner world, and similar attributes. Of course, the person trying to determine whether their child is an Indigo or not may be biased and so they may wrongly believe that their child fits the criteria of Indigos more than they actually do. 
     If autistic children are diagnosed by spiritual friends or their parents as being Indigos, it may be as a consequence as a psychological need for the parents to believe that their child is special and that their autism is not a problem, but rather that the condition acts in their favour in some way. After all, it is hard for a parent to accept the diagnosis of their child as having autism, so maybe if the parent consequently discovers that actually their child was "wrongly diagnosed" as having autism - and in fact, they are NOT autistic, but are merely an Indigo child - then it is obviously a way to deal psychologically with their child having autism. 
     However, if a young person - an adult - believes that they are an Indigo, or they adopt some other label, it will give them a psychological sense of self-importance: they are an Indigo; they have a job to do: a spiritual mission to fulfil. It makes them feel more important than they actually are. 
    Indigo children, for example, are believed by advocates of the concept, to be more "psychic" than the ordinary child. That they possess extraordinary psychic ability. This would mean that their psychic abilities should in theory confound scientists in the laboratory, who are testing for psychic abilities. So theoretically, they should be tested against a "normal" child, testing their psychic ability. But psychic ability has not really been found scientifically - although there were consistent results involving psi hitting and psi missing, in which the participant guessed correctly and guessed wrongly higher and lower than chance respectively, it is purely suggestive of psi and psi ability (aka psychic ability). Also, it is difficult to test children in experiments as they may not necessarily understand or want to take part in any experiment.
    Since it is believed by some spiritualists that children are more psychic than adults, it would suggest that the Indigo child is MORE psychic than the psychic child.
  

References

Friday, 5 December 2014

Kinesiology

Introduction

Kinesiology is sometimes referred to as "muscle-testing". However, although kinesiology does primarily use muscle testing, that is not just what kinesiology is about.

Kinesiology


There are different branches of kinesiology. A particular type of kinesiology is called 'systematic kinesiology'. Another kind is 'clinical kinesiology'. The latter is a more simplified version to the former. 
Systematic kinesiology

Courses
Systematic kinesiology courses can be very expensive. A practitioner course, run by the Academy of Systematic Kinesiology (ASK), which is done in London, UK, costs £10,000. If a person wishes to be systematic kinesiologist as a career, they need to be motivated to do such a course - including giving in the required homework. 

What is it?

In systematic kinesiology, a variety of muscles are "tested". The one that is used as a 'Strong Indicator Muscle' (or SIM for short) is the pectoralis major sternal muscle. There are believed to be multiple "circuits" associated with different muscles. Different muscles are links with a particular organ and muscle. Specific muscles require different "corrections". These "corrections" include the massage or rubbing of acupuncture points - referred to as "neuro-lymphatic points" (which, when rubbed, are supposed to improve the lymphatic system) and "neuro-vascular points" (when are usually held lightly and are supposed to improve the energy flow along the particular meridian. Normally these are centred on some place on the head).

Muscle-testing

Muscle-testing involves the kinesiologist applying a light pressure on a particular area of the muscle. The area the pressure is applied depends on the muscle, as what is being tested is the strength of the muscle as different muscles move or function in different directions. According to Kinesiology for Balanced Health - by Brian H Butler, p.134, the pectoralis major sternal is tested with "...the subject lying down. The arm is extended at 90 degrees to the body and to the shoulders with the elbow straight, the palm is turned outwards, pressure is against the wrist above the joint to push the arm back, and 45 degrees away from the body." If the muscle tests weak, it is interpreted to meaning that there is some blockage in the muscle's corresponding meridian circuit. Various measures may be used - for example, rubbing the neuro-lymphatic points and the neuro-vascular points, as well as "tracing" the meridian. Nutrition may also be seen to - for example, a milk thistle supplement may be muscle tested using this muscle, and if the muscle strengthens with this supplement, and is weak without the supplement being tested, then it means that the client with the weak pectoralis major sternal muscle should take the supplement in order to strengthen their muscle. 
    Bach flower remedies may also be tested using a SIM should it be found through further muscle-testing that the person needs to deal with their emotions. 

Muscles & meridians

According to Reflexology, by Joelle Peeters, p.19, meridians "...are energy pathways, along which flows the vital life force which is sometimes called qi." These meridians "are duplicated on each side of the body, with two central meridians (known as the 'governing' and 'conception' meridians) running down the front and back of the body along its central or median line." And Kinesiology, a type of alternative medicine, uses the concept of meridians in its practice. It involves testing the muscles by moving them in their natural range of motion. If the muscle is 'weak' due to an energy blockage, it will test weak by refusing to move. The kinesiologist would test the muscle by pressing on an area with a light two-finger pressure which the client must resist if they can by responding back to this. For example, with the supraspinatus muscle (which can be used as a 'strong indicator muscle'), the kinesiologist will test the supraspinatus by applying the light pressure at the client's wrist whilst they are lying down, seated or standing. The muscle is tested in its normal, 180-degree movement. If it resists the pressure, it is 'healthy' but if it doesn't, then it indicates an energy blockage. In Systematic Kinesiology, should a muscle show to be weak in this way, the relevant, associated meridian is physically traced just above the body, associated acupuncture points are held - 'neuro-vascular' points they are called - and other associated acupuncture points are physically rubbed - 'neuro-lymphatics' they are called." See also: Meridians

Meridian                             Muscle

Bladder                              Sacrospinalis
Brain                                  Supraspinatus
Circulation-sex                    Gluteus medius, piriformis
Gall bladder                        Anterior deltoid
Governing                           Teres major
Heart meridian                   Subscapularis  
Kidney                               Psoas, upper trapedius
Large intestine                    Fascia lata, hamstrings,
Liver                                 Pectoralis major sternal
Lung                                  Deltoid, diaphragm
Small intestine meridian      Abdominals, quadriceps  
Spleen                               Latissimus dorsii
Stomach                           Levator scapulae, neck muscles, pectoralis major clavicular                      
Triple warmer                    Sartorius, teres minor

Explanations

A sceptical explanation for kinesiology and muscle testing is the ideomotor effect. In other words, the muscle testing weak or strong may be more down to increased or decreased effort on behalf of the client. Or it may be due to increased or decreased pressure applied by the kinesiologist - if the kinesiologist presses harder when the muscle may be a bit weak (during a bit of laziness, for example) the muscle will be more suceptible to their pressure as it is not behaving as strongly as if it was not being a bit lazy. And vice versa. 
An explanation for the "improvement" in the muscle, or for its strength or weakness is classical conditioning. Another explanation is that it is cognitive dissonance and misperception, because the muscle testing results may be perceived in particualr way as evidence to support a belief in kinesiology or bodily energy systems (meridians, acupuncture points, etc.). For example, a person may have a weak subscapularis, so the heart meridian is traced, as well as the acupuncture points being held or massaged, and nutrition checked through muscle testing. However, it had tested weak due to improper muscle testing by the kinesiologist and after the corrections have been made the muscle tests stronger, but not due to the corrections, but because the practitioner's inadvertantly testing their subject differently to how they did before when muscle tested weak - they are testing more properly after the corrections than before, and they may not be aware of this. This is not due to the corrections, but more due to inconsistant muscle testing techniques on behalf of the practitioner; it is also a mere example for illustration. Anyway, in this scenario, through cognitive dissonance the practitioner believes that the muscle tests stronger due to the corrections, but in actual fact it is testing stronger due to their better muscle-testing. This is an example of classical conditioning.
 

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Classical conditioning

Introduction

Answer "Yes" or "No" the following questions - get a piece of paper to write your answers down if you need to.
 
Question                                                                                                       Yes        /       No

1.  Have you ever had tingling or goose bumps on your neck; or 
felt hot spots or cold spots all of which you took to mean that 
there was a spirit present in the room?


2   2.  Have you ever repeatedly come across butterflies or white feathers shortly 
     after the death of a loved-one, which you interpreted as meaning that they are 
    safe and being looked after by angels? 
   

3.    3. Have you ever felt warmth in your body whilst meditating with a crystal, 
   which you attributed to its “energies”? 
   


4 4. Have you ever felt relaxed or better after a Reiki treatment, which you 
   thought was due to the Reiki energy (not meditation/relaxation)? 
  

5.5. Have you ever felt warm tingling during an “energy sensing” session as someone   
   moved their hands physically above your body (without you looking), which
    you thought was due to the impact it had on your aura?
   
   6. Have you ever seen indigo-coloured orbs, and some rose-pinkorbs with your eyes 
  open, which you associated with Archangels? You associate Archangel Michael with the
   colour of indigo, so therefore interpret the indigo orbs as being a sign that he is present and 
  you associate Archangel Chamuel with the colour of pink/rose-pink, so you believe that the
   rose-pink orbs mean that Archangel Chamuel is present?
   
   7. Have you ever heard a voice in your head which you interpreted as being the voice of a 
   spirit?
  
   8. Have you ever felt a cool breeze or warmth enter your body which you associated as being
   your spirit guide being close to you?
  
   9. Have you ever done table-tipping in which you thought that the table's tipping or tilting had 
   been due to spirits being present, who harnessed the energy of you and the rest of the group to
   physically move the table?
  
   10. Have you ever heard a voice in your head that was talking intelligently to you, whilst you 
   had been trying to establish psychic communication with a dog, and you consequently believed
   that the voice had come from the dog, so therefore you believed that psychic communication
   with the dog had happened?


  
If you answered "Yes" to any or all of these statements, then you had inadvertently succumbed to classical conditioning during these such experiences. 

 So what is classical conditioning?

Hopefully, you answered all 10 questions from the above questionnaire. So what have they got to do with classical conditioning? Now, a few of these questions will be looked at. In the post, Psychology, a brief, but clear, definition of classical conditioning as given. Here it is: "Something (e.g. relaxation), which was caused by something else (e.g. meditation) is associated with having been caused by another factor (e.g. crystals) that was present, when in fact the effect (relaxation) was caused by something else (meditation) and not by another factor that happened to be present (crystals)." This is how things such as crystal healing work. It's really down to misperception. 

Analysis

Spiritual presence

With channelling, seances, haunted houses and spirits in general, there are some key physical sensations that are typically associated with the presence of spiritual entities. Question one of the questionnaire asks, "Have you ever had tingling or goose bumps on your neck; or felt hot spots or cold spots all of which you took to mean that there was a spirit present in the room?" Typical sensations thought to be as a consequence of a spirit being present are:
  • physical tingling 
  • goose bumps
  • hot spots
  • cold spots
But what if all these are due to other factors? For example, physical tingling, goose bumps and hot or cold spots are due to the bodily circulation. Furthermore, selective memory, selective attention, cognitive dissonance and belief also play a part in a person perceiving these physical sensations with the presence of a spirit (we won't go there, but check out Psychology for more information).
  In other words, the person misperceived these four physical sensations as having been caused by a spirit, when they may have been due to something completely different - the person's own circulatory system. This is an example of classical conditioning.

 Angels & signs


    Some people believe in angels. They also believe that when they repeatedly come across white feathers, it is a sign from the angels from the angelic realms that their loved-ones are safe and that they are being cared for in the spirit world by angelic beings. Similarly, some people believe that when they come across butterflies repeatedly shortly after their loved one passed away, it is a sign from that deceased person - that they are keeping an eye on those they left behind on the earth plane. Question 2 asks, " Have you ever repeatedly come across butterflies or white feathers shortly after the death of a loved-one, which you interpreted as meaning that they are safe and being looked after by angels?" 
   Of course, these events may have been down to other things. They may have been a coincidence. Or may be due to selective memory - perhaps the experiences of coming across the feathers were selectively remembered over an immense length of time, but these, like a book, were squashed together in their memory, and consequently this accumulation of such events seems more incredible or amazing than they actually were. More mundane things that occurred that were perceived to be unrelated were forgotten. Furthermore, the remembered events were seen as evidence for their beliefs, and so cognitive dissonance was involved. Reconstructive memory may also have played a part and be responsible for any exaggeration of the account. 
    
                                                                    Crystal energies

     Do crystal energies have any effect on our bodies? A number of people believe it to be so. Question 3 asks, "Have you ever felt warmth in your body whilst meditating with a crystal, which you attributed to its “energies”?" Any person who believes thatb a given crystal has a particular effect or impact on their physical body is succumbing to classical conditioning. They may just be deluding themselves. They do not perceive that warmth in their body whilst holding a crystal in meditation is actually due to their circulation (or some other mundane cause) and instead they beleive that the crystal caused the particular feeling in their body - the warmth. They may selectively forget a great deal of time before they felt the warmth, and their mind interprets the energies of the crystal as being the reason why they felt the warmth, regardless of the possibility that they may not have felt it initially, or that maybe they had felt warm prior to holding and/or meditating with the crystal. 

      Reiki

    A similar point - and question - is raised regarding the effect or impact a Reiki treatment has on a person during or after a session. Question 3 asks, "Have you ever felt relaxed or better after a Reiki treatment, which you thought was due to the Reiki energy (not meditation/relaxation)?" A Reiki healing is relaxing. But so is meditation. A person during a Reiki treatment enters a meditative - or meditative-like - state, during which they feel wonderfully relaxed. They may access memories that were previously hidden, from the depths of the subconscious mind which they believe to have been past life memories (again, we won't go into that!). However, once the treatment is finished, they feel extremely relaxed and believe that this feeling was as a result of the Reiki. Not necessarily - as already said, they entered a meditative state, so this relaxed feeling may have been caused by this meditation, not the Reiki at all. Furthermore, during this state they access "Past Life memories", which they believe was a consequence of the Reiki healing. Not so necessarily - again, it may have been due to being in meditation and not due to the Reiki at all. Again, it's another example of classical conditioning being at play.
 


 

 

   

Monday, 24 November 2014

Selective Attention

Introduction


Selective attention is when a person only sees parts of something, but does not necessarily notice the other details of the same thing. It is, according to http://www.thefreedictionary.com/selective+attention "the process by which a person can selectively pick out one message from a mixture of messages occurring simultaneously." Watch the video below by Daniel Simons.  

Did you spot the gorilla? The Monkey Buisness Illusion



Applications of 'selective attention'


So if we do not see the whole picture, but merely certain aspects of it, as was demonstrated in Simons's video above, how can this knowledge be applied to life the paranormal? Logically, selective attention would work in conjunction with cognitive dissonance - this would mean that we only see what we want to see and therefore we do NOT notice the other details because we focus our attention on a part of it and as a result we miss the other points or details that we didn't want to see. In other words, we see the bits that we want to see (which are in accord with our belief, e.g.) and we miss the bits that we didn't (the details that were not in accord with our belief, basically). 
   Clearly, this can work in the mediumship circle/demonstration context. If a person. for instance, believed that a medium was giving highly accurate information that was all correct during a one-to-one reading, they may selectively focus their attention more on the bits that confirm this belief and not on the bits (the statements) that did not confirm this belief. Because the person selectively focussed on the bits that confirmed their belief, these particular statements will be remembered and the statements that were incorrect are forgotten because the person did not notice them. This, of course, leads to their memories being selective - selective memory.
  (To be continued...)

Saturday, 22 November 2014

Past Lives & Future Lives


Introduction
Some people believe in reincarnation. That is, that after the end of a lifetime, we get born into another lifetime. In between, according to Life Between Lives by Michael Newton, there is a stage where, after a person has died and exited their previous lifetime, they enter another world where they meet their soul group (deceased family members and friends) and spirit guides. This world is what mediums and spiritualists, who believe in its existenence, term the spirit world. Here, Past Life Regression and Future Life Progression will be discussed.

Past Life Regression
Past life regression (P.L.R.) is the practice of regressing someone to experience or access their past lives. It can be helpful for people psychologically and spiritually, although whether the memories that are said to be of or from past lives are actually from past lives is debatable.
   Consider the following:

Q1. Even if PL memories were from actual past lives, they wouldn't be entirely accurate due to selective memory and reconstructive memory. So with this knowledge in mind, how accurate would memories from Past Lives actually be?

Q2. Furthermore, the memories wouldn't necessarily be entirely correct, because of cognitive dissonance - the person in the past life whose memories they are would only be seeing things and significant events solely from their own perspective which may result in their rememembering particular details that are in accord with their belief that a particular outcome had happened at a fault of another person's during a significant event that had had a major impact on that life. This would mean that they only remembered details that are in accord with that belief or viewpoint and forget those that were not.  
Q3. If, in this current lifetime, an individual had had an extremely traumatic experience earlier in life - probably in early childhood - but they had caused themselves to consciously forget about the experience, the traumatic memories may end up burying themselves in their subconscious mind and, during a PLR session, these memories may be discovered, but, perhaps due to transliminality, these memories present themselves as memories from a past life. However, because of their traumatic nature, transliminality works in this in that it allows their valuable information to be a accessed by the conscious mind in a safer form (as mere 'past life memories') which will help the individual to come to terms with their content. In other words, if the traumatic memories that had been hidden deep in the subconscious were presented as 'past life memories', it would mean that the individual does not necessarily need to know they were from this lifetime, but can work, in a more dissociated state, to deal with these psychological problems as if they were lived by their soul but in a different lifetime as a different person. Alternatively, the traumatic memories may be misperceived by the person being regressed as being memories from a past life. 
Case studies
Details about past lives vary. Past life experiences vary. Some people believe they were famous people - such as Anne Boleyn or Cleopatra or some historical monarch - whilst others had seemingly mundane lives where they had lived in a rainforest. Details from past lives are not usually very specific and are often rather vague. For example, in Figure 1, Person A says they had had a lifetime in a rainforest. Person A did not get a lot of detail about it, although they had an video-memory where they were young tribal children jumping into a rainforest river. But was this a real past life memory, or was it fantasy? If it was a past life memory, in what rainforest did it take place? When did the lifetime take place - could it have been a lifetime where they had been living in a rainforest which had, in more recent times, been chopped down - e.g. a rainforest in the United Kingdom? Or did it even take place in a rainforest on Earth? Could it have occurred in a parallel universe, or another planet that was Earth?
Did Person A's PL take place in the Amazon?

Person A may believe that the rainforest was the Amazon rainforest, but just because they believe this doesn't mean that it is true. They did not come up with a lot of details, so consequently there isn't actually any evidence for whether it took place in the Amazon rainforest. It could have taken place in some other rainforest other than the Amazon.


Cognitive dissonance
Some people think that they share characteristics with the people who they believe they had been in a past life. For example, Anne Boleyn liked to play cards and dance when she was younger. A person who believes that they were Anne Boleyn may be aware of this and "remember" that when they were young, they, too, liked to play cards and to dance. This serves to strengthen their belief that they had been Anne Boleyn in a past life. Of course, they would have more differences than similarities to Anne Boleyn, but because of cognitive dissonance, they only recall these two "similarities". Of course, this "memory" may not be true - they may not have actually liked to play cards and to dance when they were younger. This may have been made up by their mind. They may have hated playing cards or dancing, but due to reconstructive memory, this memory is altered, in order to confirm their belief. So they remember liking playing cards and dancing when in fact hey actually didn't. A possible antedote to this scenario is to ask one's elders - parents etc. - whether they remembered if they had had a liking for cards and dancing when they were young. Of course, it is possible that the person did have a liking for cards and dancing, but their parents can't remember.       
Similarly, if a person believed that they had been a monarch (e.g. Henry VIII) in a past life, this may explain to them why, in their opinion, they behave rather like they had been a monarch in a previous lifetime (bossing people around, letting people clean up after themselves, etc.).

Future Life Progression
Future Life Progression (FLP) is a technique for accessing one's future lifetime. Originally discovered by a psychic called Anne Jirsch, it can be used to help a person spiritually with their current lifetime. According to her book, The Future Is Yours, she stumbled across it during a past life regression of her and two friends - Steve and Dave, conducted by a student of hers called Dan, p.11: "After taking us through the relaxation techniques, Dan told us, 'Feel yourself floating back through time. Float all the way back to a previous life, one where you have all met before.' All three of us sat in silence, our eyes closed. Eventually Dan asked, 'Steve, what are you aware of?'" Then '"This is odd,' he replied, 'I don't know what is going on. All I can see are two skyscrapers next to each other. There is smoke coming out of them.' He paused. 'I don't know what all of this means - I haven't gone back to a past life at all. Maybe my mind isn't right at the moment. I just can't see anything other than these skyscrapers.' Dan said, 'Tell me what else you see.' Steve continued. 'There's smoke coming out of the skyscrapers. I don't know where this is. There are people on the ground running, there is lots of dust. A helicopter is circling the building.' He added, 'It is not army, nor police. It says CNN. This is America.' Dave then reported, 'I'm not seeing a past life either. but I'm not seeing what Steve is seeing. All I can see is a bay, but I don't recognise it. This sounds mad, but it's as if the skyline has changed. How can a skyline change?'" Then Anne Jirsch spoke up next. "'I'm somewhere completely different from you guys. All I can see is the Middle East and oil.' That was all, we saw no more and had no idea what any of it meant. At the time we thought we had got our wires crossed; it had just been a bad session. We gave up, deflated, believing we had been unsuccessful. ... Two weeks later I received a call from Dave at my office. 'Have you heard?' 'Heard what?' I replied, confused. 'It's happening, everything we saw in the session is happening. Steve and I are at work transfixed by the television, watching everything we saw happen.' I logged onto the web and went to Sky News. My blood ran cold as I saw the very scenes Steve and Dave had described. Suddenly, we understood what the session  had been about and why I had seen the Middle East. Our three visions had seemed unconnected but now we knew better: we jumped forward in time." Lo and behold, Future Life Progression was born.

To be continued...

 

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