Reincarnation

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As I may have some of the real regeneration evidence not to scam, but discarded because of some Misunde Where I live in Vietnam has a case of Reincarnation.
 A 3-year-old kid is confirmed to be a dead driver, the evidence is perfect nearly so. But there was a problem the reporter believed that the rebirth brought in experience and knowledge far beyond normal should have used a mathematical article of middle school students For testing. Of course the boy will not do the test, and that the whole case is swept out because the reporter said this is a scam done and dine Mystery solved, all hail Materialism. 
I felt quite disappointed on how to do this, the article was removed but I wanted to talk a bit about it. At the discretion of everyone, according to me, the whole test is nonsense, whether it's a rebirth, it's still the brain that is still not fully developed, not to mention he's a driver, to me currently studying The high school, is not sure how to do a middle school math because I do not remember how(or just because i'm dumb :<
 But the problem is that I believe there are many more regenerative evidence than we have, but some reasonable people have thrown it off easily by few stupid questions. 
Ps: sorry Since I have no link to post, the article appears to have been deleted, but i have some meme Smile [Image: JuLadDxl.jpg]
I'm not a detractor, I am persuaded we have multiple lives.  A very small few of us appear to remember some parts of some of them or have talents that appear unattributable to any other explanation. 

But there are other possibilities and other explanations and an apparent past-life-recall may not be all it appears.   Wink
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  • Brian
One aspect which does not seem to be explainable by other means is trauma. Events which cause extreme stress such as for example during war, leave the person traumatised, even during a single lifetime such trauma can remain prominent for decades, or throughout an entire lifetime.

It seems reasonable that such events occurring just before or at the time of death would have some impact, and often where there is no corresponding event which could have caused such trauma in the current lifetime, it is reasonable to consider a cause in a past life, regardless of whether or not there are conscious memories of any kind. Personally I can think of no other explanation for such damage.
(This post was last modified: 2019-02-21, 12:56 PM by Typoz.)
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(2019-02-21, 12:30 PM)Typoz Wrote: One aspect which does not seem to be explainable by other means is trauma. Events which cause extreme stress such as for example during war, leave the person traumatised, even during a single lifetime such trauma can remain prominent for decades, or throughout an entire lifetime.

It seems reasonable that such events occurring just before or at the time of death would have some impact, and often where there is no corresponding event which could have caused such trauma in the current lifetime, it is reasonable to consider a cause in a past life, regardless of whether or not there are conscious memories of any kind. Personally I can think of no other explanation for such damage.

agreed 

It's certainly been reported that long-standing, sometimes crippling psychological issues have been resolved or helped by past-life-regression therapy.  Those are the most persuasive that a particular past life's events are/were impacting the current one.
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  • Typoz
(2019-02-21, 01:56 PM)leadville Wrote: agreed 

It's certainly been reported that long-standing, sometimes crippling psychological issues have been resolved or helped by past-life-regression therapy.  Those are the most persuasive that a particular past life's events are/were impacting the current one.

We have to remember that sometimes something might work, but not for the reasons we think.  PLR therapy may well be a model that in some way helps people face things that are really here and now issues.  Of course this doesn't mean necessarily that it can't be because of genuine past lives but I feel it is somewhat lazy to form certainties so easily without first trying other ideas.
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(2019-02-22, 01:03 PM)Brian Wrote: We have to remember that sometimes something might work, but not for the reasons we think.  PLR therapy may well be a model that in some way helps people face things that are really here and now issues.  Of course this doesn't mean necessarily that it can't be because of genuine past lives but I feel it is somewhat lazy to form certainties so easily without first trying other ideas.

Speaking for myself, the question of past-life issues versus here and now issues is moot, they may be the same thing. More to the point, we can't go back to the past to fix them, so any solutions are of necessity present-day ones.

I don't now whether what I've added clarifies or not. At any rate I didn't consult a therapist, any fixing I may have achieved was self-guided and instinctive, though it did involve prayer at times.

This self-therapy was not dependent on any particular worldview. But coming up with an explanation was a separate task. The difficulty I had in terms of explanation was that I thoroughly felt my way through all of my present life, exploring for causes, but all I found were insignificant incidents, when what I was seeking was something the size of a mountain. Thus the necessity to look further for explanations. It wasn't a direct leap to past-lives as the only available answer, but rather one which in the light of other, additional evidence made it the best fit, even though it seemed wildly implausible to me.
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(2019-02-22, 01:03 PM)Brian Wrote: We have to remember that sometimes something might work, but not for the reasons we think.  PLR therapy may well be a model that in some way helps people face things that are really here and now issues.  Of course this doesn't mean necessarily that it can't be because of genuine past lives but I feel it is somewhat lazy to form certainties so easily without first trying other ideas.

I don't study these issues but the accounts to have most impressed me are those when long-term conditions have not been able to be resolved using conventional techniques but do respond to PLR.  The reasons for eventual successful intervention can never be certain, I agree, but they may be indicative.
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