Why You Should Not Do Hypnotic Past Life Regression Therapy
Why You Should Not
Do Hypnotic Past Life Regression Therapy (On Purpose)
Do you believe that there are such things as past lives? Do you
think that you may have lived before? Is it part of your religion, or
completely against it? What I believe is not important in this article, and of
course it is up to you to think whatever you want to think or believe with
regard to the existence of past lives.
I will not do past life regression as a kind of therapy, on
purpose. By this I mean that I will not conduct a past life regression simply
because a potential client requests the therapy. From time to time, I will have
someone call our office wanting to receive Past Life Regression Therapy (PLRT)
for a fear of snakes, a relationship problem or some other issue. When I meet
with them I will ask these potential clients how they know that the problem was
caused by something in a past life. Usually the answer goes like this, “well I
cannot imagine what else could have caused it. I do not remember anything in
this life that could have caused it. So it must have been something that
happened in a past life.”
Proceed with caution if you run into such a situation. Our
client is simply doing the best she can to try and understand what might be
causing her problem. And who can fault her? She is unaware of anything in her
personal history that would indicate where the problem came from, nothing she
can consciously remember anyway. On the other hand, any hypnotherapist who has
experience using hypnotic age regression techniques can tell you that it is
common for the client to uncover material of which she was not consciously
aware, but which is important to the origin of a particular issue or problem.
The National Guild of Hypnotist training covers the concept of
hypermnesia and the process of hypnotic age regression in their certification
training materials. It has been well documented that by merely taking a client
into the state of hypnosis, that an individual can experience an improvement in
the ability to recall events from her past. Furthermore, in the somnambulistic
state an individual can experience a hypnotic age regression, and can relive
past events. This reliving of a past event is called revivification. This
revivification is a “true age regression” and is a re-experiencing of the
event, including all of the associated sensations: touch, taste, sight, smells
and hearing. In an age regression, all (or nearly all) of the information
associated with the event can be uncovered (recalled). Age regression is the
“Royal High Road of Therapy” because it
can quickly uncover the cause of a problem and provide powerful insights
leading to rapid healing of old issues and problems.
When a client attempts to understand or to deal with a problem
without hypnosis, she is using only the conscious mind. Because the conscious
mind tries to come up with a reason for the problem based on incomplete
information, it is likely that the conclusions are often wrong, especially if
the problem has been a difficult, long-standing issue in your client’s life.
This brings us back to the client who thinks that her problem
comes from an event in a past life. Unless this individual has an ability that
most of us seem unable to exhibit (the ability to have knowledge about our past
lives while in the conscious state), then such conclusions are likely flawed.
So, it is important that you as a therapist not be misled by it too.
Few if any hypnotherapists have the ability to look at someone
and know that a particular problem came from a past life. So it would be in
error to engage in PLRT or any kind of therapy based on a guesswork.
Furthermore, it would be inadvisable to suggest a kind of therapy because the
therapist or client may find it enjoyable or interesting to do that kind of
work. Unfortunately, many PLRT sessions are conducted for just such reasons.
In my opinion doing PLRT under those conditions is unethical. I
believe that it is unethical because you must certainly avoid leading your
client when doing hypnotherapy. Hypnosis by definition is a state of heightened
suggestibility, and if you suggest to a client that she regress to a past life
“where this problem began,” you are leading your client, which can result in a
confabulation. A confabulation occurs when the subconscious
mind makes things up, or “fills in the blanks” where information is not
available based on real life experience.
Here is another reason that I suggest that you do not do PLRT
(on purpose). Within the philosophies associated with the different faiths that
include the concept of having lived more than one life, is the concept of
karma. For these people, it is believed that we have a karmic debt that needs
to be repaid. Or, at least that we have something to learn which requires more
than one existence, and that it is for that reason that we enter into life
after life.
>From this point of view, we came into this life because we
have issues that we need to work on. Most of the clients that I work with are
adults over the age of thirty. Logic suggests that if someone came into this
life in order to work on some issue left over from a previous existence, then
the experiences needed to be able to do that work would come up in this life.
The fact that your client has sought out your services to work on a particular
issue indicates that the issue has probably come up. Thus, it makes sense that
you would most likely not need to conduct a hypnotic age regression to a past
life in order to work on this issue.
In the vast majority of the cases that I have seen where my
client wanted PLRT, hypnotic age regression successfully uncovered an Initial
Sensitizing Event (ISE) in this life. (The ISE is the event which is the
genesis of the problem.) A thorough examination of an ISE involves uncovering
compelling evidence that before the event, the problem did not exist. For
example, before the event, the child (client in the regressed state) was a
normal
happy child, and after the event she was sad or frightened, insecure or
whatever the emotion or belief that was associated with the issue.
Now, on the other hand:
I will, and have purposely conducted past life regression
sessions for reasons other than therapeutic ones. For example, if a client
comes in to my office and requests that I conduct a past life regression
session for her because she just wants to have the experience or for spiritual development,
I am happy to do so. These kinds of past life regression sessions can often be
very fruitful and beneficial for my clients, often providing inspiration,
self-understanding, insight and spiritual renewal. The key here is that we
are not conducting therapy based on the assumption that a problem or issue
started in an unknown past life.
I never conduct Past Life Regression Therapy sessions (on
purpose). However, you might be surprised after reading this far to learn that
I also believe that there is a time in which I consider conducting a past life
regression for therapy appropriate. This happens when the past life regression
occurs spontaneously, without any suggestion from the Hypnotherapist that the
client regress to a past life. I have conducted approximately a thousand
hypnotic
age regression sessions, and I have encountered cases where, without suggestion
from me, some of those clients have regressed to a “past life” or had an
experience which can only be described as a past life regression. The
percentage is low, averaging about one to two percent among the hypnotherapists
working at our Center.
During these spontaneously occurring past life regressions, your
client may experience being a different gender or race. It will be obvious that
she is not the same person who came into your office. Interestingly, the event
that she is experiencing in the past life will be associated with the problem
she came into see me for. For example, a client may seek services to overcome a
fear of water, and in the past life regression she may relive an experience of
drowning at sea. (Since this is not an article on how to conduct a past
life regression or how do PLRT, I will not go into the process of how to do
PLRT. That would require a series of articles or a book dedicated to the
topic.)
As a professional Hypnotherapist, you need to be aware that if
you conduct more age regression sessions, it becomes increasingly more likely
that you will encounter a spontaneous past life regression. It does not matter
what your view on the issue is. So, it is the responsibility for each
hypnotherapist to establish in his or her mind, how the situation will be
handled in advance.
If you are trained in doing past life regression work, then when
a spontaneous past life regression occurs, it will be no problem for you.
However, if you are not trained in conducting PLRT, be cautious. Our first
concern for our clients is that we do not harm them in any way. Handling a
spontaneous past life regression unprofessionally could certainly do so. This
is why I recommend that you decide (based on your beliefs and principles)
whether or not you will conduct a PLRT session if one occurs spontaneously.
If you decide that you would like to be able to provide PLRT to
your clients, then seek out appropriate hypnosis training[cdb1] . If you decide
that you will not provide PLRT, then you owe it to your clients to respect
their beliefs and what they may have experienced in the hypnosis session. Find
someone that you can trust and feel good about using as a referral source in
such cases.
I know of a hypnotherapist who informed his client that she was
mentally ill because she spontaneously experienced a past life regression
during her hypnosis session with him. In this case the hypnotherapist was a
psychiatrist in Sweden. In my view, how he handled his patient was unethical
and careless. His patient is a family member of mine. Years later, she related
to me how fearful this made her feel. Because of what he had said to her, she
believed that she was “going crazy.” She was particularly vulnerable to this
psychiatrist’s suggestion of mental illness because of his credentials and
because of the emotional problems that she was experiencing at the time, which
led to her seeing the psychiatrist. The diagnostic manuals that I know of
(i.e., DMS-IV) do not have a criterion for diagnosing
mental illness because of an individual’s belief in past lives, or because such
an experience was produced during hypnosis.
In the event that you have a client experience a spontaneous
past life regression and you have decided that you will not conduct PLRT, I
suggest that you need to emerge your client and inform her that she has had an
experience in which you have had no training, but you know someone that is
trained in that area and you can refer her to that therapist if she wishes.
So, I do not conduct PLRT sessions on purpose, but I do them
from time to time. I conduct PLRT when a past life experience spontaneously
occurs during the course of hypnotic age regression therapy. Such spontaneously
occurring past life regressions are rare in my experience. However, as you
continue to practice the “Royal High Road of Therapies” you increase the
probability that eventually one will occur during one of your age regression
sessions. Be prepared so that you can make use of it if you wish to conduct
PLRT, and have a referral source at hand if you do not intend to offer this
service. This way you can always be respectful of your client’s beliefs and
experiences.
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