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Dr. Brian Weiss Uses Past-Life Regression

Dr. Brian Weiss Uses Past-Life Regression for Jodi’s Fear of Dolls

Dr. Brian Weiss Uses Past-Life RegressionIn May 2008, Dr. Oz introduced viewers of The Oprah Show to Dr. Brian Weiss and his study of past life regression. Dr. Weiss uses hypnosis to return his patients to their earliest memories. Then he takes them even further back to what he says are their previous lives. From that point, Dr. Weiss says he and his patients can examine the experiences that seemed to have formed the roots of their current fears and phobias. Dr. Weiss says if you can connect your current fears to a past life, those fears will often disappear.

For as long as she can remember, Jodi says she has been terrified of dolls. One of her earliest memories is having her picture taken with Santa. To her horror, the photographer asked her to pose with a doll for the photo. “I can remember holding this doll and trying to smile,” Jodi says. “I was screaming inside, ‘Please don’t make me hold that doll!’”

Jodi’s fear is so strong that she says she doesn’t even let her daughter own dolls. One day when picking her daughter up from daycare, Jodi arrived to find her little girl holding a baby doll. “My heart went to my stomach and tears welled up in my eyes and I started to shake,” Jodi says. “I thought, ‘There’s my baby, she’s got this doll, and I can’t pick her up.’”

Jodi says even photographs of dolls scare her and nothing she does can rationalize her fear away. “I know that that doll cannot come to life. I know that there’s nothing that doll can do to physically harm me,” she says. “I’m still terrified.”

After Jodi meets Dr. Weiss and explains her fear of dolls to him, he begins their session by hypnotising her and guiding her into her past lives. “Go through the door and the light,” he says. “Join the scene where the experience or the person on the other side of the light is in a past life.”

Jodi says she sees her grandfather, who died almost 20 years ago, welcoming her. She says she’s happy to see him but misses him. Dr. Weiss says Jodi’s grandfather is her spiritual guide.

Then she mumbles the words “died too soon.” Dr. Weiss leads Jodi to the moment when, in a past life, she died. “I see an accident scene … car,” she says.

“Was there anyone else in the car with you?” Dr. Weiss asks. “Who did you leave? Who was in the car?”
“My babies,” Jodi says. “It feels real. And then I’m kind of gone. And then I’m with Papa.”

As she continues examining the scene of her death in a past life, Jodi says she sees the emergency personnel comforting her crying children. Jodi is worried about the babies. “Do they see me dead?” she asks through tears.

To comfort her, Dr. Weiss asks Jodi to look beyond the moment in which she died and to focus on the lives of the survivors of the accident, specifically her babies in the car.

Jodi does and says she sees them as they grow up. “They’re healthy and good kids,” she says.

Dr. Weiss says his session with Jodi was a long and intense one. “It was very emotional, but that’s where the healing often comes from: from the catharsis, from the emotion, from remembering,” he says. “And this was important for her to go through.”

Dr Weiss believes Jodi’s fear of dolls originates from not being able to protect her children in a past life. “This is a fear she would have carried over [to her next life],” he says. According to Dr. Weiss, the dolls Jodi is so fearful of are representative of the children she left behind. “The doll was a metaphor symbol for babies.”

Jodi says the lessons of her past-life regression were put to the test almost immediately when she watched the episode of The Oprah Show that featured an Osmond family reunion. During the show, Marie Osmond presented Oprah with a gift—a one-of-a-kind doll of Oprah as a child.

“My instinct says to me, ‘Flee. Turn it off.’ Because that’s what I would have done in the past,” Jodi says. “[Instead] I immediately thought of the light and I heard my grandfather’s voice say, ‘It’s okay.’

Before, there’s no way I could have watched that show, absolutely no way.”

While one in five Americans say they believe in reincarnation, Dr. Oz wonders if what Dr. Weiss calls past-life regression might be something else. Are the people he treats reliving memories from lives they have lived before?

“When symptoms disappear, that’s usually not from imagination or something like that. It’s usually from the real memory, the experience,” Dr. Weiss says. “Imagination doesn’t cure symptoms.”

As a heart surgeon, Dr. Oz says he has been around many patients who have described to him what their near-death experiences feel like. Often, these experiences feature light, which they can either move toward or away from.

Dr. Oz says he distinctly remembers one of these patients, a Vietnam veteran who needed mechanical support for his heart. Before the surgery, Dr. Oz went to visit this patient. “He said, ‘Doc, I’ve been on battlefields when I should have died. I know when I’m going to die and it’s not tomorrow,’” Dr. Oz says.

During the surgery, Dr. Oz says, there were serious complications. “He bled and bled and bled and for three days I had my arms in his chest. And by some miracle … this gentleman survived and should not have,” Dr. Oz says. “A couple of days later, after he’d come back to his senses and I closed his chest, I asked him what he’d seen because I was so curious about what gave him the fighting power for that long a period. And he said, ‘All I saw was a light and I was in sort of Jell-O and I was moving back and forth and I knew if I lost the light, I’d be gone. But if I could get under it and focus on it, it would pull me up towards it. And that’s what happened when I woke up and recovered from the operation.’”

“I’ve heard similar stories too many times … to write it off,” Dr Oz says.

For those who remain sceptical of the ability to tap into past lives, Dr Weiss points to reported cases of xenoglossy—in which people fluently speak languages they did not know before their regression.

Dr. Weiss says he experienced a case like this with a Chinese surgeon who spoke no English when he met her. The surgeon didn’t suffer from any phobias or other symptoms, but just wanted the experience, he says.

When they began her regression, Dr. Weiss says, they used an interpreter. “So we’re doing this and she’s in 1850 in Northern California having this argument with her husband and she begins to speak in very fluent and colorful English. And the translator doesn’t realize at first what’s happening so he begins translating the whole thing back into Chinese for me. So I have to say, ‘Stop it. I understand the English.’ And then the look on his face—because she couldn’t even say hello 20 minutes before that—she’s ready to faint.”

Dr. Oz says some recollections may be explained by déjá vu. “I have patients that have chronic déjá vu,” he says. “They won’t go see their doctor because they think they’ve been there. It’s a true syndrome. … We know that you can stimulate some kinds of memories.”

When Dr. Oz meets people who seem to have emotional and intellectual connections to places they’ve never visited, he says he starts looking for paranormal explanations. “I think it’s very healthy for us to take a crowbar, which is what we’re doing on this show, and just pry the lid off our belief that everything around us is so rational,” he says. “We are hardwired to deal with very real things in front of us because that kept us alive 100 years ago, 1,000 years ago and last year, but I think we’re able to go past that.”

Recent innovations have allowed researchers to study human DNA strands, but Dr. Oz says we still don’t know what most of our genetic makeup means. “[Roughly] 97 per cent of our DNA is called junk DNA. Believe me, it’s not junk,” he says. “There’s no reason for you to have DNA strands that don’t have any meaning. There is meaning there. We just don’t know it, and some of that may be hereditary memories—the insights into events our species has collected.”

Dr Oz says if you condition an earthworm to respond to stress and then cut it in half, both the part with a brain and the part without a brain continue to react to the same stress. “You begin to think, ‘Is our mind where it is all at?’” he says. “Now I admit, as a heart surgeon I’ve always focused on the heart, but the poets might be right…maybe the spirit is there.”

Since Erin was old enough to remember, she says she’s been paralyzed by a fear of sharp corners and terrified by the idea of someone touching her neck. For the past 30 years, she’s hid her phobias from friends. Now, she’s ready to speak out and get to the root of her fear.

“It controlled my whole life. None of my friends know about it, so I have little rituals that I would do to cover it up,” she says. “Anything that had a sharp object, I had to try to rearrange the situation.”

Erin agrees to meet with Dr. Weiss to try to unlock the mysteries of her phobias. During their first session, Erin taps into the life of a Native American man living in the 1800s. She glimpses the sharp, pointed spear of an attacker.

As the session continues, Dr. Weiss guides her into another past life, which helps explain her fear of having her neck touched. In this past life, Erin says she thinks she was a prostitute who died by strangulation. “I don’t feel very good about myself. That’s why I think I’m a prostitute,” she says. She envisions herself sitting on the edge of a bed, putting on stockings. Then, she sees a man strangling her from behind.

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Dr. Brian Weiss Uses Past-Life Regression for Jodi

♬ nhạc nền – The Oprah Winfrey Show

As Erin comes out of her regression, she begins to confront her fears head-on. “Visualize a sharp corner, and let the fear go because that’s all it is. Look at it in your mind. Look at any corner,” Dr. Weiss says. “You can be cured of this quickly. … You can touch it. It’s safe now.”

For the first time in years, Erin says she’s able to touch her neck and visualize sharp corners without feeling anxious. “I feel so much better,” she says. “I can’t believe that I can look at a corner now and touch my neck…it’s amazing.”

“There’s no more fear,” Dr. Weiss says. “You’re free now.”

When Erin regressed to the life of a Native American man, she says she saw images of him being stabbed near the eye with a sharp object. “When I fell in my death, I smacked my head on a piece of granite, so I don’t like things close to my face or next to my eye,” she says. “When [Dr. Weiss] was talking me through all of this, I saw elevator doors close right after the death, and I asked him what that meant. He said, ‘You’ve closed that chapter in your life.’”

In April 2008, Oprah and Dr. Oz met Amy, a 34-year-old mother, while taping a show about night terrors. As one of the millions of people who suffer from this sleep disorder, Amy revealed that she’s been having the same, reoccurring dream since she was 9 years old. “In my dreams, someone is always coming into my room—from the ceiling, from a door—to kill me, to come after my family,” she says.

Thinking there might be more to Amy’s story, Oprah Show producers suggested that she meet with Dr. Weiss to explore past life regression. At first, Amy was hesitant. “I didn’t want to do it. I was very sceptical. There’s all that world of unknown,” she says. “Plus, I wasn’t sure if I believed in past lives.”

Eventually, Amy had a change of heart and decided to set up a session. After a few moments of relaxation, Dr. Weiss asks her to revisit past lives that might relate to her present fears. Amy says she sees herself as Elizabeth, a confident, royal woman in Medieval times. When she goes forward in Elizabeth’s life, she sees a baby that looks like her son, Wyatt.

Then, when she jumps to the end of Elizabeth’s life, Amy says she sees a sick woman on her deathbed with her son at her side. “He doesn’t seem scared, but he seems sad. Very sad,” she says. “It feels awful that I’m leaving them.”

Dr. Weiss says understanding how Elizabeth died in a previous life will bring great comfort and meaning to her life today. What lessons does she learn from this experience? “I think that I’m scared to die because my kids will miss me, and I will miss them,” she says.

“The fear of losing your children, that comes from that ancient time. It’s not something that’s going to happen. It’s something that already did happen,” Dr. Weiss says. “You can let go of that fear and that anxiety and you can be happier now. You don’t have to be afraid for them.”

Dr. Weiss says Amy’s reoccurring dream reflects a constant, overwhelming fear of losing her children. “I think the dream is someone coming in—because it’s a faceless man—coming in to take her away again. She died in that ancient lifetime, and here he’s coming to take her away again.”

Since her session with Dr. Weiss, Amy says she hasn’t had another night of terror. “I have had actual normal, happy dreams. I’ve never had those. … I feel free of it,” she says. “One thing that Dr. Weiss said to me that I think is what I took from it [is] that it can be part fantasy. You go to this previous life, and you find things that you need healing for in this life.”

Even if you’re sceptical about past life regression, Dr. Oz says there are lessons to be learned from Dr. Weiss’s book, Many Lives, Many Masters.

“These teachings were things that resonate [with] me,” he says. “For example, the concept that you’re put on this planet in part to work out issues of trust and forgiveness and love—these are themes that should not be foreign to anyone hearing this show…even my colleagues.”

Dr. Oz says this therapy may help some people get to the root of their problems, and help ease physical and emotional pain. “I want to be as upfront as I can. It is not about advocating for this. It’s about evaluating it,” he says. “We owe it to ourselves as physicians and [to the] people who trust us … to explore every possible option to make lives better. If we’re going to be closed-minded about that and put the blinders on, then shame on us.

Taken from: http://www.oprah.com/health/does-past-life-regression-work

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