Past Life Regression May Aid in Healing Generational Trauma

Past life regression is a great tool for healing generational trauma

Scientist have been spending numerous decades answering the question whether trauma is passed down from one generation to the next. Recent research suggests that the experiences of our ancestors can indeed shape our own lives and even impact our DNA. In this view, trauma is not just an individual challenge but may be connected to our past lives and the lives of our ancestors.

According to research, trauma may change the genes, which in turn may lead to  physical and mental health issues that are passed from one generation to another. The specific mechanisms behind this process are still being explored, yet these findings change the way we understand and treat trauma. 

According to epigenetics, trauma can modify your DNA that effect gene expression without altering the underlying DNA sequence.

Traumatic experience can also alter hormonal and neural pathways that are related to stress regulation and pass this modification to the next generations.

Parenting styles are also effected, as those parents that experienced trauma in their childhood tend to create insecure attachment styles and affect their children in a negative way.

These findings suggest that generational trauma is not limited to specific events or groups of people. It can be observed in entire communities impacted by slavery, natural disasters, war, oppression, and other horrific events. The effects of trauma can manifest in various ways, such as:

  1. Hypervigilance
  2. Pessimism
  3. Addiction
  4. Mistrust
  5. Disconnect
  6. Anxiety
  7. Depression
  8. Insomnia
  9. Nightmares
  10. Panic Attacks
  11. A  fight/ flight/ freeze response
  12. Insecurity
  13. Aggression
  14. Insecure attachment styles in relationships
  15. Immune diseases

And so on….

The good thing is that generational trauma does not have to be your destiny. Past life regression is one of the most powerful tools to help you address the root cause of your trauma and your dis-ease and mental challenges.

Past life regression session can help you travel back to several generations back (research suggestions that the effects of trauma can trace fourteen generations back!)

In this exploration you can get to the root of the inherited pain, either in your childhood or past lives or even the lives of your relatives. My approach is gentle and organic. I do not guide anyone into a re-traumatization experience and connect my clients to their Super-conscious mind that guides the session, and  either allows you dive into the traumatic story, or clear it without entering it. During these “journeys” my clients discover and re-write their soul’s contracts, ancestral agreements and vows and change destructive patterns into productive and harmonious relationships.

Schedule your appointment here.

Resources:

Abraham, N. and Torok, M.(1994). “Secrets and Posterity: The theory of the Transgenerational Phantom “. Pp. 165-169. In: The Shell and the Kernel. The University of Chicago Press.

Ajduković, D. & Čorkalo, D. (2004). “Trust and betrayal in war. In: E. Stover and H. Weinstein (Eds.): My neighbor, my enemy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 287-302.

Ajduković, D. & Čorkalo, D. (2008). Caught between the ethnic sides: Children growing up in a divided postwar community. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 32(4), 337-347.

Albeck, H.J. (1993). “Intergenerational consequences of trauma: Reframing traps in treatment theory: A second generation perspective. In M.O. Williams & J.F. Sommer (Eds.) Handbook of Post-Traumatic Therapy. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 106-125.

Apprey, M. (2003). “Repairing History:Reworking Transgenerational Trauma”. (Pp.3-27). in: Moss, D. (ed.) Hating in the First Person Plural. Other Press. Auerhahn, N. C., & Laud, D. (1998).

Danieli, Y. (Ed.) (1998). International handbook of multigenerational legacies of trauma. New York: Plenum.

Danieli, Y. (2007). Assessing trauma across cultures from a multigenerational perspective. In J. P. Wilson & Dekel, R., & Goldblatt, H. (2008).