Sometimes our dreams can tell us about our past life experiences. They can give us insight into why we are the way we are today. Everything inside us is a memory and can be touched upon by expressions of ourselves in daily life. Or by someone activating a part in us we did not know was hiding out inside of us.
I have found in my experience we are not who we think we are. When someone asks, "who are you", you may answer with oh , "I'm Bill and I'm in Marketing."
Or my name is Anne, I work in Hospice. You are more than just these personalities.
However, dig a little deeper and you will find more to this physicality then just Bill in Marketing. Look a little deeper into your life. Do a time line of yourself from before you came into this life to whatever age you are now and recall from memory and write down all the accomplishments in your life. All the setbacks in your life. All the things you might be ashamed of you did. Then write down all the good you've done in your life.
Then take an inventory of your life. Feel it's expression, know that who you were is not who you are now. Right?
How do I know about this process you might ask. "Well it is from working on myself that I had the experiences that I speak about.
I came so close to death three times in my life and I know deep down I had to pull from another place (dimension) to survive.
The experience was like a slow motion movie going on in front of my very eyes, everything slowed down, even the impact of the crash was slowed down. And no feeling , just shock and dismay, light headed numb and a sensation of floating out of the body, and time is standing still.
My body was hurt but I could not feel it. Some kind of mechanism turned on in my brain and somehow shut down the pain which sent some kind of super morphing compound to the body to shield my body from feeling the pain, anxiety, or emotion. I'm sure there is some scientific explanation for all of this. I am just putting it in layman terms so everyone can get an idea of what it was like to actually be near death.
Several people have gleaned on existence of this dimension which we may or may not know we have felt before. It feels like we are in some dream for the time it is happening. Then reality sets in later once this morphing compound wears off. The we are left to deal with the trauma we just experienced. Some people stuff these trauma and later on in their lives have a somatic release when a trigger happens from a memory or a conversation about a similar subject. Very interesting topic.
I have found in my experience we are not who we think we are. When someone asks, "who are you", you may answer with oh , "I'm Bill and I'm in Marketing."
Or my name is Anne, I work in Hospice. You are more than just these personalities.
However, dig a little deeper and you will find more to this physicality then just Bill in Marketing. Look a little deeper into your life. Do a time line of yourself from before you came into this life to whatever age you are now and recall from memory and write down all the accomplishments in your life. All the setbacks in your life. All the things you might be ashamed of you did. Then write down all the good you've done in your life.
Then take an inventory of your life. Feel it's expression, know that who you were is not who you are now. Right?
How do I know about this process you might ask. "Well it is from working on myself that I had the experiences that I speak about.
I came so close to death three times in my life and I know deep down I had to pull from another place (dimension) to survive.
The experience was like a slow motion movie going on in front of my very eyes, everything slowed down, even the impact of the crash was slowed down. And no feeling , just shock and dismay, light headed numb and a sensation of floating out of the body, and time is standing still.
My body was hurt but I could not feel it. Some kind of mechanism turned on in my brain and somehow shut down the pain which sent some kind of super morphing compound to the body to shield my body from feeling the pain, anxiety, or emotion. I'm sure there is some scientific explanation for all of this. I am just putting it in layman terms so everyone can get an idea of what it was like to actually be near death.
Several people have gleaned on existence of this dimension which we may or may not know we have felt before. It feels like we are in some dream for the time it is happening. Then reality sets in later once this morphing compound wears off. The we are left to deal with the trauma we just experienced. Some people stuff these trauma and later on in their lives have a somatic release when a trigger happens from a memory or a conversation about a similar subject. Very interesting topic.