Regression View on Connection
About this lesson

As you move along this path, you’ll sometimes hear labels like young soul and old soul. They’re just labels — shorthand for stages of awareness, not hierarchies of worth.
In so-called “earth years,” even a young soul would be ancient by our standards — tens of thousands of years old. I’ve been told more than once that I’m a “young soul designed for the future.” The word designed wasn’t mine, but I understand what was meant.
Of course, time isn’t linear in the way we casually imagine it. We’ll go deeper into that soon.
For now, consider something simple: what is an “earth year”?
It’s merely the time it takes our planet to complete one orbit around the sun. That’s it. A local measurement. A cosmic lap counter.
Across the universe, there are planetary systems where an orbit might take a matter of hours — and others where it could take tens of thousands of our years. If life exists in those systems — whether visible to us or not — its rhythms, aging processes, and perception of time would be radically different.
Even here on Earth, our sense of time is relative to movement.
NASA research has shown that astronauts experience measurable physiological shifts in microgravity. Bone density decreases. Muscles atrophy unless actively maintained. The body adapts quickly when removed from Earth’s gravitational environment. Step outside the conditions you’re used to, and biology recalibrates.
And here’s something even more disorienting:
The Earth isn’t sitting still.
It spins.
It orbits the sun.
The sun orbits the galactic center.
The galaxy moves within an expanding universe.
When you combine those motions, our planet is traveling through space at extraordinary speeds — well over a million miles per hour.
You’re reading this at your desk. You feel stationary.
Yet you are hurtling through space faster than any theme park ride ever built.
Stillness, it turns out, is a perspective.
So when we talk about lifetimes — past lives, future lives, soul ages — we’re speaking within a framework that may be far more fluid than our language allows.
Whether you believe in reincarnation is entirely your choice. I have no interest in persuading you either way. Belief is personal. Experience is personal.
I can only share that my own explorations — particularly through regression work — felt less like fantasy and more like remembering. For you, it may resonate. It may not. You may feel you’ve lived ten lifetimes. Or thousands. Or perhaps this is your very first human experience.
Whatever the case, here you are.
Breathing.
Aware.
Participating in something extraordinary.
And I sincerely hope you’re enjoying the ride.
In the audio below, I share one of my own past-life regression experiences — not as doctrine, but as an invitation. If you feel called, explore your own ancestry of consciousness. Not to escape this life, but to deepen it.
Because whether you’ve been here once or a thousand times…
This moment still matters.




If you listened to my rather meandering audio — and followed along with the images — you may feel a quiet nudge to explore past-life regression for yourself.
For me, it was one of the most cathartic experiences of my life.
Not because it was dramatic.
Not because it was mystical.
But because it revealed patterns.
Patterns of behavior.
Patterns of fear.
Patterns of loyalty, hesitation, courage, avoidance.
Whether those scenes were literal past lives or profound symbolic narratives created by my subconscious almost didn’t matter. What mattered was this: I saw the patterns clearly — and once you see a pattern, you can change it.
That is power.
Past-life regression, when done well, requires guidance. Not someone with a weekend certificate and a laminated badge. Not someone who memorized a script.
It requires someone deeply attuned. An empath. Someone steady. Someone who understands that the subconscious is sacred terrain.
True facilitators are rare — but if you genuinely feel called to the experience, one will appear. Many gifted energy healers, therapists, or intuitive practitioners can hold that space beautifully even if regression is not their primary modality.
There is nothing to fear.
You are not “going somewhere dangerous.” You are exploring your own mind — your own energetic archive. And when approached with curiosity rather than drama, the process can be gentle, illuminating, and deeply freeing.
Be cautious of anyone who oversells it. Anyone who guarantees cosmic revelations. Anyone who claims mastery because they completed a course.
Real wisdom is quiet.
Paulo Coelho touched on this beautifully in The Aleph. In that book, he unravels a past-life trauma that shaped his emotional landscape in the present. The novel operates on multiple levels — literal, symbolic, psychological, spiritual. Like much of his writing, the surface story is only the doorway.
The deeper lesson is this:
We carry unfinished stories.
And whether those stories originate in childhood, ancestry, or something beyond linear time, they influence how we move through this life.
Regression — or any deep inner work — is not about escaping the present. It is about liberating it.
You don’t need to believe in reincarnation to benefit.
You only need curiosity.
If you feel the pull, explore it.
If you don’t, trust that too.
Your transformation does not depend on believing in past lives.
It depends on your willingness to examine the patterns shaping this one.

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