Tagged: past-death regression

Alex Formos with his new book Eurydice in Love 0

A Love Story Unlike Any Other

Alexander Formos wrote his new book Eurydice in Love with great courage, honesty, and soulful clarity. Currently, I’m only on chapter III but I am enjoying his bold and unbelievable story-telling style through the pages. Reading the book provides a perfect little break in my office after seeing my clients and before heading home.

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His Regret Holding back the Lost Love

My first session is generally twenty minutes longer than the follow-up sessions because it takes some extra time to know someone, the conscious and the subconscious mind, to check their hypnotisability, and to do the initial trance work.

Occasionally I’d meet someone who can get the entire benefits of hypnotherapy in their first appointment for a much shorter time.

Marsha is such a person.

Telling a Little Story About a Story 0

Telling a Little Story About a Story

Carol’s Lives is my second book. It’s the only book that has been turned into an Audiobook so far. In 2019 I intended to do a promo video on it. The book cover designer photographer Silmara Emde was hired to do the work. As Tim and I were travelling in New york to collect some footage, Simara moved the city. We had to schedule for spring 2020 to film it, and then everything went sideway because of the pandemic. Finally, in 2022, my partner, the main character in Carol’s Lives, decided to take up the project. Here we have it, the promo video of the book that was published two years ago.

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A Wanderer’s Journey

Randy came to see me specifically for Past Life Regression. One of the things he shared with me prior to the hypnosis part of the session was that he always felt that he was a “wanderer.” It turned out this...

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Non-Linear Memory of a Past Life

“One reason I love what I do is that I still get surprised at what comes up in a session, no matter how much I think I know.” As Clara was getting ready to settle into the hypnosis part of our session, for past life regression, I said to her, “For example, someone would come to see me for fear of water, it’s easy to assume that this person was drowned to death in another lifetime; or someone has a fear of height, it’s easy to assume this person died in another life from falling. Many times it was so, but sometimes it was not so, and then when the regression ends, it would all make sense, in a very different way.”