I’ve written extensively on the subject of cell memory, including in my book Past Lives, Future Healing. Knowing what cell memory is, how it affects all of us and how to address it in children, can make a profound improvement in the rest of their lives.
Cell memory is the total body of knowledge our spirit minds have gathered during all our past lives on earth, infused into every cell of our bodies and then reacted to by those cells the moment our spirit enters the fetus shortly before we’re born. It’s the key to resolving countless health problems, phobias, night terrors, and any number of psychological obstacles a child might need to overcome. A step-by-step explanation of cell memory goes like this:
- We know that our bodies are made up of billions of interacting cells
- We know that each of those cells is a living, feeling organism that received and follows orders in a very literal way from whatever information is transmitted to it by the subconscious mind. For example, if we’re told under hypnosis, when the subconscious mind is more in charge than the conscious mind, that the hypnotist’s finger is actually a lighted match and that finder touches our arm, the cells of our arm will form a blister, just as they’re programmed to do when they come in contact with a flame.
- It’s in the subconscious that our spirit minds exist, remembering every moment we’ve experienced, in this life and every other life we’ve lived since we were created.
- The instant our spirit minds enter our physical bodies for a new incarnation, they’re flooded with the familiarity of being in a body and all those memories and sensations from past incarnations come rushing back. If you’ve ever revisited a place that holds powerful memories for you and found yourself having physical and emotional reactions to being there again, you’ve had a glimpse of what our spirits experience when they find themselves in a body again.
- Our subconscious minds, on receiving all this new information, promptly infuse it into the billions of cells that make up our bodies, and those cells dutifully respond to that information as their reality. And they continue to react physiologically to all the memories from past lives that our spirit minds infuse them with, whether our conscious minds are aware of those memories or not.
- And so, by accessing those cell memories and understanding that they’re part of lives and deaths we’ve already moved on from, we can rid ourselves of long-buried illness, phobias, pain and trauma and give ourselves a clean slate to work with in this new incarnation.
I’ve worked with literally thousands of clients whose lives have been completely transformed thanks to the unearthing of cell memories that are holding them back. I can’t stress enough that the pursuit of cell-memory answers should never take the place of working with licensed, reputable medical and psychiatric professionals to get to the root of a problem. I can be an effective supplement to those professionals, but I’m not a replacement for them. And it delights me to know that more and more of them are accepting the possibility that not every physical, physiological, emotional or mental malady can be traced to a source in this current lifetime.
In addition to being a psychic, I’m also a certified master hypnotist and I’ve had great success using both skills to get to the core of children’s cell memories from past lives that are causing current, very real disturbances. And children are wonderful hypnosis subjects, take it from someone who’s hypnotized thousands of them. Between their innate willingness to trust and their wide-open connections to their spirit minds, they’re a joy to work with.
In fact, a great demonstration of the power of cell memory is a six year old boy names Greg, whose parents, at their wits’ end, brought him to me for a hypnosis session in the hope of relieving his severe asthma and his hyperactivity. They’d already been to countless doctors and Greg was on medication for both conditions. Here’s a surprise: the medication didn’t seem to be helping. When problems are rooted in cell memories, it’s very rare for medication to make a difference.
Greg was an only child, a smart, funny little boy who’d already made casual passing comments to his parents that made it clear he had conscious memories of past lives. He’d told his mother that he remembered when he was her mother and he’d announced one day at a family party that “I know all about boats’, even though he’d never been anywhere near one in this life. So I knew that helping him remember more details about those previous lives through hypnosis would be a breeze.
There were two past lives that seems to be the most memorable to Greg. In one of them he was happily married to a woman named Anna. They had eleven children and lived on a farm with lots of animals. He was called away to fight in the war as a navel officer and was killed when his ship was attacked and a piece of shrapnel pierced his throat. In the second life Greg vividly remembered he was a soman, the widowed mother of nine children (one of whom was ‘my mommy now’, he was amused to report) whose household and life in general seemed like perpetual chaos. In that life he died of pneumonia at the age of thirty-eight.
Two lifetimes that ended abruptly due to breathing-related catastrophes and in this lifetime the child has asthma that’s not responding to medication. Two lifetimes in which the household were constantly chaotic with lots of noisy active children and in this lifetime Greg is a hyperactive only child, again, not responding to medication. He listened raptly still under hypnosis, as I assured him that he was only having these problems because the cells of his body thought they were still living those previous lives. He could release those problems now, because they’d been resolved when those lives ended and go on with his new life healthy, happy and peaceful.
Six months after my regressive hypnosis session with Greg, his parents reported that his asthma attacks had become virtually nonexistent and that his hyperactivity has calmed to the point that his teacher was sure he’d changed to a more effective medication, when in fact he was no longer taking any medication at all. I still remember the call from Greg’s pediatrician, who’d first prescribed and then weaned Gregg of Ritalin when the dramatic improvement in his behaviour became apparent. “I don’t know what you did,’ he told me, ‘but it sure worked.’
And after all that’s the whole point : not whether I’m right or wrong, but whether something works and works risk-free. Again, you’ll never hear me advocate replacing doctors’ orders with cell-memory work, but you will hear me advocate helping to eliminate any harmful cell memories your children may have brought with them from other lives they’ve lived, right along with any recommendations their doctors have to offer. There’s no either/or choice to make between my advice and your doctors’. Be as skeptical as you life, just be open-minded enough to try it, if only to prove that I don’t know what I’m talking about. Then let the positive results you see in your children speak for themselves.