This
Doctor Brings You Back to Your Previous Lives |
A lot of the problems that people are fighting
against can be ascribed to experiences that have taken
place in our unknown past, says the American Professor,
Dr. Glenn Williston. He works with regression - bringing
a patient back to a previous life through hypnosis. One
of our reporters believes to have "met her own
self" at the end of last century. An exciting and
dramatic journey back in time. . . Already over the phone - as I make my appointment with Dr. Glenn Williston, across the Atlantic - do I feel that there is something special about this man. His quiet way of talking has an almost hypnotic effect. It creates trust and safety. The man who meets me in Lake Tahoe a month later is slim, and towers close to two meters above the ground. This young and attractive man has only one thing in common with the "daddy-type" that I, judging from his voice, expected to meet; the voice and the eyes. Dr. Glenn Williston has written several books on regression - going back to previous lives by the help of hypnosis. His last book, "Discovering your Past Lives," was published by Gyldendal last spring . The book explains, in an easy, understandable way what a regression really is, and how a person can search for his or her previous lives e by using self hypnosis. Is it not a risky experiment, to try out self-hypnosis? I am trying hard not to think of hypnosis as I ask the question. It is hard. Dr. Williston's, intense blue eyes seem to look straight through me. Glenn Williston shakes his head: It depends on what kind of risks you have in mind. If abused, hypnosis can be dangerous. You can make a person do some something he normally would not have done. But what most people fear is that they shall never wake up again. Never return to the present time. That does not happen. I don't know of any cases where someone under hypnosis has not come out of the hypnosis. That happens automatically. Hypnosis no more dangerous than dreaming You use hypnosis to bring your patients back to previous lives. Why? Because I feel confident, after having used regression as a treatment for more than 25 years, that a lot of the problems that we are struggling against today have their sources in what we have experienced earlier. In our childhood in this life, but also further back in time. In other, previous lives. So you believe in reincarnation? Absolutely. Does the patient also have to believe in reincarnation in order to accomplish a result? No. Not at all. I have had faster and better results with patients that have been skeptical. They are more relaxed. They don't produce so much adrenalin as those who believe and have high expectations. Children and teenagers are often those who are easiest to work on. They are more relaxed and have not yet reached too many prejudices. But if an experience in a previous life has been rather traumatic, which probably is most likely as it is supposed to create anxiety and phobias in this life - can not experiencing this all over again by a regression, become a new, strong and shattering experience? Of course. I have seen patients go through severe pains and fears during a regression. And that is the whole idea. By helping the patient live through a suppressed or unfinished anxiety, the patient can be freed from his phobia or his unconscious fear. Is it not a risk that such an experience can lead to injury of a permanent character? To more anxiety later in this life? Not more that an ordinary nightmare would give. But the whole point with having me put a patient through a regression, is that he shall have a full treatment. Meaning that I don't let go of the person after the regression. We meet and talk about his or her experiences, once or several times. It depends on what is needed. The most important thing has already been accomplished: by finding the origin, the source of the problem. Then we will start working on the material that the regression has given us; by using therapy, we talk about it, or even try repeated regressions. Regression against anxiety and phobias |
Glenn Williston was born and raised in
Massachusetts and Rhode Island USA. He first wanted to
become a teacher, but found that the profession held too
few challenges. So he ventured into psychology. I did not believe, neither in God nor in
reincarnation at that time, he tells me, giving me a
tilted, boyish grin. It was friends of mine who finally
got me interested. I tried to fight them until the bitter
end, but found myself more and more curious. I began to
understand that there had to be some truth in this. It
could not be just a bluff when men like Tolstoy, Plato,
Beethoven, and Alexander the Great believed in it. |
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