dave_a_mbs
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central california
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I'm inclined to agree, George. "Behold I make everything new" is to the point.
But there seems to be more. In between one body falling off and putting another one on we go through a sort of spiritual knothole. Ecclesiates said that when we stand before God all our best works are "as filthy rags". Meditators who are accustomed to deep work occasionally make some kind of (often trivial) error. Then they go through torments appropriate to the damned while they pray for forgiveness, salvation, liberation from more mistakes, and a few dozen other ways to fix things so that they will not recur.
Actually, this is the same as Bruce doing a rescue on some poor soul that's gotten stuck in a self-delusional attachment, except that t's far more emphatic when we do it ourselves.
The result is that the person who is reborn is only partly like the one who died. The changes involve morls, values, attitudes, attachments to needs and drives and so on. The history of the dead self still remains, since that's how we get to wherever we are, but generally, only those moments that strongly stood out can be recovered. Recovery is always greater when the person has changed less, and is usually quite substantial when the death resulted in attachment to the mundane levels of reality due to intense fear, hatred or desire.
I'd guess that by the time you are advanced enough to think about such things you are probably pretty well liberated, in which case I agree. Experience with a great many past life regressions supports your idea that we have very little recall - at least for people of that advanced level.
d
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