spooky2
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I certainly don't know how our mind works Lucy, but what you wrote surely rings true to me. Maybe it's this way: Some live their life in a way, so that every earlier life-episode is not only in the past, but as well really over in the sense this person said good-bye to it, it's all well worked through, closed, and the conclusions of this past-experiences are integrated well into the present. Others (and I guess that's more common) have a more sequenced lifeline, meaning many events of their life are not really closed; projects which couldn't have been maintained due to outer circumstances, experiences that are "not done", not worked through, mysterious occurings, and of course experience of extreme pain and fear.
Now my line of thoughts is, could it be, the more quasi-separated sequences there are in one's life, the more "surprises" there will be in the afterlife, as all those not-goodbyed past events could function as crystallization cores for a specific afterlife-surrounding? This thought seems to be supported by the fact, that in the afterlife there aren't these physical cycles (dates, daytime, sleep-wake, hungry, digestion etc.), so that all these undone past events could come to the surface more easily than in the physical, where all the details of daily routine can provide a cover for memorizing.
Spooky
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