DocM
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Hi Dude,
I've given a lot of thought to this issue, and decided that, unless I have a major spiritual breakthrough where, like Swedenborg or Cayce, I am permitted to travel at will to the spiritual realms and gather evidence, (all of which is unlikely, given how rare it is that an adept gets to such a level), I won't be able to sort the answer to your question out while I am alive.
But another thought to bake your noodle, is this; that if we are all part of the unity of God, suffused with God as the underpinnings of our being, and if our false sense of "separateness" causes much misery and suffering in the physical world, then the idea and theory of reincarnation may become moot. The reason behind this is that we are starting out with the false premise that we are separate from God, and the unity. That separate point of consciousness calls itself Matthew (myself). If I postulate that when I shed my physical body, that separate point of consciousness then spends some time with planners to incarnate again, what I am really saying is that consciousness is not ready for the big picture, and insists on continuing this false separation from God and heaven (hence the need to reincarnate a false separate self).
Part of me believes on a gut level, that even at a young age, I felt there was a pre-life purpose and memory - I can "feel it." And yet, much of what makes me a separate point of consciousness is, right now, a mixture of my innate reactions to life, and the wisdom of my accumulated earth-life experiences. The idea, that I will keep shedding these experiences and wisdom on earth, so that the core of my soul can be tested again and again by being born on earth is intriguing, yet remains unproveable. As I said, we are starting with a premise that I am separate from God and everything else - a premise which I believe to be faulty from the get-go. Then we are saying that this false separate self reincarnates in order to "get it right." Yet in truly getting it right, we must lose our ego based thinking and, in some ways our ideas of separate incarnations.
I give a lot of credence to E. Swedenborg's notion that mergers of thought could mistakenly lead many to assume the life they merge with was one of their own. In reading of the transfer of thought in focus 27 and other realms, I have been told that huge amounts of data can be transferred in "thought balls," that take mere seconds, but convey days or weeks worth of data. Its easy to see how, any person might confuse this for a past life of their own.
If there are soul groups, people in your "disc" who you are bonded to, then it is very possible that these personalities are so close to us, that they also at times appear to be our own past lives.
So for me, the issue of past lives is a difficult and complicated one. Although I haven't closed the door on the possibility, it seems clear that we are meant to work with what we have in the here and now. If we feel a deep wound or scar, and wish to heal that inside ourselves, in order to move on in our present life, that seems like a sensible idea to me. For myself, if I can become more loving while alive, and lose selfish ways of thinking and unnecessary fears associated with the physical plane, I will feel that I accomplished quite a bit.
Matthew
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