In today's Washington Post there is a potentially game changing article that could have far reaching implications for afterlife explorers.
In brief, it discusses a study that demonstrates that mice may pass traces of fear to its offspring. Scientists induced fear to adult mice by giving them an electrical shock after exposing them to the fragrance of cherry blossoms. It turned out that after breeding the mice, their offspring reacted with fear and anxiety when exposed to the same fragrance.
So.....what if it's possible (no proof yet) that human DNA may transmit memories of things that happened to our own ancestors? And if that's true, it just might explain why some people are born with certain talents or certain fears that are otherwise unexplained. A so-called irrational fear of water might be the result of a near-drowning of an ancestor, especially (I'm guessing here) if the event was traumatic enough to imprint the trauma on his/her DNA and then was passed down to subsequent generations.
Now as to afterlife issues. One thing hits me right off the bat, the deja vu effect. Maybe the feeling that comes over some people that the first time they are in a town, they just "know" they have been there before and are able to find their way around with no help or maps.
So then they conclude they were in that town in a previous life and therefore reincarnation must be true.
Maybe, maybe not. A genetic memory perhaps? So much we don't know about our brains and how they work.
I'm sure others will identify other things that we currently ascribe to the afterlife that might possibly be the result of other as of yet unknown DNA aspects.
Please take some time and go to
www.washingtonpost.com and bring up that article. Would really be interested in your reactions.
r