
The following two
articles were written by Life Styles reporter Tracy Rasmussen of The Reading Eagle newspaper and are reprinted here
for your reading pleasure. Barbara regressed Tracy in August of
2002 and the following is the story of Tracy's experience, as well
as an interview Tracy had with another client of Barbara's.
Common
threads seem to run through many people's lives, according to
regression therapist Barbara Kauffman, who led reporter Tracy
Rasmussen to a battlefield in 16th century France.
Exploring bygone
lives A warrior within
suffers grief, guilt
By Tracy
Rasmussen,
Reading
Eagle
It's 1572.
France. And there's a battle raging.
A man, a
dark man with long brown hair and a warrior's yell, falls from his
horse.
His brother,
a light man with hair so blond it shines like a halo even in the
smog of pillage, runs to him, fending off the advance of other
fighters, and falls to his knee beside him.
"Guillaume,"
he says.
"Francis,"
comes the response.
But that's
all they have time for.
A man on
foot, whose face is unclear in the smoke, appears above Francis'
head, his sword ready to swoop, and Guillaume sees it.
But there is
no time to yell, to scream, to react.
The sword
comes down.
Blood
bubbles from Francis' lips as he falls dying onto Guillaume's
breast.
He says
something, but Guillaume can't hear him. He hears only the
pounding of his own blood in his head, his own rage boiling
through the pain in his back, the ache in his head.
It is guilt
that drives him to kill. Guilt that fuels his anger.
He leaps to
the battle to avenge the death of his brother. He kills the
attacker. He kills horses. He kills many men.
Finally he
walks back to the castle of his father and stands poised on the
edge of the large, wooden bridge that will take him the rest of
the way home. But there he stops.
The voice
that tells this story is filled with the emotion of the battle.
It is the
voice of a 16th-century 20-year-old, anguishing over the death of
his 17-year-old brother, whom he had sworn to protect.
It is 430
years later my voice that tells this story.
I was open
to past life regression, but I didn't think it would work. I
didn't think I could be hypnotized, and I didn't think I would do
anything more than make up stories if I were hypnotized.
But I was
wrong.
My session
with regression therapist Barbara Kauffman was interesting, fun,
educational and very real.
The process
is painless. You visit with her for a few minutes, and she asks
you questions about why you are there, what you hope to learn.
My
objective? Just to have the experience.
So I climbed
onto a cot with a fluffy pillow under my head and another under my
knees. A blanket covered me, and my sneakers were tucked under the
cot.
We began.
First I had
to imagine light shining down through my head.
"Healing
light," Kauffman said.
So I did. I
told myself there was lots of light, running around my brain, down
to my cheeks, down my arms.
I felt
nothing of it, but I visualized anyway.
Then she led
me to a stairway (in my mind), and I had to go down slowly. I was
already at the bottom step and Kauffman still was counting the
third or fourth step.
I was upset
that it wasn't working, but I persevered and tried to concentrate
on my breathing: in and out ... in and out.
At the
bottom of the stairs was a garden. I wandered around the garden
for awhile ... lots of trees, a bench, a couple of flowers (I'm
not much of a gardener, I guess).
And then, of
course, came the door.
It was
inevitable that I would have to step through something to get into
the next dimension.
I had the
urge to open my eyes and cut the session short. I felt my heart
quicken as Kauffman instructed me to open the door and step
through.
Was I
hypnotized?
I have no
idea.
But when I
opened the door, it was dark, and I had the sensation of being
alone.
My voice on
tape describes it like this (italics are Kauffman's questions to
me):
"My
impressions are that it's dark and I'm waiting for something ...
waiting for something to happen. ... "
How do
you feel?
"I feel a
little like there's some danger ... like something big is going to
happen."
Do you
hear any sounds around you?
And that's
when it started to happen. Like stage lights coming up I heard ...
something.
"I hear
metal clanging ... And it's starting to get lighter now ... "
What kind
of clothes are you wearing?
"I'm wearing
a long dress, and now I do see ... I see a castle. I see a castle
with lots of ... it looks light but it feels dark ... and I'm
walking to the castle and I'm very, very, very heavy and sad, and
what I thought was a dress isn't a dress, it's ... um ... it's
more like ... hmmm ... how can I describe it? ... It has a red
cross on it ... it feels like I'm some kind of a soldier coming
home, and my friends are all gone and I'm alone. And feel a
tremendous sense of guilt that I didn't do enough ... but I don't
know what I didn't do enough of ... I'm walking with a horse. I'm
not riding, I'm walking in front of my horse ... and I have long
brown hair."
This came to
me in my mind's eye, and I felt as if I were relating a story as I
was watching it unfold. I was watching myself, but I didn't have
any sense that it was myself.
But how the
story unfolded. I was stuck in the knowledge that someone I cared
for had died, and I was somehow responsible.
Kauffman
sharpened her questions, and I responded with details:
"So go back
to an event before the battle ... to a conversation or some
significant event."
"He's my
brother. He's light and I'm dark, but we're brothers."
So he's
light and you're dark, what do you mean by that.
"He's blond,
and I've got dark hair. We look very different. His essence, his
spirit is different from mine."
How?
"He's very
happy. Funny. Loving."
And how
about you? What are you?
"I'm a
warrior. I'm dark."
Who is it
that you fight for?
"I fight for
God."
Do you
know what year it is? Is there a calendar year you go by.
"1572."
What part
of the world are you in?
"France."
What do
they call you?
"Um ... I
can't say it ... "
Can you
spell it?
G-u-i-l-l-a-u-m-e
About how
old were you when this happened?
"At the
battle I was 20. My brother is Francis, and Francis was 17. And he
didn't want to go. And I told him he'd be safe. That I was there
to protect him."
Who are
the people who came to take the land?
"I think
they are Huguenots."
As it turns
out, in this life, Guillaume (French for William) fell off his
horse in battle and hurt his back. Francis tried to help him and
was killed. The battle scene was vivid in my mind, dissolving my
traditional journalistic resolve to tears.
The session
continued, and I spoke of Francis, and how I, Guillaume, died
later in life, after changing from being a warrior to being a nice
guy, getting married and eventually succumbing to some sort of
lung infection in my late 50s or early 60s.
The grief I
experienced over Francis' death resonated in many parts of my
current life in ways I couldn't explain. And after I got to "see"
Francis in heaven (he met Guillaume as he passed to the other
side) it was oddly comforting.
After the
session, I remembered every detail of the story I was telling, and
I had a tape of the session to help any memory lapses.
But I still
couldn't convince myself that anything actually had happened,
since I appeared to be describing a Crusader, but the Crusades
were long over by 1572.
I had no
idea what a Huguenot was, and I've never particularly liked French
culture.
So it was
odd to have an imagining about something I never had thought
about.
When I got
home I did a search on my computer to see if I could find myself.
I typed in
the words: France 1572 Huguenot.
And what I
got back were hits and hits and hits for the St. Bartholomew's Day
Massacre. On Aug. 24, 1572, Catholics slaughtered Huguenots
throughout France, all in the name of God.
Was I
there?
Will I read
one day in a history book about brothers Guillaume and Francis,
how one fell in battle and the other grieved a lifetime?
Maybe. Maybe
not. But I did learn a few things from Guillaume and Francis that
make them important in my history.
So maybe
I'll never know.
But, well,
that's life.
Or as we
said in 1572, C'est l'vie.
Regression Therapist Helps People Find Clues to Present Problems in Previous Incarnations
By Tracy Rasmussen , Reading
Eagle
Maybe your
fears aren't so irrational after all.
The spiders
that send you screaming, the loneliness that stymies you in bad
relationships, an obsessive need for order and control that
seems to have no roots in this lifetime, may have been born
hundreds of years ago when you were the same spirit in a
different body.
As bizarre
as that might sound, past life regressionist Barbara Kauffman
has seen clients make those connections with their other selves
and lay those issues to rest.
"I don't
know how it works or why it works," she said. "But it does work
when other things have not worked. Part of it is that when
you're under hypnosis the ego is removed."
Kauffman
knows this because she is often the last stop for clients who
have tried just about everything else to let go of their fears
or neuroses.
"Some
people just come for the experience," she said. "Or just for the
growth of their soul. But most people have something that they
want to know."
Lauren
Fedorka, a sophomore at Millersville University, went for
several regressions in an effort to help her get over a
particularly bad breakup.
"I was
feeling depressed, and I just couldn't get out of it," she said.
"My mother does energy work and she had met Barbara through
that, and she had had some regression therapy so she thought it
would be good for me to try."
Fedorka, an
economics major, said she was open to the experience but wasn't
sure if it would help her.
"But it's a
very safe place, and you really feel OK the whole time you're
doing it," she said.
For
Fedorka's regression, Kauffman led her through a series of
relaxation exercises until she was in a light hypnotic trance.
The sessions were taped so Fedorka could refer back to them.
"The first
time I remembered everything," she said. "But for the other ones
I think I was in a deeper trance and didn't remember what I was
saying, so I needed the tape."
Once
hypnotized, Fedorka said, she saw bright colors.
"There were
reds and oranges, and then I started to see fuzzy pictures," she
said.
Kauffman
said people experience the regression differently.
"Some
people will actually see themselves, but others will just have a
sense of knowing," she said. "Other people hear things or smell
things. Ultimately you want to engage all of your senses, but
that takes time for most people."
During her
first regression of four, Fedorka saw herself in a very old
village wearing attire that reminded her of the Civil War era.
"I just saw
myself," she said. "I didn't see anyone else."
She said
she felt her loneliness in that life and saw how she spent so
much of her time alone.
She
witnessed her death, a common occurrence during a past-life
regression, and saw that as she passed, she could see all the
spirits that were around her.
For Fedorka
the regression was validation that she really isn't alone.
"We
discussed it afterward," she said. "And it made me feel better
to know that even when I feel alone, I'm really not, and there
are people watching over me and protecting me."
For Fedorka,
that knowledge was enough to boost her from depression.
She said
she also learned it's important to ask for help when she needs
it.
In a
subsequent regression, Fedorka believes she visited a future
life, too.
"There had
been some sort of major war, and the entire world was one
country," she said.
Kauffman
said it's not unusual for clients to visit a future life because
the idea of time being linear (one thing following the next) is
a Western belief that is challenged by some Eastern and New Age
beliefs.
Kauffman
said while some people see a future life, most go into the past
and see people whom they recognize from their current life.
For
instance, Fedorka saw her mother in a past life, where she was a
loving and trusted friend.
During
regression Kauffman asks clients if they recognize anyone in the
scene that is playing out for them because it's common for
spirits to travel lives together.
Sometimes
those relationships need healing, she said.
And that's
the therapy part of the regression.
While it's
fun to visit the past and see what's there, it's also
therapeutic to put some of those issues to rest, or to see how
they are still resonating in your life.
Kauffman
said people will go to the life that is most significant for
them. Many people have three or four regressions and see a
different life for each.
"I don't
know how they get there," she said. "It could be God or guides.
But there will be some understanding of why you are seeing that
life."
Sometimes
the themes are the same from regression to regression, and other
times they are different. Always though, there is a sense of
recognition in some aspect of the life.
Kauffman
said each regression takes about an hour, so there is time to go
to more than one life or to get important details from one life.
"Sometimes
they can go as long as 90 minutes if we're really on a roll,"
she said. "But I don't want to keep people under for longer than
that."
After her
regressions, Fedorka said, she felt very relaxed and
exhilarated.
"Some
clients report that they feel a little blue for a day or two
after the regression," Kauffman said.
She also
said it sometimes takes a couple of days to process the
information.
"But then
most clients will say that they feel lighter and are glad that
they have learned something," she said.
Contact
reporter Tracy Rasmussen at 610-371-5066 or trasmussen@readingeagle.com
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