The Reveal: The next stage of human awareness by David Icke

The Reveal: The next stage of human awareness by David Icke

Author:David Icke [Icke, David & Icke, David]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Ickonic Publishing
Published: 2024-09-02T00:00:00+00:00


Most people have no such memories because of the ‘mind-wipe’ which happens with each incarnation (more shortly). Stevenson found recurring themes with children who could remember checkable details, often fine details, of other human lives from the earliest cognitive years which could not possibly be explained by ‘this world’ knowledge or experience. These were some common themes: Children began talking about previous lives between the ages of two and four; details increased until five or six before tailing off; talking about past lives tended to end by the age of eight with normal development from at least ten; the few that retained memories beyond that age usually lost them at puberty; children expressed traits of other lives in their fears, interests and responses that have no this-life explanation; many times they will have birthmarks and defects that reflect the location of fatal wounds they claim ended the other life. The last two points will result from memories still encoded in the plasma/electromagnetic auric field. Other children had nightmares related to what happened in a previous life.

Compelling cases

We are not talking about only a few cases either. Stevenson studied some 2,500 to 3,000 cases in different cultures across the world. He would have the accounts checked to search for any explanation that would avoid the conclusion of reincarnation. This proved a challenge when children provided names of people, locations, happenings, and cause of death details that they could not possibly have known at such a young age about someone long passed. Scientific American featured one of Stephenson’s accounts in a 2013 article. A toddler in Sri Lanka overheard her mother mention the name of an obscure town called Kataragama that the girl had never visited. She told her mother that she drowned there when her mentally challenged brother pushed her in the river. She said her father was a bald man named ‘Herath’ who had sold flowers in a market near the Buddhist stupa (a dome-shaped building used as a shrine). The little girl said she lived in a house with a glass window in the roof and dogs were tied up in the backyard and fed meat. The house had been next door to a big Hindu temple and people smashed coconuts on the ground outside the temple. The detail was impressive, but was it true? Ian Stephenson found that it was. He confirmed there was a flower vendor in Kataragama who ran a stall near the Buddhist stupa and his two-year-old daughter had indeed drowned in the river while the girl played with her mentally challenged brother. The man lived in a house where the neighbours threw meat to dogs tied up in their backyard, and it was adjacent to the main Hindu temple where devotees practiced a religious ritual of smashing coconuts on the ground (don’t ask). Stephenson found that the drowned girl’s father was not bald, although her grandfather and uncle were. His name was not ‘Herath’. That was the name of the dead girl’s cousin. Stephenson established that 27 of the 30 details the toddler gave turned out to be true.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.