That's correct: On the other side, Sylvia says we are all healed and well. That doesn't stop us from having reminders from wounds in earlier lives.
In her book "Past Lives, Future Healing", Sylvia Browne describes a neurologist friend of hers, who suspects a link between birthmarks and congenital illnesses. He asks her to "take a poll" among her "steady stream of clients" to see if she notices "any birthmark/health connection."
Sylvia describes it like this:
"Birthmarks weren't something I'd sat up nights wondering about, but it was a small favor for a friend to ask. If he turned out to be right, it might lead to some fascinating medical diagnostic possibilities."
p.23
She then tells of Billy, who, during a past life as an American Indian in the early 1800s, died in "a battle when he bled to death from a knife wound to his right leg, a couple of inches below the knee."
Sylvia is so captivated by this "brave, exciting, and tragic life" that she almost forgets to ask him whether he had any birthmarks or not.
"He did. Just one. A purplish discoloration, like an angry unhealed wound, about two inches below his right knee."
At first, Sylvia writes this off as a "fluke", especially since Billy turned out not to have any congenital illnesses. But afterwards, she finds a 90% correlation between birthmarks and a serious or fatal injury from a past life. She claims to have files "well into the hundreds" to support this.
Sylvia also explains why the last 10% doesn't have birth marks: Not because they haven't had past lives - oh, no, they all have - but because the issues have been "resolved": If you had been hanged in a past life for a crime (but had no birthmarks around the neck), it was because you were either "truly innocent" of the crime. But if you were guilty - I kid you not:
"...there was resolution, the subject was closed when that lifetime ended and you won't retain any residual marks."
Amazingly, she goes on:
"If you were the innocent victim of a catastrophic fire, you're very likely to have a past-life scar from being burned, but if you died in a fire you deliberately started, there won't be a birthmark because that life ended with no unfinished business."
I now have a headache.
In her book "Past Lives, Future Healing", Sylvia Browne describes a neurologist friend of hers, who suspects a link between birthmarks and congenital illnesses. He asks her to "take a poll" among her "steady stream of clients" to see if she notices "any birthmark/health connection."
Sylvia describes it like this:
"Birthmarks weren't something I'd sat up nights wondering about, but it was a small favor for a friend to ask. If he turned out to be right, it might lead to some fascinating medical diagnostic possibilities."
p.23
She then tells of Billy, who, during a past life as an American Indian in the early 1800s, died in "a battle when he bled to death from a knife wound to his right leg, a couple of inches below the knee."
Sylvia is so captivated by this "brave, exciting, and tragic life" that she almost forgets to ask him whether he had any birthmarks or not.
"He did. Just one. A purplish discoloration, like an angry unhealed wound, about two inches below his right knee."
At first, Sylvia writes this off as a "fluke", especially since Billy turned out not to have any congenital illnesses. But afterwards, she finds a 90% correlation between birthmarks and a serious or fatal injury from a past life. She claims to have files "well into the hundreds" to support this.
Sylvia also explains why the last 10% doesn't have birth marks: Not because they haven't had past lives - oh, no, they all have - but because the issues have been "resolved": If you had been hanged in a past life for a crime (but had no birthmarks around the neck), it was because you were either "truly innocent" of the crime. But if you were guilty - I kid you not:
"...there was resolution, the subject was closed when that lifetime ended and you won't retain any residual marks."
Amazingly, she goes on:
"If you were the innocent victim of a catastrophic fire, you're very likely to have a past-life scar from being burned, but if you died in a fire you deliberately started, there won't be a birthmark because that life ended with no unfinished business."
I now have a headache.