top of page

How action in past life create diminishment in this life

Yafit comes to me to do a session on an experience she feels has been controlling her life in recent months.

“I want to work on diminishment,” she tells me.

“What does that mean?” I ask her.

“I feel like my life has been contracting lately. I’m closing my business, we’re moving to a smaller apartment, we changed our car, everything is shrinking, and it totally contradicts my perception of abundance.”

We start with three representations:

• Me

• My soul

• The contraction.

ree

When Yafit represents herself, she feels that there’s someone above her, standing and pushing or squeezing her head, as if trying to make it smaller.

A sense of sorrow for a loss also comes up.

This feeling of someone standing and pushing her reoccurs a few times.

I decide to add a representation for it, and Yafit immediately feels relief in her head.

From the representations for the soul and the contraction, information comes up that indicates that there are things in the field that have not yet been revealed.

Additionally, Yafit feels a sensation of fire in her throat, like a dragon who wants to breathe fire.


I ask her to set up a representation for the reincarnation in which the contraction was formed.

When this representation arrives, a sense of terror arises in the field.

Everyone wants to move away from it.

The reincarnation itself tells us that there is a great deal of good in it, and it’s a pity that the only thing that is seen is the terrible thing that happened.

Yafit tells me that the sensation of fire in her throat is getting stronger, and I invite her to add a representation for that feeling.


Then a story emerges:

The fire consumed everything in the place, and the place turned into a wasteland.

“What was in this place?” I ask the representation.

“There was nature, and there was also a village here, and the fire consumed it all,” the representation answers me.

I ask Yafit to set up a representation for the person who set the place on fire, and a representation for the village itself.

When she steps onto the soul’s representation, great pain and a sense of guilt come up in her.

Very quickly, I understand that it was Yafit who set the village on fire, in a previous reincarnation.


There is pain and guilt in the place, and a curse, too.

The villagers cursed Yafit’s previous reincarnation for betraying and killing them.

Yafit’s previous incarnation died in that fire.

She died feeling guilty and deserving of the curse.

We separated between Yafit of today and her previous life.

We released Yafit from the curse and feelings of guilt associated with that event.

After this happened, we asked the previous incarnation for the resources that existed before the trauma colored everything in fiery tones.

The resources in that incarnation were leadership, passion, connection to elements of natures, and more.

Yafit connected to them and welcomed them into herself.

The contraction felt that it no longer belonged and asked to leave the field.

After it left, Yafit turned to the village, asked for forgiveness for what she’d done in her previous incarnation, and asked for their blessing.

They looked at her and told her she’s not her previous life. She’s not the one who killed them, and there’s no reason for her to take the curse on herself.

Yafit felt greater peace and more whole.


The fire in her throat disappeared, her breathing became easier, and her connection with her soul grew.

Things often happen to us in life that don’t reflect who we are and that seemingly have no reason to occur.

I’ve found that in such moments, our karmic past has the explanations.

We live with an unconscious experience that we have to “pay some debt,” or energies of curses and vows limit our paths.

When these things are revealed, our karmic past stops being unconscious, and we can offer it healing and change.

Comments


bottom of page