The Temple of Healing Between Incarnations
- Yael Eini
- 14 minutes ago
- 2 min read
When I read about the “Temple of Healing” in Dolores Cannon’s book, it made me curious. It was the first time I’d heard this term in relation to a place in the time between lives. It’s not that other therapists don’t refer to it, it’s just that no one calls it that.
I remember that in one of the between lives sessions I did, as soon as I reached the space between lives, I went to some area to be recharged, but I didn’t feel it was a healing temple. Neither the words temple or healing came to me in that session.
I don’t remember anyone else being there other than me, but it was a space where I could rest and be recharged.
The book and the description it contained caught my interest, so I did what I always do when I’m curious: I researched the topic in two of my labs, and from the combination of both, I reached several conclusions:

✅ The Temple of Healing is a space of unconditional acceptance.
There is no criticism and no judgment, there is full acceptance of who we are, what we are, and what we’ve been through.
✅ The responsibility for our healing is in our hands only.
There’s no one there with the role of healing us. We’re the ones responsible for our own healing.
During the lab, when I worked on my issue, I was explicitly told by the temple that my issue, even if it manifests in the physical world, is based on an emotional issue, and I need and can resolve it without any need for the temple.
✅ Healing is a process.
Even if we really want to heal, there’s a process we need to go through.
If we don’t go through it, we won’t heal.
✅ Simply being in the Temple of Healing, is healing.
Being in the temple allows new knowledge and another perspective to emerge, and that in itself leads to some kind of healing.
One of the most significant things occurred in the lab when we learned that access to the Temple of Healing is available and immediate.
You can set up a representation, and boom, you’re there.
You don’t need deep meditation or past life regression: intention, focus, and representation, and before you know it, you’re inside.





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