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May 13, 2025 • 36 mins

In our ongoing exploration of past life regression, we delve into the intricate connections between our current experiences and the echoes of our previous existences. This episode features Mark Beale, a distinguished hypnotherapist and author, who elucidates the profound impact of unresolved emotional traumas carried over from past lives. We examine how these past experiences can manifest as fears, phobias, and relationship patterns in our present lives, thereby illuminating the path for healing through understanding and acceptance. Mark shares compelling case studies that illustrate the transformative power of hypnotherapy, emphasizing the necessity of emotional engagement in the healing process. As we conclude this two-part series, we invite listeners to consider the broader implications of past life experiences on their current spiritual and emotional journeys.

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Episode Transcript

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(00:02):
Welcome to the Dead Life.
Here's world renowned mediumAlison dubois.
Welcome to the Dead Life.
Today my guest is Mark Beale,a hypnotherapist and expert in past
life regression.
Mark hosts a podcast calledthe Past Life Awakening and he's
the author of the book PastLife Awakening.

(00:22):
Many people feel as thoughthey've been here before.
They often vibe with aparticular point in time and can
carry wounds brought in frompast lives.
Hypnotherapists can take theirpatients back in time through past
life regression to discoverwhy they feel like they've been here
before and who they were.

(00:42):
To book a reading with me,email us@bookinglisondubois.com if
you have a life question forme and Sophia for my Love Me, Love
Me not segment, leave Yourquestion at 802-332-3811.
If you want to watch past andpresent episodes of the Dead Life,
you can follow me on YouTube.
Please like and subscribe.

(01:04):
Go to alisondubois.com formore information about what I'm up
to.
Well, Mark, welcome to the show.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you, Allison.
Lovely to be here.
Well, it's great having you.
So I think it's veryfascinating as well in spirituality
I've come to know and I'm sureyou have as well.
People used to viewspirituality as something that maybe

(01:27):
gullible people fell for orthe uneducated or whatever they want
to say, because I don'tactually think education has anything
to do with a person's worth.
But people weigh it that wayin this day.
And I get a lot of veryeducated people, a lot of psychologists,

(01:47):
a lot of judges, a lot oflawyers and professionals.
And I think peopleunderestimate how mainstream what
we do has become in people'slives and that it's actually healthy
to look for spiritualreasoning and physical pains as well

(02:08):
as issues with loss.
And I think we're starting toget there.
It's been encouraging to seethe progress there in the last 20
years.
Exactly right.
And for hypnosis,hypnotherapy, past lives, it is positively
correlated to intelligence.

(02:28):
The more intelligent you are,the better you are at it.
And if anything I have tofilter out if there would be a bottom
10% of the intelligence.
It's like it's really the mostintelligent people that are the most
capable and that I tend towork with and that come right.
So yeah, absolutely.
And that's why I think it'simportant talking about this so we
normalize it.
So I mean, if they're thepartner in a law firm, they don't

(02:50):
want to go on a podcast andtalk about it.
But most of my clients arereally at that level that, you know,
are well educated andintelligent and all that stuff.
I sort of.
Yeah.
And so.
And I think it's useful totell these stories.
So it does sort of normalize it.
Yeah.
Where.
Yeah.
And I think we've.

(03:10):
We've made a lot of progressin the last 20 years that I've been
doing it in particular.
So people would thinkhypnotherapy is, you know, fears
and phobias, maybe habits.
But even in the early days,people would come and say, oh, I
thought this was just prettybasic, but I'm going to book for
a whole different issuebecause I realize it's much more
sophisticated.
And these days, people don'teven start off with that.

(03:32):
They come in and it's lookingfor, you know, complex emotional,
spiritual issues rather than,you know, basic breaking a habit
kind of a thing that peopleused to think hypnotherapy was about.
Right.
So this awakening that'shappening, I'm seeing it, you know,
daily in my practice.
It's.
I think it's interesting aswell, people who.
And this is for my listenersto consider, who have fears around

(03:56):
fire, or I'm going to die in acar accident, or they've got like
this gripping fear around something.
I think past life regressionwould be very helpful in them getting
to the root of what that fearis, is stemming from so that they
can make sense of it and let alot of it go so that it doesn't affect

(04:20):
their life to such a degree anymore.
Because fear, to me, is whatlimits people the most in this life.
In not doing things, nottaking risks out of fear of what
could happen, or not leaving apartner out of fear of being alone.
Where are these fears stemming from?

(04:41):
So I think past liferegression actually would be very
helpful for a lot of people there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, a lot of people areeven afraid to get healing or afraid
to become healers.
Yeah.
So, I mean, I've got an ex,and, you know, there are levels as
well.
So I think if people can goand they can expect a certain solution.

(05:02):
But I've got a case study inthe book as well that you're reminding
me of, which is another one ofthe cases.
She's a psychiatrist, andpeople read Brian Weiss's book, Many
Lives, Many Masters, andthink, oh, now past life regression
is widely accepted, and it'saccepted by the public, but not really
by the psychiatric community.

(05:24):
And so she had this sort ofdeep inner conflict.
And she'd actually listened toone of my audio sessions.
So if people were wanting tomake a start, I've got some hypnosis,
audios, or past liferegression, short courses or things
on YouTube.
And she listened to that, andshe said, I'm a psychiatrist.
I'm very rational.
But as I went through youraudio session, I had spontaneous

(05:44):
images of a flood, and theword Lemuria came to me, and I just
had an overwhelming sadnessand grief, and I couldn't stop crying.
And so I ended up havingsessions with her.
And we're able to go throughthis life, a mythical past life,
you could almost say in themirror, where she gathered some healing
powers.

(06:05):
But at the age of 19, just asshe was graduating, society collapsed.
And she felt sort of a griefat its loss and even a guilt at its
destruction.
But she also found that shewas in a past life, which was a similar
story.
But she was a doctor who couldonly issue pills and medication,
and she wanted to givepsychological healing to a particular

(06:29):
client, but she couldn't, andshe had a deep regret from that.
And so she had this vow that Iwant to be able to come back and
help people properly.
So that enabled her to be a psychiatrist.
But then she felt thisconflict of, now I want to go from
being helping peoplepsychologically to helping people
spiritually.
But I feel I can't because I'mrepressed by the society, and because

(06:50):
last time I did that, itdidn't go well.
And so that's part of the kindof the wounds that people carry or
the.
The residues.
And so, you know, I had thesame thing.
There were certain beliefs andexperiences that I had to work through
in order to be able tofinally, you know, take certification
and say, I think I'm.
I'm going to do this and takethat risk.

(07:11):
And that other conventionalpath is no longer on the table.
And so that.
That is something as well.
So that is one of the bigfears that people have is even, you
know, just the fear of evenfacing up to the emotions that they
have.
Yeah.
You know, and that can reallyblock them.
And I find that we're also.
And I hope that this changes.
We put so much energy intotreating the body, and we have a

(07:36):
soul at the heart of us, andit requires as much attention and
nurturing as our body, ourphysical health.
And I think that what you doand what I do in trying to ease people's
pain through.
Through their loss is tendingto the soul and I think the more

(08:00):
that that becomes normalizedin society, you're going to see people
living better and more of anunderstanding of the existence of
their soul.
Not the theory that this soulcould exist, but actually an acknowledgement
that it's there and that it'sa huge part of who they are.

(08:22):
It's literally the only thingleft when we die is the soul.
It requires our attention.
So.
Absolutely.
And you know, I think a lot ofpeople take spirituality as sort
of an intellectual orphilosophical pursuit, but that's
why I sort of, I think itneeds, they need to engage at a,
at a real emotional, visceral level.

(08:42):
And so, you know, the workthat you do, you're connecting like,
you know, deep.
There are deep emotions kindof close to the surface.
And so that, that's evident.
But a lot of people have,they've buried it or some time has
passed and, and they've misseda healing opportunity.
And so that's one thing as well.

(09:04):
A message can be.
It's nice to read books aboutsomething or to think about it and
discuss it philosophically,but if you can, you know, meet somebody
in person and you know,there's an expense and an effort
and an energy involved, butthe amount of the change that it
can make in your life can beso valuable.
Yeah.
So if people can see a mediumor a healer or a spiritual teacher

(09:27):
or go on a retreat and youknow, have 10 days unpaid, but just
get it done and make.
And put yourself in anenvironment with spiritual orientated
people, then you know, thatcan have pay powerful dividends in
the long run.
I like having you as afinance, I like having you on the
show as well.
Well, because people arealways asking me, how do I know who's

(09:48):
any good, you know, as amedium or a healer or you know, past
life regression, who, who do Igo to?
And I always say word ofmouth, pay attention to other people's
experiences.
And that's a good baseline touse when picking somebody that you
vibe with.

(10:08):
Also, them hearing you now andgetting to know you through this
interview is helpful in on anenergy level.
And I don't think peoplerealize they do this.
They probe you and recognizewhether or not they're comfortable
in your energy or not.
And that's what we do when wesee someone's face and we hear their

(10:30):
voice and that's our soulprobing, not our body, you know,
probing the person and saying,yeah, that resonates with me and
he feels like somebody I couldopen up to.
So I just find that reallyinteresting and so I'm really glad
to have you on.
But I always tell people wordof mouth, don't.

(10:51):
And not the person who is thatyou'd be going to necessarily like,
if Madame Delia's out theresaying I'm 100% accurate, come to
me, not her mouth.
Other people.
What was their experience with her?
That's what you want to listen to?

(11:11):
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Picking up that energy is important.
And also that really importantpoint about you do have to feel a
connection and a rapport withthe person you're working with because
if you don't, people then willhold back.
So I talked about, you know,and she was holding back.
So I encouraged her to go tothe emotion and therefore she went
to it.
One of the most painful thingsyou can imagine, witnessing all these

(11:34):
people getting killed in frontof her.
But she felt safe to do thatbecause she was in rapport and trusted
me.
She trusted the process, shetrusted that I trusted her.
Therefore she was able to gothrough it.
But if you go to a healer andyou go sort of half heartedly or
intellectually trying toanalyze them and you don't have a
deep rapport and connectionand trust with them, then you'll

(11:55):
just hold back and then you'llsay, oh, I tried past life but didn't
really work.
Well, you've got to work withit to a bit.
To a bit.
And so it doesn't really happen.
But if I do feel people arejust showing up and going through
the motions, I'll say, are youhere because your wife wanted you
to do it?
Right?
Because if that's it, like golike if that's it, go home and if

(12:16):
your wife's got a problem withyou, send her in and maybe we can
make.
But absolutely they have toreally be there.
Wives often send theirhusbands to people like us so we
can fix them.
And clients also, and Tom andI often point this out, they have
to do the work.
And we tell our clients thatif you don't do the work, don't be

(12:38):
surprised if things don't getbetter in your life.
I'm seeing your higher senseof self, of what you could get to
if you do these things A, Band C, if you choose not to do those
things, your life won't changefor the better and you will not grow.
And so we're always sort ofimpressing that upon people.

(12:59):
You've got to not be lazy inthe process.
You have to take some risksand change things and do things that
aren't familiar to you inorder to get a different result.
Exactly, yeah.
I mean, I've got seven laws inthe book, which is a bit of a grand
title, but it's just sort ofseven observations I made in.

(13:20):
The first one is the law of karma.
And karma just means action.
So we're all taking actions.
Yes, but our actions are oftena bit unskillful and they're caught
in dualistic loops of I'mafraid to do something, so my action
is distracting myself and notdoing it, and that's my action.
But if you can get a healingbreakthrough and you can transcend,
my last law is also it'songoing action.

(13:41):
But it's a totally differentbecause if you take action once you've
had a transcendentbreakthrough, then the actions you
take will be cleansing yourkarma, not creating more.
But absolute action is thebeginning and the end.
Yes, I love, I love that it's.
The battery that makes theprocess run.
It's very important.
So I have a question for youonly because I've worked in crime

(14:06):
and with law enforcement, alot of murder, a lot, you know, serial
rapists, all that.
And with past life regressionfor victims, do victims in your experience,
or maybe you know this, maybeyou don't, but just curious, picking

(14:26):
your brain there, did they, dothey often have a victim story in
a past life or a story thatbleeds into sort of the circumstances
of this life?
Or is that something that ismore man made, not predestined?

(14:49):
Do you know what I'm saying?
I mean, is it something like awound they didn't heal in a past
life that then repeats itselfin this life to heal the wound that
they didn't in the last?
Yep, absolutely.
I've actually got a case studyin the book.
It's kind of a short one, butif I could tell you that one, it
kind of answers that question.
I'd love to hear that.

(15:10):
So cool.
So in this life, her name'sEmmy and she's in her mid-30s, she's
divorced, she's a corporatewoman in San Francisco.
Had no interest inspirituality until a few years earlier
where she suddenly got thismessage that she should use a pendulum
and contact spirits.
But she did so without manyboundaries and started getting some

(15:30):
problems like spiritattachments or some unpleasant spirit
energy.
But she had a lot of otherissues as well with relationships,
boundaries in general.
And so we took her to a pastlife and we just went straight in
again.
She was a woman in her early30s in the US 100 years ago or so.
And we find out in that scene.
She's just been murdered.

(15:51):
She's been stabbed by her husband.
And she's saying, he's angryat me for cheating on him.
She's saying, but the thingis, I didn't cheat on him.
He just thought that I did.
So as she's dying, I say,notice the thoughts as you died.
She says, as I'm dying, I tellhim I loved him.
I told him I'd never cheat onhim, but it didn't matter.
He feels no remorse.

(16:13):
And then she realizes, oh,I've just got something.
My name in that life is Margaret.
And I know that because as hestabbed me, he said, margaret, I
never loved you.
And I'm shocked because Igenuinely loved him, but he didn't
love me at all.
I feel so betrayed.
So I said, well, there's the knife.
But then those stabbing words.
She goes, yeah, that's whathurts very badly, those words.

(16:35):
So she died with this physicalwound, but it's also an emotional
wound.
And that's been haunting herin this life of feeling unlovable.
And she said that in this life.
And her spirit guide's oftenthere, and she's got this wisdom.
She goes, that is that momentin that past life when I started
believing that I couldn't be loved.

(16:55):
And this also made hervulnerable to deceptive or spirits
that would feed off that energy.
Now, there are a number oftechniques that I could use to deal
with this, like breaking thebonds of time, releasing that old
energy.
But I put my little detectivehat on as well, and I sensed there
was a bit more to the story.
So I said, and by now, she'sout of.

(17:17):
She's out of the body, so alittle bit detached from the trauma
and the emotion of it.
And she could review her lifeand she could see things from a higher
perspective of their spirit guide.
And I said, you know, just onemore question.
What made you think that youwere cheating on him?
He said, oh, well, he heardabout it from a friend, while it
was a man who said that he washis friend but lied about him behind

(17:39):
his back.
So I said, that man could havebeen lying to him.
So he said, yes.
And so you did love yourhusband, right?
And your husband felt deceivedand betrayed by you.
So didn't he commit a crime of passion?
Isn't that the act of aheartbroken lover?
She said, oh, I see it now.
That's right.
He did love me, despite whathe said.

(18:00):
And as I opened that up, shesaid, I can see more of that past
life now after my Death.
I see that he's crying.
He feels so bad.
He can't believe what he did.
He did love me.
He's saying, what have I done?
He feels so guilty, he made a mistake.
He ends up dying alone.
And that's what he always feared.
He was afraid to die and haveno love around him.

(18:21):
But that's exactly whathappened to him.
Abandonment issues that he had already.
And so he kills the one personthat would have never left him.
That's sad.
Yeah.
I mean, he pays a price in away as well.
And so, yeah, so it issomething I see that, you know, I've
had people that are murderedand I find and I also have people
that murder.

(18:41):
And you sort of go through theprocess where they have to learn,
thou shalt not kill.
Because if you're slittingyour throat, you're somebody else's
throat, you're slitting your own.
Right?
And funnily enough, and that'swhy it's a spiritual law in the Bible,
because we have to learn that.
Because people think, hey,here's a quick life hack to get what
you want.
Kill somebody else and taketheir stuff.

(19:03):
I mean, they literally kind ofthink that might work, but then they
realize karma may be a thingand whoops.
At least I've learned aspiritual lesson, though.
I was wondering if we aresupposed to see both sides.
And I'll just use this as anexample of where I'm going with this.
So I always played cowboys andIndians when I was a little girl.

(19:25):
And I was always a cowboy.
And cops and robbers, I wasalways the cop.
You know, like born withsavior complex.
Always.
And weird murder dreams sinceI was seven, you know, of.
Of not getting there in timeto save the child.
That was always what I wastrying to do.

(19:48):
So I do believe that wasbrought in.
But I always felt like I washere before.
Late 1800s, Tombstone,Arizona, which I've been to.
I was a man.
I had a gun on my hip.
I'm still kind of a guy.
And I have guts.
Like, I go to the range.
Like, it's just who I am.

(20:08):
I grew up in Arizona, born andraised, fifth generation.
But then I ran my 23andMe DNAa few years ago, and it turns out
that I'm 20% American Indian.
So I thought I've been herebefore, and I probably would have

(20:30):
been the person that wouldn'thave been friends with the Indians.
And then I'm born into thislifetime and my dad would have been
half American Indian, and mynana was 100% so they were Pasqua
Yaqui and my grandmother grewup in what is a pueblo.

(20:51):
And it's just.
I just don't think that's a coincidence.
I feel like there has to besome overlapping, maybe something
from a past lifetime that Ididn't understand that I had to come
back in this lifetime and finda balance between the two existences.
So do you find that it'scyclical with people, maybe even

(21:17):
somebody who killed in a pastlife can sometimes be a victim or
put in a victim's shoes in an,in a now lifetime, like in a current
one and vice versa, that rolescan just go back and forth until
you have a betterunderstanding of, of the core of
who we all are regardless ofspace and time.

(21:43):
Yeah, amazing question andinsight because that's exactly what
we see at a micro level.
If you are in conflict with acertain people, you'll often find
that you've got a past lifeon, on the other side of the, the
equation.
And so absolutely we findthere are repeating patterns.

(22:04):
Maybe you just keep doing thesame thing until you learn.
But oftentimes they're abalancing pattern.
So if you do it to them, theydo it to you and you can go back
and forth until someone breaksthe loop.
But actually it does remind meand I love the fact you bring up
just sort of the infinite inthe end because that was one experience
that I had that I think reallyhelped me as a healer because I had
a.

(22:25):
I was into.
I was meditating one nightafter I did half a dozen ten day
meditation retreats.
And you get some powerfulblissful energies occasionally and
maybe some Kundalini stuff,particularly a girlfriend that I
had.
So that's how I heard about it.
But one time I couldn't sleepafter the seventh day of a meditation
retreat.
I felt a powerful energy thatI'd felt before, but this time it

(22:47):
felt too much and almost scary.
And at that time I went backto the bed.
But before I could even sleep,I went into a vivid lucid dream and
I started seeing myself in apast life where I felt myself to
be an African woman in a hut,afraid of something that's coming
with dread.
A warrior comes through the door.

(23:08):
Cuts me to pieces.
SCENE STOPS I'm in a man's body.
I'm thinking, great, I'mpowerful, I'm going to be able to
protect myself.
But I play it forward and I'mmoving towards a hut.
I go in, I kill a lady.
I'm like, oh shit, yeah, I amthe killer and the killed.
I feel the fear of the woman.

(23:29):
I feel the power of the guy.
But I think being the killerhelped me to feel less of a victim
when I was being killed andhelped me to be less judgmental towards
the killer.
And then as I kept on going,it seemed like it went on all night,
but I just remembered it feltlike it was kind of me.
But after a while, it felt universal.
Like I went through.

(23:49):
I felt that I was relivingpast lives in every continent, as
every ethnicity, on both sidesof all dualities.
And as I went through that,gradually after time, I felt less
fear as I was being killed,and I felt a sadness towards them.
But as I felt the power of theguy killing, I also felt his pain
and that he's killing becausehis loved ones are being killed.

(24:13):
And as I realized that it wasan abuse of power, and it really
wasn't power, it was just pain.
And I realized they're bothjust coming from pain.
And in that moment, I feltjust a visceral sense of compassion.
It's a nice word, but I didn'tknow what it felt until that moment.
And in that moment, it endedthe whole looping play of human suffering.
And it felt to me that it wasable to stop.

(24:34):
And it felt like an infinitesoul energy.
And I woke up in the morning,I felt infinite consciousness was
in my finite body.
And I had.
I can't say I had a goodfeeling because that has a bad or
a bliss, because that sort ofcan come and go, but just felt like
an otherworldly equanimitythat transcended a feeling.
It was more of a state that Icould only really describe as perfection
or completion.

(24:56):
And so it's something where,as I witnessed what looked like real
suffering, a deeper part of mefelt that inherently there isn't
a good or bad.
It's almost like I zoomed inat an atomic level.
All there is, is just anelectron and neutron energy.
It froze and there was spacearound it, and it was an impermanent
building block.
And there's choices.
So maybe that cycle would endwith you being in the position of

(25:20):
power and choosing not to killthat person.
You know, it could evolve into that.
Do you know?
Has anyone.
Obviously, I'm.
I was interning to be ahomicide prosecutor.
I was going to put the badguys away.
And that, you know, that wasmy path when all of this.

(25:41):
And then medium happened, andthen it.
I was too far down thespiritual path to ever go back.
And it was clear that I.
I was where I was supposed to be.
But has anybody ever done astudy and done some past life regression
methods with criminals anddone a case study on that?

(26:02):
I think that'd be fascinatingfor people with violent tendencies
to see if there's some commonlink from the past for them or if
most of that is learnedcircumstances from childhood.
You know, just to see ifthere's some.
Something that can be releasedin them that is creating the anger

(26:26):
that, the underlying angerthat they have.
Yeah, I'm not aware of thosekind of studies.
I'm just weird.
Don't mind me, Mark.
Okay.
We, you know, actually do havea case study in the book of a guy
who was viciously bullied in the.
In this life.
I mean, viciously, no one would.

(26:48):
And he contemplated killinghimself or killing others.
So he wasn't a murderer, buthe kind of wanted to be.
Got it.
And he suffered.
Yeah, well, I murdered someone else.
And he literally was saving upmoney as a kid to put a hit out on
his bullies.
Wow.
And so he didn't go throughwith it, but he had this rage.
And I think a lot of have ushave this rage in us.

(27:10):
So it's kind of, I mean,people may, even if they have killed
people, they probably don'twant to tell me about it, but they
do kill people in past lives.
And he even admitted, I wasreally planning to kill them in this
life, but I didn't.
But I still have this feeling.
And we found out that in apast life he had killed somebody.
And so he had this, he hadthis fear in him and this rage.

(27:36):
And he was wanting to be ableto deal with it in a better way.
And so in a past life he'd hada similar rage and he had killed
and murdered somebody.
But that's where he learned.
And that was literally the onewhere I put a contract on someone.
They were killed.
This was in France.
He had to flee to Holland.
We find that he's sitting in abar and someone comes up behind him

(27:56):
and slits his throat.
And what he said was, as hewas dying, I said, what are you thinking
feeling?
He goes, there's just aresignation, I can't fight.
It's done.
And he goes, you know, it'sall part of the game.
I killed him and I got killed.
But he said, honestly, effort,I still win because I live longer.

(28:16):
That's what his past life selfwas thinking.
But in hypnosis, the clientjust sort of laughed and said, geez,
I was so stupid.
So that's that.
I mean, that's that reallymakes you think.
I mean, how much people carryinside of them that we don't even
know is an underlying issuefor us and the path we take.

(28:41):
I, I counsel so many women whothey get so comfortable being with
the guy that is abusive or whomistreats them because it's familiar,
it's what they know, it's whatthey feel they deserve from their
own childhoods, perhaps howtheir fathers even treated them.

(29:01):
And they get in this cycle ofit and are unable to break that cycle
or unwilling to break that cycle.
The ones that do change their lives.
So with on a soul level withwhat you're doing with this past
life regression, it just seemsas though there's this other whole

(29:22):
other layer of spiritualitythat I don't think is as tapped as
it's going to be in 20 years.
I think more people will be,this will be more common to find.
But I'm so happy to let mylisteners know that this is a method
that may help them unravelsome of the mystery around the pain,

(29:44):
the anger and the fear thathas been in them since childhood.
And with the only way I canshow myself as an example of that
it is possible to break it isI've always had that savior complex
to save children.

(30:05):
And then I took the path to spirituality.
And my first case was in Texasand the Texas Rangers had called
me.
The first episode of Medium isactually legit that happened.
But I wasn't on a private jet.
I flew commercial anyhow, sothey called me to come out for a
missing child's case.

(30:25):
And I went out there for thatcase and I met a sheriff that I was
riding with and he was tellingme about a thing called an Amber
Alert named after Amber Hagerman.
That was a little girl thatwas raped, tortured and murdered.
And I came back to Arizona andI said we have to have this here.

(30:48):
And I beat on so many doors,sent so many emails, approached every
politician, every powerfulperson that could have made it happen
and had just doors slammed inmy face.
Finally I got one politician, J.D.
hayworth, he was a congressmanto listen.
And I ended up serving on atask force to design the Amber Alert

(31:14):
for Arizona to help to extractchildren while they're in route after
being abducted to.
Because that's the only timeyou have.
Because they're killed in sucha small amount of time from the time
they're abducted.
I think the average is usuallyaround five hours from the time they're
taken to killed.

(31:34):
So it needs to happen quickly.
And they're usually removedfrom the area they're abducted.
From.
So the Amber Alert actuallycommunicates with the signs on the
freeways.
You may have it where you're at.
I'm not sure, but it's so helpful.
And it's got license platesand description of the vehicle and
the child.
And they've been able to stoppeople who have these children in

(31:59):
their car, their vehicle intime and save them.
And for me, that quietedsomething in little Alison from when
I was a child that you savedthe children.
Like, I did something that wasable to help, and I've done that
with, you know, telling lawenforcement where to find certain

(32:23):
children that were missing.
But this is on a grander levelwhere I don't have to do it individually,
and it's in place.
And that just.
It really calmed something inme that, okay, that.
That changed things, that madethings better and saved lives.
So it's possible, but you haveto be in the space of being uncomfortable.

(32:46):
It wasn't.
I wasn't comfortable havingdoors slammed in my face and being
ignored and having my emails,you know, never responded to, and
they made me feel a littlekind of nuts running around creating
so much noise, trying to getthis child abduction alert system
implemented.

(33:07):
But it was all worth it.
See, but if I hadn't done itbecause I was worried about having
the door slammed in my face orworried about the rejection, it wouldn't
have happened then.
And it wasn't done on anational level for like a year or
so after that.
So then that first year ofkids wouldn't have been pulled back

(33:29):
from danger.
And so I felt it was all worth it.
So go outside of your comfortzone, people.
It's the only way to make bigdifferences in your life and in the
world.
And it brings a kind of a meaning.
So one girl did die, butbecause of that, this alert system

(33:50):
gets put in, and therefore alot of children are saved from this.
Yeah.
And so I think that can bringcomfort to the person who feels that
there was.
What we often, sometimes seein between lives is that there are
some really brave, veryadvanced souls almost know this kind
of thing can happen.
Right.
And think if I can go in andincarnate, and I may have to have

(34:12):
a short life, and the peoplearound me may have difficulties.
Right.
But there can be atranscendent part where you realize
this is for an ultimate, longbenefit of many people.
And they sort of do that outof compassion, right?
Yeah, pretty much.
I mean, but, yeah, out of compassion.
And so for the people that arearound those people, I mean, I just
say to them, it's you've gotan amazingly brave and advanced soul

(34:36):
that comes to do somethinglike that.
And it's a blessing to bearound them.
And I hope they feel, youknow, understand, you know, what
a powerful spiritual act it isfor the souls that choose to go through
those kind of incarnations andwhat a benefit it has for so many
others.
I can't think of a better wayto end the show than that.
That was really perfect.

(34:56):
Yes.
Leaving it about the victimsand their soul's journey and their
bravery and the sacrifice.
And people often wonder if weagree to come into this life and
go through these painful experiences.
And from what I understand,and I mean, what I've learned, I

(35:17):
think many in the spiritualcommunity have, we do sign up for
that.
I'll go back for 10 years andI'll end up saving a bunch of other
children.
Sure.
I want to be an inspiration.
I want to do something thatmatters, maybe that they weren't
able to do in another life.
And I was out there to lookfor Opal Jennings when I was being

(35:40):
told about Amber Hagerman.
And they need to do somethingabout all of that as well.
But that's another show.
So where can people find youif they want to study with you or
book a session with you?
Yeah.
Website is Past Life Awakening Institute.

(36:01):
YouTube is past life Awakening.
Instagram, Past Life Awakening.
They're the big three.
Don't be surprised at how manyof my listeners are going to reach
out to you.
And they will reach out, butthey're all wonderful and I know
that they appreciate you being here.
So thank you for enlighteningmy audience.
I really enjoyed our conversation.

(36:22):
We'll have to have you back.
Have another talk.
I would love that.
And thank you to my listeners.
Tune in next week for a freshepisode of the Dead Life.
I'm Alison Dubois.
This is the Dead Life.
And to all of my believers outthere, don't stop believing.
Join us next week on the deadlife.
And don't forget to subscribenow to get notified of every new

(36:43):
episode.
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