NATO ‘one step away’ from sending troops to Ukraine – Orban
The leaders of the EU and NATO are potentially ready to deploy forces to Ukraine, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban claimed on Friday. Brussels sees the conflict between Moscow and Kiev as its “own” and is failing to consider the risks arising from its ever-deeper involvement, he warned.
The mood of EU leaders is “one of war,” Orban told a gathering of his Fidesz Party ahead of the EU Parliament elections. “There is a pro-war majority in Brussels today,” he said, adding that the bloc’s politics “are dominated by the logic of war.” EU politicians are already so invested in the conflict that they fail to see the flaws in their strategy, the prime minister argued.
Despite all the “money and weapons, the situation is not improving [for Kiev], in fact, it is getting worse… We are one step away from the West sending troops to Ukraine,” Orban warned. “This is a vortex of war that can drag Europe into its depths. Brussels is playing with fire.”
Budapest will not let itself be dragged into the hostilities, and “will not enter… the war on either side,” the prime minister pledged, adding that his country “must stand for peace” everywhere, including in “Brussels, Washington, the UN and NATO.”
“We don’t want war, and we don’t want Hungary to become a toy of great powers again,” Orban stated.
The idea of sending NATO troops to Ukraine has been repeatedly floated by Western leaders. French President Emmanuel Macron first raised it in February, saying “all options are possible.”
Macron has since doubled down, stating that there are “no limits” to support for Kiev. His words initially alarmed some NATO allies, who quickly denied having such plans. However, the French leader did receive backing from certain members of the US-led military bloc.
In March, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said Russia’s military operation in Ukraine requires an “asymmetric escalation” on the part of the West. Warsaw’s top diplomat also called the idea of a NATO presence in Ukraine “not unthinkable.”
Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur said earlier in April that every NATO member already has military personnel in Ukraine operating as advisers or instructors. Last week, former British minister of state for the armed forces James Heappey told Sky News that sending NATO forces to Ukraine did “deserve consideration.”
Moscow has repeatedly warned that deploying NATO troops in Ukraine would bring the US-led bloc to the brink of a full-blown conflict with Russia. President Vladimir Putin stated in March that it would be “one step shy of a full-scale World War III.”
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…The differing paths that are right ahead
…….future lives
This is a massive update of an article I did back in August after reading this book online:
https://archive.org/details/massdreamsoffutu0000snow/page/70/mode/2up
What struck me was that while dates may be off, the general gist or drift of things is credible. There are four scenarios for earth, three of them nasty and in perfect harmony with where we see things heading under jew tyranny.
There is one scenario of ecological disaster, and Dane Wigington of www.geoengineeringwatch.org has a show every week on this. But he ascribes this catastrophe not just to typical earthling greed for profits but to deliberate action by the Deep State, using HAARP and chemtrails, to cause an environmental collapse — with droughts, floods, earthquakes and famines — and thus achieving the jew goal of a 90% depopulation, which was Commandment One on the Georgia Guidestones.
This evil Georgia Guidestones structure was blown up in 2022.
Actually ALL FOUR scenarios show a major reduction in the population, even the happy outcome, with vast forests returning and almost no people.
My assumption, since this applies also to the “optimistic” case, is that millions of us must and will die liberating this planet from Jewry.
But that would be only just, because in many lives we let this jew thing fester. Jesus, King Louis VIII of France, Martin Luther, Henry Ford, Adolf Hitler and George Lincoln Rockwell — all world-famous men — sounded the alarm, and nothing was DONE.
So it would be despicable, immature whining in the eyes of God to complain about our lot. WE, in earlier lives, instead of acting, just got drunk and ignored the growing menace.
You might remember this screenshot from my April 20 2015 Epstein-VIP pedophile video:
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.https://johndenugent.com/images/ah-sierra-eagleson-viva-la-vida-when-i-ruled-the-world.mp4
Most of these scenes with the public were spontaneous and not using actors. (Note that ALL the muslims gave Hitler a thumbs up or sieg-heil.)
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But now NS must be for all Whites, and benefit all races, because we all suffer from the same malevolent jew.
We need a world without IsraHell, without war, without poverty, without pandemics, lies, despair, suicide, drug addiction, homeless shantytowns, human feces on the sidewalk, cruelty, migrant violence, divorce, broken homes, and the tears of bereaved mothers and all the sexually molested children.
Parkland High School, Florida moms after the mass shooting committed by a hispanic Antifa
We need a world without jews.
Hail the great AMERICAN, Rockwell, who gave his life for this day!
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In scenario one, earth is so toxic that people have to live on space stations, eating artificial food, wearing the same silver jumpsuit every day, and slogging away for The Man in a cold, unfeeling, artificial environment.
Nature is GONE. We killed it, or let the jews kill it.
The second scenario is also based on a polluted planet, but not with orbiting space stations. There are cold, underground cities on this earth, and some cities on the surface, but under protective domes. Most of earth is uninhabitable, and the air fatal to breathe.
Three: there is an all-out nuclear war, with survivors living as hunter-gatherers in a return of the Stone Age.
Finally, there is one bright scenario where Whites stop being either human wolves or human sheep, and earth becomes a place of spiritual growth, beautiful, and happy.
This is where I come in.
A comrade in California sent me in August $100 and this legendary masterpiece of a book.
The book is basically about how physicists at the highest level have been realizing since 1900 that this physical universe is a very real-seeming construct, a perfect illusion. It is an elaborate game with rules which we agree to play along with when we incarnate here — to spiritually grow through choosing a life of challenges.
All this is in harmony with what I said in another life:
Life is struggle, and if you refuse to struggle, you don’t deserve to live.
Anyway, in chapter 7, “Time Out of Mind,” the author, Michael Talbot (a Norman name, btw), says that, as I stated already above, truly renowned textbooks of therapeutic hypnosis for psychiatrists warn that the professional hypnotist should not be shocked if a hypnosis session — designed to unearth and address early childhood traumas — glides right over into the person’s traumas from
PREVIOUS LIVES.
Talbot writes, on pp213-14
Dr. Joel Whitton, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto [Canada] Medical School, has used hypnosis to study what people unconsciously know about themselves. […]
An expert in clinical hypnosis, he also hold a degree in neurobiology, and asks [patients] about their past — their distant past, to be exact.
For the last several decades, Whitton has been quietly gathering evidence suggestive of reincarnation. […]
The main thrust of Whitton’s hypnosis research is based on a simple and startling fact. When individuals are hypnotized, they often remember what appear to be memories of a previous existence.
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For 500 years the German Aryans waged war on the Roman Aryans. I visited a battlefield in the south of France near the commune of Pourrières (https://www.reconstitution-romaine.com/pourrières%202013.html) where the germanic Ambrones and Teutons fought the Roman general Marius, but despite two previous victories got slaughtered . From thousands of sun-bleached thigh bones, the local farmers in Pourrière literally made fences.
Why, O Romans, did you not stop trying to conquer this gifted Germanic nation and enslave them? Why not instead just let them come in, one by one, or in families or small groups, as the incredibly valuable nordic, white immigrants they could have been for you? (Begging Germans to immigrate was what, millennia later, the Americans, Russians, Brazilians, and other white countries would do.)
Even Emperor Augustus’s own bodyguards consisted of Germans!
The guards of the Pope to this day, and of the Bourbon kings of France, were German-Swiss!
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List of Roman-German wars and battles
- Cimbrian War (113–101 BC)
- Battle of Noreia (112 BC)[1]
- Battle of Agen (107 BC)[2]
- Battle of Arausio (105 BC)
- Battle of Aquae Sextiae (102 BC)
- Battle of Vercellae (101 BC)[3]
- Battle of Vosges (58 BC)
- Battle of the Sabis (57 BC)
- Clades Lolliana (16 BC)
- Early Imperial campaigns in Germania (12 BC–AD 16)
- Battle of Arbalo (11 BC)
- Battle of the Lupia River (11 BC)
- Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (9 AD)
- Campaign against the Marsi (14)
- Campaign against the Chatti (15)
- Campaign against the Bructeri (15)
- Battle at Pontes Longi (15)
- Battle of Idistaviso (16)
- Battle of the Angrivarian Wall (16)
- Campaign against the Chatti (16)
- Battle of Baduhenna Wood (28)
- Revolt of the Batavi (69–70)
- Domitian’s Campaign against the Chatti (82)
- Clashes along the Danube (92)
- Marcomannic Wars (166–180)
- Battle of Carnuntum (170)
- Crisis of the Third Century (235–284)
- Battle at the Harzhorn (c. 235)
- Battle of Nicopolis ad Istrum (250)
- Battle of Beroe (250)
- Battle of Philippopolis (250)
- Battle of Abrittus (251)
- Siege of Thessalonica (254)
- Battle of Thermopylae (254)
- Battle of Mediolanum (259)
- Battle of Augusta Vindelicorum (260)
- Siege of Mainz (268)
- Battle of Lake Benacus (268)
- Battle of Naissus (269)
- Battle of Placentia (271)
- Battle of Fano (271)
- Battle of Pavia (271)
- Battle of Lingones (298)
- Battle of Vindonissa (298)
- German and Sarmatian campaigns of Constantine (306–336)
- Siege of Senonae (356)
- Siege of Autun (356)
- Battle of Durocortorum (356)
- Battle of Brumath (356)
- Battle of Argentoratum (357)
- Great Conspiracy (367–368)
- Battle of Solicinium (368)
- Battle of Noviodunum (369)
- Gothic War (376–382)
- Battle of Argentovaria (378)
- Massacre of Thessalonica (390)
- Battle of the Frigidus (394)
- Gothic War (401–403)
- Siege of Asti (402)
- Battle of Pollentia (402)
- Battle of Verona (403)
- Battle of Faesulae (406)
- Crossing of the Rhine (406)
- Sack of Rome (410)
- Siege of Hippo Regius (430–431)
- Battle of Narbonne (436)
- Battle of Vicus Helena (c. 448)
- Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (451)
- Sack of Aquileia (452)
- Sack of Rome (455)
- Battle of Aylesford (455)
- Battle of Órbigo (456)
- Battle of Arelate (458)
- Battle of Cartagena (461)
- Battle of Orleans (463)
- Battle of Bassianae (468)
- Battle of Cap Bon (468)
- Battle of Bolia (469)
- Battle of Déols (c. 469)
- Battle of Arles (471)
- Battle of Ravenna (476)
- Vandalic War (533–534)
- Battle of Ad Decimum (533)
- Battle of Tricamarum (533)
- Gothic War (535–554)
- Siege of Naples (536)
- Siege of Rome (537–538)
- Battle of Treviso (541)
- Siege of Verona (541)
- Battle of Faventia (542)
- Battle of Mucellium (542)
- Siege of Naples (543)
- Sack of Rome (546)
- Siege of Rome (549–550)
- Battle of Sena Gallica (551)
- Battle of Taginae (552)
- Battle of Mons Lactarius (553)
- Battle of the Volturnus (554)
- Byzantine–Lombard wars (568–750)
As I recently blogged, some incarnations we have were perhaps relatively happy, and often we have a fondness for certain things or people who are connected to an earlier life.
You may meet someone and feel an instant bond. (This is how I was with Margaret. Within one week of us meeting on April 20, 2005 she had moved in with me.)
The phenomenon [of hypnotized patients recalling details of previous incarnations] is widely recognized, even by skeptics.
For example, the psychiatry textbook Trauma, Trance and Transformation warns fledgling hypnotherapists not to be surprised if such memories surface spontaneously in their hyponotized patients.
The author of the text [Edelstine] rejects the idea of rebirth, but notes that such memories can have remarkable healing potential nevertheless.
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(Yes, Edelstien was a jew, but so was the doctor who, in my last life, cared deeply for my mother Klara with her awful breast cancer that finally killed her. I said at the Berghof: “If every jew were an Edeljude [noble jew] like Dr. Bloch, there would be no need for antisemitism.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduard_Bloch) )
Talbot then says, on pages 224-225, that under hypnosis patients also describe one of four quite different futured for the earth, two of them being bleak and one extremely grim — Humans are nuked back to the Stone Age.
In other words, the majority of earthlings of all races stay, to be frank, even as the curse of the ego becomes obvious to us all, selfish assholes, which is what the majority is now, denying reality on a daily basis.
Yes, they reject any truths that could end up getting them ostracized, shunned, fired or arrested, whether about jews, the Holohoax, race, the Covid clot-shot, or other hot-button jew LIES such as Putin-is-out-to-reconquer-Europe-for-a-neo-Soviet-empire.
And so the sheeple get one of three miserable futures which they richly deserve based on their thoughts, words and deeds:
MORE pain, more enslavement, more exploitation, and just existence — lives of meaningless drudgery ending in a lonely death.
“Life’s a bitch and then ya die.”
So Earth stays, in three of the four scenarios, the dismal trailer-park planet of this solar system.
Note, however, that in one of the four scenarios, earthlings do awaken, evolve, and our earth becomes a wonderful, peaceful garden planet where people love and cooperate with each other, embracing the fact that we are here to change, grow and blossom, partly by sincere honesty and repentance regarding our flaws.
People are happy!
I guess that if you have never been to a truly warm Christian congregation that is imbued with “God is love” (whatever flaws may exist in their doctrines, such as the core Pauline-Christian flaw of judeophilia) you have never felt this kind of atmosphere.
I have, though, by having been a Jehovah’s Witness long ago, 1970-75, and from having visited Mormon congregations. (and Margi had the same experience at a Mormon “ward” in Asheville, North Carolina,where a love buzz is palpable in the air….). I also experienced this with Mel-Gibson-type Latin-Mass Catholics….. a wave of love you can feel, and with beautifully behaved children all about (often, as I noted, with above-average looks).
I am talking LARGE white families (4-6 kids), and husbands and wives who clearly, visibly are close and love each other.
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If you reject all this as superstition, as “Christian bullshit,” and grumble that “Jesus was a god-damn jew, too” (which I sincerely and categorically refute, and I did so in my last life, too) then you just have never experienced WHY Christianity took off…. It was that agapé feeling of fellowship, friendship, caring, compassion, and a roll-up-your-sleeves desire to actually help a “brother” or “sister” in need with some practical problem they may have.
Maybe another congregation member needs a babysitter, or a ride to the doctor, or their lawn mowed when they fall ill, or a brake job, or help in moving.
I saw JWs a hundred times help others in practical ways. It was beautiful to see both loving speech and loving deeds. With the Jehovah people, over a five-year period I also saw Blacks and Whites truly getting along perfectly despite all the real differences between our races.
So I have experienced MASSES of humans (people just like you and me) who are getting along great.
So yes, there could be a great reform of humanity, and then this beautiful planet would also have beautiful behavior, attractive cities, lovely gardens and parks, and humans who live 130-180 years or more, growing all the time. And no one dies miserable and alone, but passes over while surrounded by their friends and children.
After showing you this scan from The Holographic Universe, I am typing out for you the actual passage.
This excerpt recounts the findings of a book by Helen Stewart Wambach, PhD (1925-85, a San-Francisco-based psychologist) and her colleague, psychologist Chet Snow, entitled Mass Dreams of the Future:
Another past-life researcher who turned up evidence suggestive that the mind has a hand in creating one’s destiny was the late San Francisco-based psychologist, Helen Wambach Ph.D. [photo r.]
Wambach’s approach was to hypnotize groups of people in small workshops, regress them to specific time periods, and ask them a predetermined list of [practical] questions about their sex, clothing styles, occupation, utensils used in eating, and so on.
[JdN: To aid analysis, subjects were hypnotically regressed and guided to choose a past life from a selection of time periods, such as 2000 BC [New Stone Age], 500 BC [Iron Age], 25 AD [Rome], 1200 AD [Middle Ages], 1500 AD [Renaisance] or 1850 AD [early modern, with cities, trains, and industries.]
Over the course of her 29-year investigation of the past-life phenomenon, she hypnotized literally thousands of individuals, and amassed some impressive findings.
One criticism that is leveled against reincarnation is that people only seem to remember past lives as famous or historical personages.
Wambach, however, found that more than 90% of her subjects recalled past lives as peasants, laborers, farmers, and primitive food gatherers.
Less that 10% remembered lives as aristocrats, and none remembered being anyone famous, a finding that argues against the notion that past-life memories are fantasies.
Her subjects were also extraordinarily accurate when it came to historical details, even obscure ones. For instance, when people remembered lives in the 1700s, they described using a three-pronged fork to eat their evening meals, but after 1790 they described most forks as having four prongs, an observation that correctly reflects the historical evolution of the fork.
Subjects were equally accurate when it came to describing clothing and footwear, types of foods eaten, et cetera.
Wambach discovered that she could also progress people to future lives. Indeed, her subjects’ descriptions of coming centuries were so fascinating that she conducted a major future-life progression project in France and the United States.
Unfortunately, she passed away [at 60] before completing the study, but psychologist Chet Snow, a former colleague of Wambach’s, carried on her work, and recently published the results in a book entitled Mass Dreams of the Future.
When the reports of the 2,500 people who participated in the project were tallied, several interesting features emerged.
First, virtually all of the respondents agreed that the population of the earth had decreased dramatically.
Many did not even find themselves in physical bodies at all in the various future time periods specified, and those who did noted that the population was much smaller than it is today.
In addition, the respondents divided up neatly into four different categories, each relating a different future.
Chet Snow
Chet and his wife Kallista, who is from France, where Chet lived in 1985; they have resided for years in Sedona, Arizona
One group described a joyless, cold and sterile future in which [presumably earth had been ruined by some ecological disaster, and so] most people lived up in space stations, wore silvery suits, and ate synthetic food.
Another type, the “hi-tech urbanites,” described a bleak, mechanical future in which people lived in underground cities or cities enclosed in domes or giant bubbles. However,this may be the same overall scenario –with some up in spaceships and others down on a polluted planet or deep underground in it.
A whopping 15% died from accidentally inhaling toxic outside air, and
some were executed as rebels.
No one mentioned drinking natural water; everything was processed. One could see outside the dome a landscape that was rocky, hot, barren and extremely bright….not inviting.
Emotionally, there was little warmth. Buildings were utilitarian, and there was little art or literature. People ate in mess halls, and the food was bland cubes of something, like “sticks of butter,” or a pink paste out of a tube.
Still another group reported living happier and more natural lives in natural settings, in harmony with one another, and in dedication to learning and spiritual development.
There were far fewer people than now, about 5% of the current population, no more vast cities, and huge forests and nature areas that seemed a bit lonely.
Some areas inhabited in that future could not be identified, as if they were still underwater in our time. (This would be nothing new; there are parts of Poland, for example, where if you dig into the soil, you will find huge shark teeth from back when most of what is now called Poland was part of the Baltic Sea.)
Women in the happy scenario seemed to wear robes and men tunics, in a seeming return to Greco-Roman fashions.
They lived and dined together as families, eating fruit, vegetables and fish.
People died in their nineties, at will, tired of their aging bodies, and feeling it was simply time to move on. They were surrounded by many warm friends when they left their bodies.
Type 4,. however, described themselves as post-disaster survivors living in a world that had been ravaged by some global, possibly nuclear disaster.
People in this group lived in homes ranging from urban ruins to literal caves to isolated farms, wore plain, hand-sewn clothing that often was made of fur, and obtained much of their food from hunting.
So the jews turn mankind’s clock back a thousand years…..but is kill-or-be-killed the right path to enlightenment? In warlord-world, it is the most brutal and treacherous who will rise to the top, and then breed children with THEIR DNA.
….More on Helen Wambach
The Pioneering Work of Dr. Helen Wambach
GROUP HYPNOSIS AS A METHODOLOGY TO RECALL PAST-LIVES – DAVID PYE (IS.32)
Home JRT Article The Pioneering Work of Dr. Helen Wambach: Group Hypnosis as a Methodology to Recall Past-Lives – David Pye (Is.32)
by David Pye
Abstract—In this article, David Pye begins in an engaging style by introducing his own journey of curiosity around the notions of life, death and the afterlife and how his encounter with the work of Dr Helen Wambach further illuminated his ideas.
David then explains the prevailing culture within which Dr Wambach’s work was embedded before explaining the research methodologies she developed as she sought to understand whether or not past life memories were merely fantasies or had a basis in reality.
The article then progresses towards Helen’s findings via an interesting selection of research participants descriptions associated with her specific questioning techniques, and historical graphs, before sharing Dr Wambach’s ultimate conclusions that past-life memories are facts, not fictions.
Introduction
As a child growing up in the 1950’s I was like many other boys seeking some kind of adventure, so I joined the Boy Scouts. Our scout hut was the church hall, and part of the deal of joining was an expectation to attend Sunday school.
This I duly did, and was surprised to be told that we all go to heaven when we die. Even at my young age, this seemed rather strange, as I surmised that this meant that heaven must be absolutely packed full with all the billions and billions of people that had died and gone to heaven.
Even more packed out if we include all the pets that apparently also join us in heaven!
How does God keep a handle on all these dead people, and what do they do all day, especially as they seemed destined to live up in heaven forever?
It seemed to me that it must get pretty boring up there! It also seemed very unfair that some people lived long happy lives on earth, whilst others suffered under famine and war or died at a very young age.
None of it made much sense.
I sought an answer from my Sunday school teacher, who could only tell me that “God moves in mysterious ways,” but he had a plan for everyone, so it would all work out. That, of course, was a remarkably unconvincing answer, but it was the best I could get.
It was some years later that I happened on a book about Buddhism and the concept of reincarnation. “Ah”, I thought, “This makes far more sense.” Humans die, their souls go to heaven, and are reborn again to live another life. The recycling of souls appeared to be a very efficient mechanism and evened out all the inequalities in the world.
Bad people get reborn into lives of suffering as a punishment, whereas good people get to be reborn into happy lives as a reward. A satisfactory concept all round, I concluded.
To be honest, though, reincarnation still seemed to involve a lot of suffering, even for folks who live apparently happy lives, who still have a fair share of worry and stress, too.
“There must be more to this”, I pondered thoughtfully. Buddhism does explain that the aim is to get off this continuous cycle of death and rebirth through meditation practice and to ultimately reach a state of “Samadhi” where you no longer get reborn.
“What happens then?” I wondered. Do souls just hang around for ever in this Samadhi state in some Buddhist heaven? Also, what happens when people die — are their souls shoved straight back down into a baby? Who decides whether you have been a good bunny or a bad bunny?
There were still many unanswered questions.
Over the following years I read many books on the topic of death. I particularly liked the spiritualist approach where dead people would communicate through mediums and say what a splendid place they were in. The dead lived in houses the same as on earth, but everywhere was clean and perfect, and if they wanted anything they could, with a bit of effort, just visualise it and it would appear.
They also had lots of other friends and family members who had passed over to keep them company, and everyone was exceptionally friendly. This all sounded rather nice, I thought.
It was in the late 1970’s that I came across two books by Dr Helen Wambach. Both published in 1979 ‘Reliving Past Lives’ and ‘Life Before Life.’ These two books were a complete game-changer for me, and for the first time I felt I had an understanding around the mechanism of reincarnation.
Allow me to explain what is so different and so ground-breaking about Dr Wambach’s research, and her unique approach to the topic. But first we need to consider the environment in which Dr Wambach started her research.
Background Environment of Dr Wambach’s Work
Back in 1950’s America there was a spectacular case of reincarnation which seemed to excite the nation. In 1952, US Housewife Virginia Tighe was hypnotically regressed by amateur hypnotist (((Morey Bernstein))). Virginia was taken back to her childhood, then back through her birth and death to what appeared to be a previous life. This past life was as Bridey Murphy in Cork, Ireland during 1798 to 1864.
Under hypnosis, Virginia revealed many facts about her life as Bridey which were later verified by investigations in Ireland. A vast amount of information was found, and it was claimed as ‘proof’ of reincarnation. Virginia had never left the US and had certainly not been to Ireland. Bernstein wrote a book called ‘The Search for Bridey Murphy’ (1956), which was later made into a film by Paramount Pictures (Langley, 1956). The excitement was so great that even Bridie Murphy songs and dances were created.
But eventually certain newspapers dispatched investigators over to Ireland to check the details. It was soon found that certain key ‘facts’ which emerged via hypnosis, including that Bridey was the daughter of a doctor, were not true. Bridey was actually a servant. Other claims were also unfounded, such as the church where Virginia stated she was married (as Bridey) did not exist. But what really put doubt into the case was the discovery that when she was five years old Virginia had a neighbour who was an Irish immigrant, and her name was Bridey Murphy.
It was quickly concluded that little Virginia had heard stories told by Bridey and had incorporated them into her own memory. It is a process known as “cryptomnesia,” which is defined as: “A memory that has been forgotten and then returns without being recognized as such by the subject, who believes it is something new and original” (Porge, 2018, p.1).
As a result, the whole Bridey Murphy proof of reincarnation story was debunked. The reason I cite this case is to inform the reader of the type of environment that Dr Wambach was in when starting her research, and why she wanted to find out if past lives were fantasy or real.
I will briefly summarize below some of Dr Wambach’s findings, as reported in her two books
The Research
Dr Wambach was a clinical psychologist at JFK University in San José, California [an accredited university that operated from 1965-2020, a period of 55 years, when its programs were absorbed into National University, another accredited university, which is located in San Diego, California].
The research into past lives she engaged in was not funded by the university, but was self-funded by Dr Wambach.
She approached her research into past life regression on the assumption that it was probably fantasy – not deliberately made up with the intention of deceiving, but created by an obliging mind eager to answer questions under hypnosis.
Adopting an open-minded but skeptical stance, she decided that a standard procedure and standard questions could be formulated and adopted to readily expose fantasy past lives.
In an attempt to avoid the pitfalls of an individual hypnotic regression, as in the case of Virginia Tighe, she created a protocol of group hypnosis which involved taking several people at once back into their past lives.
She reasoned that if the phenomenon of past-life memory retrieval was fantasy, then a past life would be more likely to be:
- A famous or interesting life (who wants to recall a life slaving in the fields all day, more likely to be Napoleon or an Egyptian Pharaoh)
- More upper class than lower class (similar reasons to above)
- More male lives than female (because males had more freedom and opportunities in the past than women)
- Time periods familiar to the subject (the Wild West, gangsters, or other lives derived from films and books)
- Population changes in time periods not reflected in lives reported (as noted by Wambach (1979b, p.138); the world population was fairly steady for thousands of years up to 25 AD [and Roman Empire prosperity], began to rise sharply from 1200AD [partly through something as simple as the introduction of beans into the European diet, which contain good, but inexpensive protein for the common people]; the population quadrupled in the 1800’s, then accelerated rapidly to its present level of 7 billion)
Method
As noted above, the method chosen to investigate was not by individual hypnotic regressions but by group regressions with up to 30 subjects at a time.
Subjects brought cushions or mats to lie on and Dr Wambach talked the group through a regression. To aid analysis, subjects were hypnotically regressed and guided to choose a past life from a selection of time periods, such as 2000BC, 500BC, 25AD, 1200AD, 1500AD or 1850AD. Subjects were then asked a series of questions and told they will remember the answers on waking and be able to complete a special answer form.
Three separate regression sessions were undertaken with an identical procedure for every group to allow for research rigour in terms of reproducibility of the approach and the data. It should be remembered that there were no computers available to help assess and correlate the data. It was all tediously interrogated and statistically analyzed by Dr. Wambach.
The funding of the research was helped by charging each participant who attended the workshops a small fee. By all accounts, there was no shortage of subjects willing to take part.
Questions
The questions chosen were quite detailed and included: the type of clothes worn, utensils used for eating food, diet, skin colour, gender, money, social class, date and type of death.
An ancient Roman/Italian couple in Pompeii
Subjects were also asked to recall their death experience.
Further questions were asked on what happens in between lives, how is the current life chosen, who helps decide, why this life, why this time period, and what is the purpose.
Also the birth experience into their present life, and at what point did they connect with the foetus.
Lastly, questions were asked as to whether people in their present lives were known to them from previous lives.
As a consequence of Dr Wambach assuring the research participants under hypnosis that they would be able to answer the questions, she got very detailed answers at the end of the sessions.
Results
The data sheets completed at the end of each session revealed some fascinating results.
An example from ‘Life Before Life’ (Wambach, 1979a, p.28) is evidenced below:
Yes, I chose to be born. Someone did help me choose and it seemed to be some voice that I trusted greatly. It was kind, helpful and wise, very wise.
My feelings about the prospect of being born were very positive. When you asked the purpose for this lifetime, it flashed that I was to broaden people’s minds.
I chose this time period to be born because it is a great period of change where people need stability within themselves. I am supposed to help them somehow. I did choose to become a male, because it is good for my work, and I enjoy that role.
My mother was my wife in a past life; my father was my son. I got some faint flashes of mates or lovers, but nothing clear. As to children and other relatives, I felt uncertain except for one uncle who came through clearly as someone I knew before. I did have many friends from past lives.
I attached to the foetus when I decided to meet it in the womb of my mother just before birth. The feelings of my mother were very positive and loving and warm. When you asked for the birth experience, I felt odd, tingling sensations around a fleshy ball that was me.
My impression after birth was one of happiness and the doctor seemed pleased and my mother was very happy. I feel that this lifetime feels very good and positive for me and I feel a burst of energy and a purpose after this session.
There are many more examples from Life Before Life, the one below (Wambach, 1979a, p.37) is an example of someone who was reluctant to be born:
No, I didn’t choose to be born; I was instructed to return. It seemed to me that I just followed instructions (but don’t know who was instructing me).
I felt no rebellion, just that it was not really my choosing. I was quite apprehensive about living the coming lifetime.
One of the purposes for this lifetime seemed to be to teach and to minister to mankind and to work on the development of the greater use of the mind to ultimately teach.
I chose this time period because somehow the psychology field flashed into my mind, and I felt that psychology was moving too slowly and hampering the spiritual development of mankind. I didn’t seem to have chosen my sex. My mother had been my sister in a past life, when we had fought all the time. My father had been my grandfather in another lifetime. My husband was a Sioux Indian when I was a French padre, and I didn’t like him then either!
I seemed to have an attachment to the foetus from the inception, but this is vague. My mother was very happy. In the birth-canal experience, I started to hold my breath and then breathe very heavily. After birth, I was mostly aware of being happy to be in a wanted situation. This has been a very enlightening hypnotic experience, as I have had the feeling since my earliest memories that I was here for a reason — and have had some interesting mental talents develop.
Fact or Fantasy
So, is this fantasy? We said above that if it were just fantasy, we would expect more male lives than female, because males had more freedom and opportunities in the past than women.
What Helen found was that out of 1,100 past lives recorded at the time of publication the split overall was 50.3% male and 49.7% female, exactly what you would expect if they were genuine past lives; as evidenced in the following diagram (Wambach, 1979b, p.124).
We also said above that if the past-life memories were merely fantasies, then we would expect more upper-class lives rather than lower-class lives – on the grounds that who wants to recall a fantasy life slaving away in the hot fields all day, when the psyche could allow the fantasy of being someone like Napoleon or an Egyptian Pharaoh, or at least someone with money and opportunity?
It was straightforward to tell what class people were in from the detailed descriptions given after the group hypnosis sessions.
Helen found that over 70% of the 1,100 lives were lower-class with around 20% middle class and under 10% upper class. Which, again, is exactly what you would expect from historical evidence; as shown in the following diagram (Wambach, 1979b, p.115).
[JdN: I note that the percentage of lower-class people rose around AD 500, which was the era when the Roman Empire in the west had collapsed; schools, police, courts, roads, bridges, aqueducts, public baths, trade….]
A similar pattern occurred with population spread, with the majority reporting lives in the more populated time periods from 1500 upwards and less in the low-population time periods. Again, the graph she produced mimicked the historical population spread. There were other correlations associated with clothing, utensils, skin colour, and so on, which all tied up convincingly with historical fact.
So for all intents and purposes, these lives appear not to be fantasy, but to represent genuine past lives.
In Dr Wambach’s own words: “All the data described…tended to support the hypothesis that past-life recall accurately reflects the real past rather than it represents common fantasies. None of the data indicated that fantasy was at work” (Wambach, 1979b, p.146).
The Death Experience
One of the most important findings in the research conducted by Dr Wambach is in terms of the of the death experience. Despite our modern society treating death as if it is something to fear, the research indicated the complete opposite to this – death is a great release and a returning home.
When hypnotically regressed to a past life, the research subjects were asked to recall their death and remember the feelings they had (without any associated pain). 85% of study participants had very positive experiences. A typical reported experience is noted below from ‘Reliving Past Lives’:
Dying was like being released, like going home again. It was as though a great burden had been lifted when I left my body and floated up towards the light. I felt affection for the body I had occupied in this lifetime, but it was so good to be free. (Wambach, 1979b, p.140).
The 15% that reported not-so-positive death experiences were those who had died in childbirth or had undergone violent deaths.
*** From the University of Virginia studies by Ian Stevenson MD and Jim Tucker MD:
Dr Wambach reports on the comments of a subject who died in childbirth:
I feel so bad because I’m leaving my two children behind…I worry about who will take care of them, and I stay around my body trying to comfort my husband (Wambach, 1979b, pp.141-142).
Another kind of disturbing experience at death was that of being killed accidentally or violently, usually at a young age. One subject said:
I was hit by a car while I was running across the street… I seemed to continue running across the street and wasn’t really aware that I was dead. Then I felt very frustrated and lost, because I didn’t understand what was happening to me. Finally, I was in a place of darkness, and then I saw a bright light. Then I went soaring up through the darkness toward the light (Wambach, 1979b, p.142).
Some subjects who expressed negative feelings at death were fighting in a war:
I was fighting and then my body crumpled. I kept on fighting, but I couldn’t seem to affect anything going on around me. I was still on the battlefield, but then I seemed to be joined by others who had died. I couldn’t seem to leave that scene (Wambach, 1979b, p.142).
Americans in blue versus Brits
.
Other subjects experienced sorrow because of others’ grief at their death. The sorrow was not for themselves but for the people who remained on earth. About 25% reported a brief period of darkness followed by light. More subjects, about two thirds, experienced soaring up high above their body into a light-filled world, where they were greeted by others and had an instant sense of companionship. One subject reported:
I soared up high in the sky after I left my body. I didn’t want to look back. I seemed, then, to be surrounded by others, who were congratulating me in that lifetime. I felt a sense of homecoming and great joy. There was life all around me (Wambach, 1979b, p.142).
We can see from the above that there is nothing to fear about death. In fact, if anything, it’s a welcome release from a life well lived. Interestingly Dr Wambach found very few suicides in her research, and those she did find reported a realisation that suicide was not a way out of their problems, no matter how bad it might have seemed.
Not taking your own life is a test of resilience and it seems that if a person does commit suicide, then there is little option but to come back in a new life and start over again. After all, this life was chosen to be able to learn and overcome difficulties — and there are no shortcuts.
Research Conclusions and Concluding Comments
There are several conclusions we can draw from the research:
- The research shows that what was being reported did not appear to be fantasy
- Although not reported here, the research method has been shown to be repeatable with different hypnotists and different groups. By the time of Dr Wambach’s death in 1985 she had collected over 6,000 reports
- We choose or were guided to choose our present lives
- The birth experience is traumatic and the majority of ‘souls’ enter the foetus just before birth
- We incarnate with people we have known from past lives
- We have had many past lives, some of which might appear quite dull and laborious but there are always relationships to work out and goals to be achieved in every lifetime
- There is nothing to fear about death. When death occurs, it is a great release, a return to our true home and a reunion with all the people we know
We can conclude that there appears to be a mechanism and a grand plan for life on earth. We are incarnated here as souls in a physical body. Our reasons for being here are to learn, experience and achieve certain lessons and objectives that will add to the greater knowledge of our souls. We are helped in this process by incarnating with souls we have known from previous lives. When we die, it is a great release and our souls return to a spirit realm where we can recuperate and take stock of the experience and share that experience with other souls.
Once rested we can plan our next incarnation. Each life lived adds to our soul’s growth, and as a consequence, all the experiences of all the billions of lives lived adds to the greater knowledge of the universe.
In this article I hope to have gone some way towards doing justice to Dr. Wambach’s pioneering research and her excellent and informative books. I also hope to have re-ignited interest about Helen’s body of work which may now be sadly forgotten; and perhaps even inspired and encouraged the reader to delve more deeply into her findings. I must tell the reader that sadly both books went out of print in the late 1990’s but I am happy to relate that following campaigning by myself and others they are now back in print, as of 2020, with White Crow Books as the new publisher.
Biography— David Pye lives near Glastonbury in Somerset, England. He encountered the work of Dr Helen Wambach several years ago, and regards it of such high importance that he set up a website dedicated to her pioneering work (See http://reincarnation.me.uk). He also gives talks about death and reincarnation, which include Dr Wambach’s ground-breaking research. David spent 20 years as a research scientist and is currently an IT consultant. He also holds a master’s degree in digital media production. Over the last 20 years David has set up several UK companies, and successful local charities which specialise in energy efficiency and organic gardening.
References
Bernstein, M. (1956). The search for Bridey Murphy. London: Hutchinson.
Langley, N. (Director). (1956). The search for Bridey Murphy. [Film]. Paramount Pictures. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJHD8fY3PlE
Porge, E. (2018). Cryptomnesia. Encyclopedia.com. https://www.encyclopedia.com/philosophy-and-religion/other-religious-beliefs-and-general-terms/miscellaneous-religion/cryptomnesia
Wambach, H. (1979a). Life before Life. UK: Bantam books.
Wambach, H. (1979b).
When the Mossad tried to kidnap Leon Degrelle.
https://realhistory.info/2024/04/02/mossads-kidnap-gang-and-leon-degrelle-a-true-story-stranger-than-fiction/
When it comes to modern leaders the only one i see as half decent, is the Belarussian president Aleksandr Lukashenko.
The scumbag western politicians and zionist western media call him a dictator, but i call him a strong leader.
Joseph Stalin was a brutal dictator and Romania’s communist leaders Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu were brutal dictators who were tried and executed by their own people after the fall of communism.
Aleksandr Lukashenko is nothing like those tyrants, i see Macron and Ursula von der Leyen and all the other western puppet leaders as the real tyrants.
Emmanuel Macron and Ursula von der Leyen are very sick evil demented people.