My Fleep:
Family & Parenting
Surprise! I am Conscious in the Womb
You may be as surprised as I was when I first discovered
that we are conscious in the womb. Knowing this, you can do
a lot to assist the unborn to be healthier and happier.
As a Marriage, Family Therapist, I counsel people with a
process I developed called HART which stands for Holistic
And Rapid Transformation. Basically, I help people get in
touch with the causes of their problems which are negative
decisions made from negative experiences. Then I guide them
to delete or erase the experience, change it to a positive
one, and then make a new positive decision. The results
have been amazing for 27 years.
For example, Sandy, a 38-year-old single woman, suffered
with depression and loneliness. She mentioned that she
always felt she was ugly. I asked Sandy to close her eyes
and go back to the first time she made that decision. She
recalled the time she was in the delivery room. The Doctor
pulled her out and said, "Oh, what an ugly baby." From that
experience, she decided that she was ugly.
Obviously, the doctors, nurses, parents, and everyone
around the baby need to know that what they say and do does
make a difference. That is, the newborn is very aware and
conscious of what is happening.
Sandy erased the negative scene, and then she imagined that
the doctor said, "You have a beautiful baby." Sandy
immediately relaxed and smiled as she felt better about
herself.
James, a forty-two-year-old architect, told me that he felt
scared and unsafe his whole life. He regressed back to the
time when he was born and the doctor smacked him on the
buttocks. From that traumatic experience, he decided that
people hurt him and life is painful. It is important to
help the newborn to breathe and there must be more loving
ways.
I guided James to erase the negative scene and change it to
a positive one. He imagined that the doctor was gently and
lovingly patting his back and he was breathing fine. James
then made the decision that he is safe and people are kind
and loving. As a result, his anxiety symptoms decreased
dramatically.
Numerous clients regressed back into the womb when they
decided that their mother did not want them. They picked up
the fear that the mother had of the responsibility of
having a baby.
In another case, Stacy, a forty-eight-year-old accountant,
decided in the womb that life is a struggle and scary. She
imagined the color black (which represents fear in the
unconscious) was entering through the umbilical cord. Stacy
was picking up her mother's negative feelings. I guided her
to erase the negative scene, take two deep breaths, and
then imagine that her mother was happy and relaxed. The
color that came in this time was white, and Stacy smiled
and also relaxed. She then decided that life is pleasant
and she could be happy too.
Bill, a thirty-two-year-old mechanical engineer, was often
angry and did not trust that he was loved or wanted by
anyone. He regressed back to the time when he was
conceived. Bill started yelling, "You don't love each
other! You don't want me! Don't do it!" I guided Bill to
erase the scene, and then he changed it to a positive one
where he was conceived out of love and the desire to be
parents. The intense man relaxed and felt peaceful. He
decided that some people may want him and love him.
These are just some examples of clients who convinced me
that we are conscious beings and always making decisions
from our experiences.
It is important to realize that our thoughts, feelings, and
actions do affect others even at conception, in the womb,
and at birth. We do make a difference when we are positive
and loving to others and ourselves.
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Copyright 2007 by Helene Rothschild, MS, MA, MFT, a
Marriage, Family Therapist, intuitive counselor, speaker,
and author. Her newest book is, "ALL YOU NEED IS HART!”.
She offers phone sessions, teleclasses, books, e-books, MP3
audios, tapes, posters, independent studies, and a free
newsletter. http://www.lovetopeace.com , 1-888-639-6390.