With my past life in the Vendeé Wars things developed in a slightly different way. There wasn’t so much confusion, and that was a surprise to me. I haven’t yet verified it completely —that is to say, I haven’t been able to verify the real existence of my previous personality, with a name and a surname— but from the beginning I could describe the historical events with a staggering accuracy. As I had more experience, I waited to research in deep, to avoid possible interferences. One day (it was June 2013) someone brought up the subject of the French Revolution in the forum Military Past Lives, and a French user who knew the history of her country quite well, replied to them. I didn’t even want to read the explanation she gave to the other person carefully (she had put a hidden fragment and I didn’t even open it), but I seized the moment to ask this user if there had been some revolutionary fight between the common people and the rulers in the northern coast of France, at the end of 18th century. At first she said no. Then I told her I wasn’t even sure it was the northern coast, but I was certain it was a coast, probably the Atlantic. It was then that she pointed to the Vendée region, name that I had never heard before in all my life, and which I struggled to forget in the following months. I described to her what I had seen in my memories: for some reason there had been many revolts amongst the common people, and I saw the French army, red and blue, arriving to our town. For sure, the fight was going to be quite unequal: the soldiers had rifles with bayonets and cannons; we had stones, shovels, knives, hoes, rakes and some other shotgun. She replied to me: “You better work on it, because what you're saying sounds pretty much like a summary of that war”.
And I worked. Four months later, still without wanting to research a lot, I wrote to this person a private message and asked her to answer me only with a yes or no to the question: “Was there at the end massive shootings of normal people who were involved in the revolts, including women and children?” Her reply was categorical: “Yes, massive is the word”.