So I intend to do this:
- Extracting the audio from the videos: most of the videos I have found are radio shows, so it makes no sense to save the whole video with a picture of Helen Wambach. These audios will be available for all the blog followers and the forum members. I will also leave the link to YouTube in case someone needs the subtitles.
- Transcribing the interviews: from the point of view of a serious researcher, it is much handier to have all the information in writing than having to resort to an audio every time you want to know Dr. Wambach’s opinion about a specific topic. Though in YouTube there are subtitles, they are automatic and leave much to be desired, so I have to make use of my ears to and check that the subtitles match the audio. It is a really, really arduous work, so it is not going to be free for the blog followers, though they will be indeed extremely affordable.
- Translating the interviews to Spanish: since the interviews are too long to write them down entirely in the blog, there will always available for download, and besides I will make some comments about them in the blog entries dedicated to these interviews. I recommend reading the whole interviews, as they are priceless. (If you are reading this in English but for some reason you want the Spanish translation, go to the Spanish version of this page).
This said, today I start commenting the first audio. It is an interview to Dr. Helen Wambach (1925-1986) in the radio program Lovingly Free. I have been unable to determine the exact date, but it seems it took place in the late 70s, possibly 1976.
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1. What is hypnotic regression?
2. Purpose of the investigation.
3. Working method.
At facing that frustration of being unable to prove reincarnation in the real world, Wambach decided to take a different task: regressing a large number of people, take them to specific period times in history, and interrogating them about the utensils that were used in that time period, the building techniques, the clothing, foodstuffs they ate, etc. The subjects had no idea what they were going to be asked. If it turned out that all the subjects described the same way of life in that time, Wambach supposed this finding would be relevant and we would reach a different level of proof.
4. Atlantis.
5. Story of Wambach.
6. Seth.
7. The nature of time.
8. Altered states of consciousness.
9. Death experience.
One of the psychologist’s subjects states that having a body is only something you do, and it is like being a drop of water in a bucket. You are in a limited, confined space, and though this is a good place to learn, it is totally different to being a drop of water in the ocean. Then you can be anything you want to be, you don’t have any limitation. He described what having a body is in a way I love, so much that it deserves to be quoted literally:
“Having different bodies is like having the same music come out through different speakers, and each lifetime is a different speaker which picks up different tones, but the music is the same. I am the same. I just make different speakers for myself.”
Wambach also makes a very interesting statement about anesthesia: she met a pathologist who was hypnotizing a group of patients that had been anesthetized, and 100% of them were able to recall the surgical procedure and what was happening while they were being operated. The conclusion Wambach draws is that the anesthetic drug somehow pushes them out of the body, but at some degree they are still present, or perhaps they are aware at two levels of the experience. Again, her conclusion completely matches mine.
10. Birth experience.
The coincidences regarding the moment when the soul joins the fetus are obvious as well. Though some join the fetus in very early stages of pregnancy, the great majority prefer to wait up until the last moment possible, often right after birth, precisely because they want to avoid those unpleasant feelings of cold and excessive light they feel when they join the infant’s body.