Humanity is a biogenetic experiment or dream
It's all physics and math in a consciousness simulation
The human brain is an electrochemical machine (computer) that responds to stimuli and is programmed for patterns of experience based on one's DNA codes. That said, when experiencing what we view as a past life, we may actually be looking at the experience of others in our bloodline or ethnic background. The events are almost always spikes on a grid - negative events that were left unresolved and attract our consciousness to resolve them. For example, I have seen myself in various roles in Nazi Germany - as I am Jewish and connect with events in that timeline, probably because they were less than 100 years ago. In my visions, I am not one of my deceased relatives but have played many roles, all of which I am Jewish and get killed. I have met people who were part of what I witnessed and can verify the places names, dates, and experiences I observed. My favorite role was a Jewish physicist who worked on time travel experiments in secret underground labs. Through the years I have met other people with the same memories and past life connections. It's just fun stuff as my soul travels the grids and seeks experiences.
Can you tap into your ancestral memories? Anyone can with practice. All you have to do is align your grid with another relative on your ancestral DNA tree (bloodline) then explore. Being in the right geographic location can also help memories surface.
Can ancestral memories influence our lives today? Only if you are programmed to believe they do. The New York Times article below takes us to metaphysical and psychological theory that says the past lives of our ancestors, influences what happens in this timeline.
Do we have to set things right from experiences our soul has had in another time, or unfinished from the genetic programming of our ancestors? No - though many people believe their misfortunes are a result of bad karma from other timelines. If your life is difficult, that is how you are programmed.
Physics and Quantum Entanglement - 2 objects that are entangled in time react the same way even when great distances apart. When you take this to reality at large, everything in the hologram is entangled by design.
Ancestor Syndrome - Family Constellations (a subset application of Systemic Constellations) is an experiential process that aims to release and resolve profound tensions within and between people.
The process diverges from conventional forms of cognitive, behavior and psychodynamic psychotherapy in several key respects. In a single session, a Family Constellation attempts to reveal a previously unrecognized systemic dynamic that spans multiple generations in a given family and to resolve the deleterious effects of that dynamic by encouraging the subject to accept the factual reality of the past.
Practitioners claim that present day problems and difficulties may be influenced by traumas suffered in previous generations of the family, even if those affected now are unaware of the original event in the past. A theoretical foundation for this concept is called The Ancestor Syndrome in psychology. Recent findings in epigenetics research supports the concept that after-effects of trauma can be passed to subsequent generations. Hellinger referred to the relation between present and past problems which are not caused by direct personal experience as Systemic entanglements, said to occur when unresolved trauma has afflicted a family through an event such as murder, suicide, death of a mother in childbirth, early death of a parent or sibling, war, natural disaster, emigration, or abuse.
The author's great-aunt Luz, third from the left, top row,
was the guardian of the secret Sephardic Jewish identity of the Catholic Carvajals.
On the Trail of Inherited Memories New York Times - August 19, 2012
Can a person "remember" the lives of forebears? Can genes carry the burden of generations? A reporter follow clues of a secret identity - of Sephardic Jewish ancestors who fled the Inquisition. There are scientific studies exploring whether the history of our ancestors is somehow a part of us, inherited in unexpected ways through a vast chemical network in our cells that controls genes, switching them on and off. At the heart of the field, known as epigenetics, is the notion that genes have memory and that the lives of our grandparents - what they breathed, saw and ate - can directly affect us decades later. The French psychologist Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger, now in her 90s, has spent decades studying what she calls the Ancestor Syndrome - that we are links in a chain of generations, unconsciously affected by their suffering or unfinished business until we acknowledge the past. Read more ...