Hello all. I've been reading the posts in this forum with great interest.
I don't have children, yet I've been reading about reincarnation, "children's past lives" and all other kinds of paranormal stuff since I was twelve. I remember stumbling upon some Stevenson books when I was fourteen - and I've found them fairly objective. Since then I've read more, also "skeptics-books", studied Economics and Computer-science. (for those who asked about my background: currently I'm working at the university (in Germany) and I'm studying psychology.).
Why have I opened this thread? Because I think that most (if not even all) described memories *could* have other origins than a past life. Thus, in my opinion reincarnation is very well possible but it is not "necessary" in order to explain unexpected behaviour. There have been psychological and parapsychological approaches to explain the "memories" phenomena (I've written some basic alternatives in the "angry at her parents"-thread).
Why bother with alternative theories when reincarnation fits nicely ?
The past-life theory is very soothing. A child can show (more or less) alarming signs (talking about other parents, drawing strange scenes, etc) and a "past-life-memory" solves this problem in a simple and convenient way.
Because the reason for this strange behaviour lies in the past - there is nothing more a parent could do than to realize what it was and deal with it...
Sounds easy.
But is it? What if it isn't?
The past-life theory is just that - a theory. And as every theory it has its zealous followers as well as fervent skeptics. And as always it is a bad idea to be one of them - blind enthusiasm or stubborn rejection does often more harm than good.
The point is that one should view it from a "safe distance", keep as much an open mind as possible and just *consider* other possibilities without to "jump in head-first" into it. Perhaps one of the alternative explanations will lead to a better understanding of oneself (or a child).
I don't have children, yet I've been reading about reincarnation, "children's past lives" and all other kinds of paranormal stuff since I was twelve. I remember stumbling upon some Stevenson books when I was fourteen - and I've found them fairly objective. Since then I've read more, also "skeptics-books", studied Economics and Computer-science. (for those who asked about my background: currently I'm working at the university (in Germany) and I'm studying psychology.).
Why have I opened this thread? Because I think that most (if not even all) described memories *could* have other origins than a past life. Thus, in my opinion reincarnation is very well possible but it is not "necessary" in order to explain unexpected behaviour. There have been psychological and parapsychological approaches to explain the "memories" phenomena (I've written some basic alternatives in the "angry at her parents"-thread).
Why bother with alternative theories when reincarnation fits nicely ?
The past-life theory is very soothing. A child can show (more or less) alarming signs (talking about other parents, drawing strange scenes, etc) and a "past-life-memory" solves this problem in a simple and convenient way.
Because the reason for this strange behaviour lies in the past - there is nothing more a parent could do than to realize what it was and deal with it...
Sounds easy.
But is it? What if it isn't?
The past-life theory is just that - a theory. And as every theory it has its zealous followers as well as fervent skeptics. And as always it is a bad idea to be one of them - blind enthusiasm or stubborn rejection does often more harm than good.
The point is that one should view it from a "safe distance", keep as much an open mind as possible and just *consider* other possibilities without to "jump in head-first" into it. Perhaps one of the alternative explanations will lead to a better understanding of oneself (or a child).