André H. Corell, Regression Therapy
ecke
Mediale Schule




Grazien




Every soul comes to this world, either strengthened through victories or weakened through defeats in past lives.


What is Regression Therapy?


Regression Therapy is a therapy that allows you to go back to childhood or youth, or even to previous lives. Using the method to look at traumas in the past, it is possible to get rid of them permanently.

 

Regression Therapy


(Lat.: Regressus = return)


Regressions should be performed especially as therapy – therefore the name Regression Therapy – to solve the following problems:

  • Negative patterns
  • Phobias
  • Neuroses
  • Anxieties
  • Depressions
  • Conscious or unconscious negative decisions
  • And/or other mental and psychological blockades

The name Reincarnation Therapy, which is currently being used as main term by some therapists and schools, is only correct if the client is exclusively guided back into former lives. In regression therapy clients get confronted with childhood and youth of their lives as well, as it is there that most traumas are (re-) activated.


Regression therapy is no hypnosis – the client is conscious the whole time. Regressions are no suggestions either, as the client is aware of the experiences he really had and which activated the current problem. The client is in a state of consciousness swinging between alpha (meditative statement) and beta (waking state).


With regressions it is important to find out what earlier experiences are the most important at the time being. But this is definitely something we can leave to the client and his spiritual leaders. The internal world, the client’s unconscious, has all the answers. By the use of the right relaxation exercises, combined with the right regression technique, the client will be softly guided into the past.


Under regressions the client will often perceive experiences of his childhood and youth he has displaced. Traumatic experiences in an early age, like abuses of all sorts for example, are chains that are felt distressing and are therefore “kept in a box”. The therapist will therefore try to find back to the original experience where the therapy can take place.


Forced by traumatic experiences, a lot of people build their lives on compensation. The client who was abused and humiliated in her early years might later feel the obsessive need to have power over men. The man who was brought up to avoid conflicts might later hold his ground through intrigues.


The therapist’s task is to make the client aware of his/her inner conflict and lead him/her back to the cause of the trauma, in order to work on that cause.


The therapist must be searching and inquiring. The client should feel the closeness of the therapist, but not as an overwhelming presence, where he/she is manipulating and leading. It is the client’s past that counts, not the therapist’s. Personal comments of the therapist can be disturbing and in the worst case make that the client does not come to the point. The therapist should therefore support the process by encouraging the client to just tell exactly what he/she perceives.


We learn to create the conversation after the session so that we can find out, together with the client, what can be learned from the experienced situation and how this learning process can be further lived.


Regression without Training


Regression Therapy is a profound form of therapy. Only therapists who can prove a solid training should therefore carry out regression therapies. To bring old traumas to the surface without being able to treat them is dangerous and can – in the worst case - reinforce them.





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