A Quantum Healing Hypnosis Session for a Young Subject
In a recent session, a very young subject went through some remarkable emotional states.
At first, the subject saw themselves as a middle-aged hunter, with unkempt hair and beard, sitting in a small wooden house, holding a cup of wine, their face contemplative, sorrowful, and in pain.
Revisiting the past, the hunter was skilled and intelligent, with a beautiful, gentle young wife. But his prideful ego led him to cause harm to others, one of whom, in deep resentment, hired someone to kill his wife. That large man took his wife’s life right before his eyes. The hunter held her lifeless body, stunned, aimless, lost, devoid of any feelings toward everything around him. “Numb,” the subject said.
Moving forward to the final days of his life, the old hunter fought a leopard and was severely wounded, bleeding profusely, exhausted, and eventually dying. His soul detached from his body lying beneath the ground. It floated higher and higher into the sky, lighter and lighter, seeing everything around him as nothingness. “Numb,” the subject said.
This journey into the past and the deep emotional states encountered during the hypnosis session speaks to the importance of understanding and releasing past trauma, as well as the power of acceptance and peace with life and death. The subject’s journey in this past life shows how unresolved emotions and the weight of guilt and sorrow can carry over to the soul, only to be released and transformed in the present through healing.
At the end of the session, I asked, “You mentioned the word ‘numb’ twice. But did you realize that these are two completely different states?”
The first instance was truly numbness due to an overwhelming loss, where life seemed meaningless after that loss. It’s like, after enduring so much suffering, the soul becomes hardened, and the person no longer cares about anything around them. This is the kind of “numbness” that many people who are alive might describe, without truly knowing what their essence really is.
But in the second experience, that wasn’t “numbness” at all—this was a state that doesn’t fit within the common definitions of many people. It was a light, peaceful state of “NOTHING, YET EVERYTHING.” It’s realizing that nothing, which I once thought was mine, actually belongs to me. They are just experiences that I can fully choose to enjoy. This is the state of our true nature.
Therefore, those who are still too focused on the outside, still attached to gains and losses from external things, still holding onto an identity of “this is me,” “I am like this,” your mind will only understand the numbness of sorrow and loss. Only when you begin to turn inward more, to love yourself more, will you gradually touch that state of “nothing, yet everything,” and life will become much more interesting and creative.
Personally, I feel very fortunate to have gone through these states from the very beginning. I have also experienced the gloomy feeling of wandering as a ghost in the darkness for decades—like a soldier who died in battle, unable to accept that he had died, holding onto resentment over the injustice of having fought far from his wife and children, only to leave them to perish in chaos while those safe at home disrespected their families. This is the state of attachment—whatever you cling to will haunt and entangle you.
Ultimately, these are just states of consciousness, not dependent on whether this physical body is alive or not. So, don’t die at thirty and wait until seventy to be buried. As long as you’re still breathing, you have the chance to live differently.