Hypnosis Regression to the Relationship Fate of the Whole Family – A Fairy Tale-like Story
This time, the subject is a young girl. Her family consists of her parents, an older brother, herself, and a younger sister. She loves her mother dearly because her mother works hard as the pillar of the family while the two men in the household cause more trouble than help. She asked many questions, and the story below answers only a small portion of what she asked, but it contains the essence of the whole family.
Let us set aside the messages and meanings for now, and read this as though you are wearing an explorer’s lens… and you are about to be lost in a wonderful fairy tale world.
THE STORY BEGINS
You are a goblin with pointed ears, wearing dark yellow clothes, wide trousers with a tear on one side, pointed-toed leather shoes, and a soft witch-like hat in the same color as your shoes. Your hair is already gray. You jump into a waterfall, swim along a stream, and lie on a rock by the shore, basking in the sun.
Then you stand up and walk through a burned forest, entering an ancient European-style village. You walk along wooden fences and open a gate to step into the yard of a house with a sharp roof and thatched roof. The house is very dark inside. Outside the door, there is a little boy sitting. He is about 2 years old, wearing wide shorts, sitting on the ground without shoes. You walk in and take a red object from the boy, something like a candy.
Afterward, you jump as if you could fly far through the clouds. You stand beneath a rock mountain and, as you climb to the peak, you see a dragon with shimmering green and deep blue scales, long horns, no wings but capable of flying. It flies around the top of the mountain, as if guarding something. On top of the mountain, there is a tower, and the goblin has to climb that tower, but the dragon is flying around it, preventing him from reaching the top. He observes and notices a cave inside the mountain, where there is an egg. It turns out that this is the dragon’s egg. The egg hatches into a baby dragon, identical in color to the mother, but after hatching, it keeps flying around like a storm, preventing the mother dragon from entering the cave. The goblin then gives the red object to the baby dragon, and it stays still. This allows the mother dragon to enter the cave, and thanks to that, the goblin can climb the tower.
The tower is extremely high, towering above the mountain peak and blending into the clouds. The goblin steps out of the tower and approaches a red iron door, which is opened by an old woman. She is a small, hunched, gray-haired witch, without a hat. The two of them enter her house. Inside, the warm orange light illuminates many objects piled high. The goblin is searching for something in the witch’s home. The witch begins casting a spell, creating a stream of green smoke. Each time the green smoke appears, an image of a young boy, around 12 years old with short hair, wearing white pajamas, shows up on a rock wall. The boy’s image appears and disappears, over and over, like the green smoke. The boy seems very familiar. It turns out the witch is brewing a potion, which she then hands to the goblin to help the boy.
The goblin returns to the cave where the boy lies. The boy is sick, lying on the bed, weak and barely breathing. Beside him is a man, his father. The goblin gives the potion to the father. The boy’s body is thin and translucent, like smoke… It turns out that the boy’s soul was cursed. After taking the potion, he returns to a normal human form. At that moment, a magical beast emerges from the cave—a creature with a long tail, a lion’s body with four legs, but no mane, a cat-like head, and two wings. This creature belongs to the father and son, and it is the price to be paid for saving the boy. The goblin had heard the story when he passed through the village, and he wanted to take the lion creature.
The goblin rides the winged lion and flies toward a forest near the beach—the goblin’s home. His house is on a tree, a wooden and leaf house overlooking the sea, and behind it is a forest with many other similar houses—his goblin community. A figure emerges from the house—another person who looks like him, but in lighter-colored clothes. It’s his wife. He wanted to trade the flying lion to impress his wife. The two of them stand there, admiring the lion, and then he takes her along to ride the lion, flying together happily, even visiting the dragon they encountered earlier.
THE CURSE ON THE BOY IN WHITE
At this point, I return and become curious about every detail of the story. Who placed a curse on the boy, and why? It turns out, the boy in white is a prince, and his father is a person of power. They lived in a castle, and the father, wanting to protect his son, had to send him to hide on that cliff. In the castle, there was a beautiful royal woman, wearing a green hat. This woman was also a witch. When she twirled her hand, a stream of green smoke would appear, and it latched onto the prince. She was the queen, and she wanted to drive the prince away from the castle in order to protect someone else. She wanted to protect her daughter, the princess, and take the throne from the prince.
After returning to normal, the prince and his father returned to the castle. A sword was swung, and a head fell. They had killed the witch queen. As for the princess, who knew nothing of the matter, she was spared. The baby dragon grew up and no longer stayed on the mountain. It flew to the castle, circling above it. The image of the boy sitting outside the house, where the goblin had taken the red candy, reappeared.
THE PRINCE’S RETURN
We move to an important day in the goblin’s life. He had grown very old, his beard long and his back bent, becoming the oldest in the goblin community. He held a torch high and declared something before them. He was looking for someone to pass on the flying lion and a crucial object… a red object… It turns out that this was not candy, but a red stone to control dragons. He had chosen a young goblin to carry out an important task. Not long after, he passed away, lying on a pile of fire. They cremated him and circled the fire with sticks. He had not completed a necessary task but had managed to pass it on to the young goblin.
A terrible truth was revealed. The boy in white was not the true heir of the castle. We return to the beginning of everything—corpses scattered at the foot of the castle. The boy in white and his father had attacked the castle. Everyone in the castle had been killed, except for the beautiful witch queen and the princess. Even they did not know that there was one more survivor—this person was the true heir of the castle and the true owner of the dragons. It was the little boy sitting outside the thatched house in the village. He was the real prince of the castle, the son of the old king, inheritor of the gem, and the brother of the princess. A quick-witted goblin had managed to help the boy escape the encirclement and take him to hide in a commoner’s house. The old goblin had known the whole story from the start.
Dragons only serve the true owner of the castle, the heir of the gem. Therefore, the baby dragon flew around the castle until the real heir— the boy from the past—grew up. It circled above to guard the castle, and when it was there, no one inside could leave, and no one outside could enter. The day the true prince returned, he walked proudly in his white robe embroidered with golden threads. By now, the princess had grown old and had learned the magic that the beautiful queen once had. The true prince pardoned the false prince and his father, commanding them to leave the palace. The young goblin had completed the task given to him by the old goblin—helping the true prince return.
THE TRUTH BEHIND
On the last day of the old goblin’s life, he felt regret and guilt because he knew everything that happened in the castle and that he should have chosen to help the true prince return to the castle without needing to save the boy in white—the false prince. However, he saved the false prince’s life because he wanted to trade it for the flying lion, just to make his wife happy. That’s why he had to find a successor to complete the task of helping the true prince. His life was a sacrifice of conscience to bring happiness to his wife.
Returning to the subject, all five members of your family were present in this story:
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You are the old goblin.
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Your older brother is the false prince.
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Your father is the false prince’s father.
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Your mother is the beautiful witch queen.
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Your younger sister is the princess.
When you asked, “Why did the old goblin choose to sacrifice his conscience to make his wife happy?” we were led into another previous life. At this point, you were a crab with a very large claw, living at the bottom of a swamp full of dark green mud. When the crab moved, it carelessly crushed a snail with its large claw. It regretted not being careful and harming another, and it stood there until it died. That snail was the goblin’s wife in the past life. You haven’t met her yet in the present.
Returning to your question, “Why did the false prince and his father kill the beautiful queen, yet in this life, your mother has to suffer and be harmed by your father and older brother?” we opened up another past life. In that life, the three of them were a family in ancient Russia. The mother worked hard in the fields and carelessly left the well uncovered. Their young son accidentally fell into the well and died. The father tortured the mother for that mistake, and she always regretted her child’s death. The two parents were your parents in that life, and the son was your older brother in this current life.
CONCLUSION
Through this story, we see that everything has a cause. The grievances of each life have their origins. You may not need to look for the cause from any past life because that life itself is the result of another life. You can choose to “LET GO” in the present, seeing everything only as experiences of the soul, without attaching emotions to them.
Thank you very much to the subject for the incredibly interesting adventure of the old goblin ^^