DWQA Questions › Tag: love bondsFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesDuring a reading with a famous medium (Caputo, Season 13, Episode 3), the client was told about their recently passed son, who was heavy into sports, “He’s playing soccer, he’s playing football, he’s playing lacrosse. ‘I’m playing every sport I can – because I can.’ Everything and anything that he wanted to do in the physical world, he’s doing on the other side.” It seems hard to believe that soccer in heaven can impart the same overall experience that it does in the physical, because of the limitations of the physical, which we are reportedly free of in the light. Playing soccer in the physical world carries the risk of injury, along with facing aggressive, sometimes cheating opponents, etc. And if light beings can see the future, what’s the point of holding a contest? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs287 views0 answers0 votesCan Creator give us a quick summation of the primary differences between a medium and someone who fantasizes readily, or is even delusional?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs254 views0 answers0 votesA police officer attended a group reading of a famous medium (Caputo, Season 11, Episode 3). Years earlier this officer had responded to a call concerning a car accident. It wasn’t good. He was doing cardiac compression on a young male victim who died when they were putting him in the ambulance. The officer had never met the young man, but inexplicably grieved the loss and obsessed about his death daily for years, wondering if he had done the right thing and if the young man’s soul was okay. What is the backstory of this officer’s inexplicable grief for a young man he never met?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs236 views0 answers0 votesIn group readings, up to several thousand people are present, and the mediums claim they do not participate in any choice about what spirit comes through. How is it determined which spirit gets the channel? Is this all determined by the higher selves of all the participants? Is the most urgent need among the many participants usually addressed?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs237 views0 answers0 votesIn a large group reading, a famous medium walked up to a participant, pulled a bag of M&M’s out of the man’s shirt pocket, and helped herself to a few. She claimed she was told by the man’s departed son that his father didn’t believe in mediums. She even licked one and put it in the man’s mouth because his son used to do that. If the man was a genuine skeptic, then why was this dramatic display of the paranormal allowed under the rules of engagement? Was the fact that all who chose to be there, and even later watch the episode on video, were by their very presence and willful observation, allowing for a paranormal miracle to be on display? Will true skeptics simply dismiss it as a pre-arranged fraudulent stunt?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs236 views0 answers0 votesA famous medium (Caputo, Season 13, Episode 1) told a client that her departed son had arranged for her to have twins later on as his “last gift to her.” Did the son have a role in her later having twins? What’s the backstory on this assertion? Or is it just creative hyperbole intended to help the client reframe the tragic loss of her son?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs224 views0 answers0 votes(Caputo, Season 13, Episode 5) A police officer said, “I can’t do this,” in front of his wife on FaceTime (videophone), and then shot himself. Killing himself was completely out of character and shocking to everyone who knew him. He told his wife 50 times a day he loved her. What is the backstory to this tragic incident? Did he make it to the light? If so, was he in limbo for a time? And if so, how was he rescued?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs224 views0 answers0 votesAll the mediums studied, advocate prayer in their books, and confess to using prayer regularly for protection. Yet, in their shows, prayer is hardly ever mentioned. And when it is, it’s incidental and never portrayed as necessary. Why is this so? And can Creator share why Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol ARE necessary, for mediums and every human being?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs238 views0 answers0 votesA client asks: “Have my friend and his wife from Twentynine Palms, California, crossed over successfully?”ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Transition (Crossing Over)293 views0 answers0 votesCathy Byrd is the mother of Christian Haupt, who at the age of two began sharing past life memories of being a “tall baseball player.” Turns out, that “tall baseball player” was none other than Lou Gehrig. Most people will have heard of “Lou Gehrig’s disease” if not Lou Gehrig the famous first baseman for the New York Yankees who played with the home run king, “Babe Ruth,” whose name still adorns a popular candy bar to this very day. Turns out, Cathy herself is the reincarnation of Christina “Mom” Gehrig, the mother of Lou Gehrig, and who was a minor celebrity in her own right at that time. Cathy doggedly pursued every lead her son provided and affirmed that her son was indeed the reincarnation of Lou Gehrig. Once her investigation was complete, she wrote a book called, “The Boy Who Knew Too Much,” sharing with the world the story of her son’s memories and the drama and investigation resulting from it. This is a truly rare account of an American boy with powerful past life memories of being a well-known American celebrity. This has all the hallmarks of a “mission life” for both mother and son. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation317 views0 answers0 votesThe majority of detailed past life memories upwelling in children predominately between the ages of two and six, seem to be fueled in most cases by deep trauma usually associated with the manner of their death in the previous life they are remembering. But in the case of Christian Haupt, the emotive energy seems to be provided by overwhelming desire. This young boy LOVED baseball. At the age of two, this child literally lived, ate, and slept baseball non-stop. He wore a toddler’s baseball uniform and refused to wear anything else. He only wanted to play baseball and nothing else. He would play by himself if he couldn’t get anyone to play with him. It seems that some form of intense emotive energy is needed to enable detailed past life memories to surface. And the emotion doesn’t necessarily have to be “trauma,” but instead could be great desire based on a great passion pursued in a previous life that remained unsatisfied. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation355 views0 answers0 votesDr. Ian Stevenson in his book, “Children Who Remember Previous Lives,” wrote, “Like many subjects of these cases, (the child) sometimes thought of himself as an adult imprisoned unwarrantedly in a child’s body. At times he had what I call attacks of adulthood.” In Christian Haupt’s case, this manifested in his precise mirroring of Lou Gehrig’s baseball mannerisms. Right down to how he held and swung his little toddler bat—an almost textbook display of Lou Gehrig’s batting style. Something he had no way of knowing at the age of two and three years old. What can Creator tell us about how and why this happens with some children?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation270 views0 answers0 votesThe fact a precise skill like swinging a baseball bat a certain way, “comes through” and is displayed in a child of extremely tender age, begs a couple of questions. Where is the so-called “muscle memory” in this? We think of muscle memory as something we train a physical body to execute, and that even if there is a soul that survives death, “muscle memory” must surely die along with the physical body. Yet, the skill displayed by the young Christian Haupt brings all that into question. Does muscle memory and even cellular memory survive the death of the physical body? If so, why is this kind of explicit display seen in Christian Haupt so seemingly rare? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation261 views0 answers0 votesThe child with “attacks of adulthood” raises some interesting questions. As a toddler, they lack the truly rational and analytical reasoning power of adults. You can’t negotiate with them and discuss anything of an abstract nature with them. They are more like memory recognition, reaction, and reporting machines, in a very similar fashion we see manifested with deep subconscious channeling. The channeled deep subconscious will answer questions in a detailed fashion and will follow instructions in a very literal sense. In a similar way, a child with vivid past life memories can answer questions and describe events in a kind of factual and literal “this is what happened” description, but will not be able to provide anything in the way of analysis. So is a child with, as Stevenson describes it, “an attack of adulthood,” akin to the deep subconscious on full display? Can this also perhaps explain why the memories are usually lost by age six? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation274 views0 answers0 votesTo the extent that a child experiencing highly emotional past life memories is the deep subconscious on full display, should the child be able to respond to trauma memory resolution and belief replacement the same way the deep subconscious does? Can this explain why children with traumatic past life memories causing deep anxiety, phobias, and nightmares, might respond in an effective and even complete fashion to something as simple as a parent telling their child, “That event is in the past, and you no longer need to relive it or worry about it ever again?” This kind of seeming trauma resolution has been witnessed with some of these children in response to such simple suggestions, especially when coming from a trusted adult such as a parent. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation297 views0 answers0 votes