A 24-year-old lady injured her left ankle while sledging in the Alps. The prognosis was to replace her injured ankle with an artificial one that was not healing. She travels all the way to my clinic from Europe seeking help as she was depressed.
Symptoms, Diagnosis and Prognosis
- Crushed and painful ankle.
- MRI revealed bone necrosis, i.e. death of the bone tissue due to a lack of blood supply.
- Despite medications, follow-ups with physicians and therapies, the ankle showed no signs of healing. Instead, it kept getting worse.
Doctors recommended that instead of letting the leg get worse, it would be better to surgically replace the affected ankle with an implant.
Findings through Past Life Regression
The woman sees herself as a male soldier from World War II in a past life. It is his maiden war and is very excited to prove himself, but he fails in his mission. While fighting, his ankle gets stuck in a tiny hole and he is unable to pull it out by himself. His friends help him to pull it out, but his ankle gets severely damaged in the process and he is unable to move any further. Everybody moves on, and those passing by also do not stop. In severe pain and isolation, he is killed by his enemies eventually.
Metaphor of the Memory in Current Life
The memory of this incident from my client’s past life is triggered when, in her current life, she gets injured in a similar way while riding her sledge. This lady had been invited by her friends to join them in an adventure that involved sledging in the Alps. She joins them hesitatingly, as she wanted social acceptance and did not desire to be labeled as a nerd. While sledging her ankle gets stuck, crushed, and she falls off the sledge. She sees all her friends passing by but not stopping to help her. Although she understands that they are unable to help her as they themselves are riding their sledges, hence cannot stop midway, she feels a severe pang of isolation, of being left out. After an hour of enduring terrible pain and helplessness, she is airlifted. The similarity of the situation and the feelings evoked become the metaphor for the memory of her past life as a soldier.
Condition Post Regression
After all her sessions my client understood the whole connection between her past and present life so well that she said, “I get a strong feeling that I can heal my ankle. I don’t want to undergo surgery.” I told her not to come to any hasty conclusion but to repeat the MRI after 2-3 months and see what happens.
She followed my advice. The next MRI showed that her bone had started healing. It’s now three and a half years, and she has had no need for any surgery. She is back to her physically fit and active life. Most important, there has been a significant change in her attitude in that she doesn’t seek for others’ approval anymore and feels confident and good about herself.