One of the most common questions people ask after a past life regression is:
“How do I know if it was real?”
It’s a fair question. People are curious to research past life connections to who they are now.
After all, memories that emerge during a regression often feel dreamlike. Images appear unexpectedly. Emotions arise without explanation. Details emerge that seem oddly specific, yet impossible to verify in the moment.
While no one can prove every past life experience, there are times when people discover information that can be researched through historical records, genealogy websites, census data, marriage certificates, immigration records, and other sources.
Over the years, many clients have shared remarkable stories of discovering unexpected confirmations after a regression.
One of my favorites came from a young woman named Beth.
An Unexpected Experience
Beth discovered my website shortly after the death of her grandfather.
Like many people experiencing a loss, she found herself becoming more curious about spirituality, life after death, and past life regression.
After joining my newsletter, she downloaded my complimentary past life regression audio and decided to listen to it one evening.
She wasn’t expecting much. In fact, she had never experienced anything like it before.
Yet as she relaxed into the process, a series of impressions began to emerge.
The images were not crystal clear. She described them as hazy, almost like a dream.
Still, certain details stood out:
-
Rural farmland
-
Oklahoma
-
Around 1890
-
A mother who died young
-
Very little family
-
A long life ending in California
-
A death occurring around the year Beth was born in her current life
The final message she received was simple: “Cherish your family and love them deeply.”
Following the Clues to Her Past Life Connection
Like many people after a powerful regression experience, Beth became curious.
What if there was something more to these impressions?
She decided to do a little research.
Using only the fragments she remembered, she began searching public records and genealogy websites.
She entered the details she had received:
-
Oklahoma
-
Birth around 1890
-
Marriage around the late 1920s
-
Death in California around 1986
To her surprise, she quickly located a woman named Bessie Hall.
The records showed:
-
Born in Cherokee Nation, Oklahoma in 1889
-
Married in 1927
-
Mother died relatively young
-
Died in Los Angeles in February of 1986
Several of the details aligned with what Beth had experienced during the regression. But that wasn’t the part that stunned her most.
The Photograph
Beth found a photograph of Bessie Hall taken in 1933.
Out of curiosity, she compared it to a recent photograph of herself. The resemblance was striking.
When she sent me the images, she described herself as stunned. Of course, physical resemblance alone does not prove reincarnation.
Families often share similar features. Coincidences happen.
Yet for Beth, the combination of the memories, historical records, and visual similarities created a deeply meaningful experience.
Most importantly, it inspired her to continue exploring her spiritual journey.
See for yourself:
