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Doodles and past lives? what?
So title is a bit out there, yeah you can ignore that. So I've heard that my doodles can show symbols and such about who or what I was in a past life. I'm very interested in my past life, and I kind of want to know who I was, and all that jazz. I usually draw flowers with multiple petals, dark or light with a stem and thorns, or black hearts filled in with pen, or people, mostly anime girls. I don't know why. Do they mean something?
2 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
I have to disagree with that statement, to a degree. I'm into handwriting analysis, and you can also apply it to doodles. Doodles are representations of your mood/personality. To a certain degree, I think it is possible for past life experiences to somewhat become illuminated in artwork, but it would be rare. I am an avid believer in Past lives having figured out a few of my own. If your this interested in researching your past lives I would buy the Phoenix card deck/book. It has deeply psychological aspects to it. Most of mine, I have figured out on my own (nothing too specific however). btw are you sure you've only lived one prior life? Ive discovered possibly 4.
Source(s): What time periods or cultures have you felt familiarity? or drawn to? Thats a good place to start I think. btw I believe that we stay the same gender in every life, as I have and my mother in both this life and my last life has ( I dont believe she was my mother then though). - Anonymous1 decade ago
Very unlikely. A friend of mine is a "past-life therapist" as he calls himself and kept offering (for years) to regress me, wanting to know who this staunch atheist and paranormal skeptic was in his past-lives. One Sunday afternoon I relented and was regressed. The life he uncovered was that of a Scottish blacksmith's wife, born in 1819. She had three sons, her husband died (we never found out how) and she moved to Edinburgh, dying there as an old lady in the 1890s. The regression imagery seemed very real at the time, but afterwards I felt like I'd been making the whole thing up. 1819 was the year Queen Victoria was born, and I've always been interested in Victorian history. I've always been interested in Scotland (though I live in England). Coincidence? I think not. The subconscious mind can make up one hell of a story when we ask it to, and I often do, being a historical novelist.