In one of Ian Stevenson’s cases, a
young Thai woman remembered that her previous body—that of a mere baby—wasn’t
buried in the village cemetery as it should have been, but rather outside of
it. She confronted the undertaker responsible, and he admitted to having done
this thing that apparently no one else knew about.
This next case comes from Hertfordshire, England, and was reported by Mary and Peter Harrison in their book The Children That Time Forgot. It involves a young girl, Mandy Seabrook, who appeared to be the reincarnation of her sister who had died at the age of five months. Even though the family never spoke about her deceased sister, when Mandy was two years old, she started recounting memories of having been this other child. One day, while riding past the cemetery where her sister was buried, two-year-old Mandy exclaimed, “Look, Mummy! That’s the place you put me in the ground that time, and you nearly fell on top of me, remember?”
At the time of the burial, her
mother had been taking medication to help her deal with the shock, and she had
been so out of sorts that she had lost her balance at the graveside and almost
fallen into the hole with the coffin. Mandy also said she’d been buried with a
silver bracelet and a fluffy yellow ball. Her mother remembered the existence
of the bracelet and the yellow ball, but she only remembered the former being
in the casket. Nevertheless, when questioned, an older sibling confessed to
having slipped the yellow ball under the dead baby’s body.
One other interesting aspect of this case is that, when Mandy was six, she asked her mother, “Do you remember the night I died? There was a bright star shining in the sky.” When her mother thought back, she realized that she had in fact noticed a star out over the garden, unusually bright and low, and had mentioned it to someone else at the time. Mandy continued, “That was my star. It was my way of telling you that I would be back.” This is the only case I’ve come across in which a child remembered using a sign or synchronicity to communicate after death in their previous life.
Sharon Hewitt Rawlette has a PhD in philosophy from New York University and writes about consciousness, parapsychology, and spirituality for both academic and popular audiences. She lives in rural Virginia. She received an award from the Bigelow Institute for Consciousness Studies for her essay “Beyond Death: The Best Evidence for the Survival of Human Consciousness,” available at https://bigelowinstitute.org/contest_winners3.php. Footnotes in the essay are not included in these excerpts.
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