
One of the things I love most about Between Lives Regression is how wildly unpredictable the journeys can be.
You might start in a peaceful bamboo forest, floating gently toward a glowing golden pyramid of light, feeling all calm and spiritually evolved.
And then suddenly you’re in 1950s Las Vegas.
Working as a mechanic.
Named Bobby.
Welcome to past life regression.
From Sacred Pyramid to Sin City
This particular session began in a beautiful, tranquil setting. The client described walking through a bamboo forest before entering the familiar golden pyramid of light that allows the soul to travel along its timeline.
Everything felt calm and expansive.
Then the scene shifted dramatically.
Suddenly he was standing in a dusty mechanic’s workshop in Las Vegas during the 1950s.
His name was Bobby.
And unfortunately, Bobby had become entangled with the local mob.
The Moment Everything Went Wrong
As the memory unfolded, Bobby realised he was in serious trouble.
He had refused to cooperate with a protection racket, and the mobsters were not impressed.
“I think they’re going to use sledgehammers to bash my feet… I’m outnumbered. My friend should be standing with me, but he’s not.”
In one moment he experienced betrayal, fear, and intense anger all at once.
And that anger became the key to the entire regression.
When Anger Keeps You Stuck
As Bobby relived the final moments of that life, something fascinating happened.
His spirit didn’t immediately leave the body.
Instead, he remained anchored to the scene.
“My spirit doesn’t want to leave. It wants to hunt them down and make them pay.”
That powerful desire for revenge was keeping him tied to the earth.
Not physically.
Energetically.
And this is where the deeper lesson appeared.
Anger doesn’t just affect the moment when it happens. It can keep someone emotionally and energetically stuck long after the event itself has ended.
Cutting the Cord
During the session Bobby was guided to release the anger that was holding him in place.
He was guided to imagine a pair of golden scissors cutting the energetic cord connecting him to the men who had harmed him.
The moment that cord was cut, everything changed.
“I’m starting to float… oh, I can go home now.”
Then came a powerful realisation.
“I felt lost. Now I’m not lost.”
That single shift allowed his soul to move forward.
The Pattern Many People Carry
Most of us have never faced mobsters with sledgehammers.
But many people carry anger for years after something painful happens.
They replay the moment.
They imagine what they should have said.
They hold onto the injustice.
The problem is that anger often ends up anchoring the person who carries it rather than the person who caused it.
The longer it stays, the heavier it becomes.
The Lesson From This Past Life
The message from this regression was simple but powerful.
Anger can feel strong in the moment, but it drains your energy over time.
Forgiveness is not about pretending something was acceptable.
It’s about releasing the energetic weight so you can move forward.
Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is imagine those golden scissors and cut the cord.
Because anger is heavy.
And your soul was never meant to live with that kind of weight tied to it.
A Question Worth Asking Yourself
Is there something you are still holding onto?
A moment that still makes your stomach tighten when you think about it?
A situation where anger keeps replaying the same story in your mind?
If so, it may be worth asking yourself whether that emotion is helping you move forward or quietly anchoring you in the past.
Letting go doesn’t mean the event never mattered.
It simply means you’re ready to move beyond it.
Ready to Discover What Your Soul Is Carrying?
Past Life Regression can reveal the deeper patterns behind emotions, blocks, and experiences that may not have started in this lifetime.
Once those patterns are understood, they can finally be released.
If this story resonated with you, your soul may already be ready to show you something important.
Book your Past Life Regression session here:
Your soul knows the way forward.
Sometimes it just needs permission to rise.