Can Your Heart Remember?

  This next story fits the definition of a synchronicity – no cause and effect – and it is certainly meaningful to the people who experienced it.
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When an eight-year old girl received the heart of a ten-year-old girl who had been murdered, she ended up on a shrink’s couch, haunted by nightmares of her donor’s killer.  She claimed she remembered who the man was.

After a couple of sessions, the psychiatrist notified the police. The cops followed the girl’s instructions and tracked down the murderer. He was convicted on the basis of the clues the eight-year-old gave them: the time, weapon, place, the clothes the man wore, what the victim had said to him. Everything the eight-year-old said turned out to be true.

Neuropsychologist Paul Pearsall collected 73 stories about transplant recipients in which part of the donor’s personality and memories have been transferred to the recipient. In his book, The Heart’s Code, he contends that the heart and the brain share equal importance in human intelligence. The body is composed of cells that communicate information electromagnetically and Pearsall argues that a transplanted organ can continue to transmit this “old information.”

Critics attribute the altered personalities of some recipients to the drugs they must take to prevent rejection. But how do you explain this one? An eight-year-old Jewish boy died in a car wreck and his heart was given to a three-year-old Arab girl. As soon as the girl came out of surgery, she asked – by name – for a piece of Jewish candy she couldn’t have known existed.

The story is here.

What I find so compelling about stories like these is that it seems science is catching up to what mystics have always known. In a series of books about the nature of reality that were channeled by Jane Roberts between the 1970s and her death in the early 1990s, the personality essence called Seth talked quite a bit about cellular consciousness. In The Unknown Reality, Seth said: “The cellular consciousness experiences itself as eternal, though to you the cells have a brief life. But those cells are aware of your body’s history, in your terms, and in a much more familiar fashion than you are aware of the earth’s history. The cells are also aware of probabilities in a more familiar fashion than you are, as they manipulate the past and future history of the body.”

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10 Responses to Can Your Heart Remember?

  1. Trish and Rob MacGregor says:

    aleksander – thanks for the link! off to check it out.

  2. Aleksandar Malecic says:

    https://www.neuroquantology.com/journal/index.php/nq/article/view/168/281 About retrocausality, anticipation, causality, love, mind, body.

  3. Aleksandar Malecic says:

    "stream of energy"

  4. Aleksandar Malecic says:

    There is definitely something on the relation conscious mind – conscious body when on feels a mystical and/or transpersonal experience. I've felt it many times. Body definitely reacts (through "electricity" or "stram of energy") to balance between consciousness and unconsciousness. A mystical or peak experience is sudden and similar (well, excuse me for a lack of less filthy word) to orgasm.

  5. Trish and Rob MacGregor says:

    String theory sounds plausible.
    Hex 29: fits!

  6. Nancy says:

    I read this book. This is fascinating, but holds together when viewed as the universe being interconnected. And isn't it string theory that discusses the interconnectedness of photons once they pass each other?

  7. Von says:

    Fascinating, these stories are becoming more and more common.How little we know!!

  8. Adele Aldridge says:

    Fascinating story. How can one doubt here?

    This reminds me of the words in the Wilhelm translation of the I Ching for K'an ,Hexagram 29, Water over the water —

    "In Man's world K'an represents the heart, the soul locked up within the body . . ."

    My imagination surmises that something of the soul – what ever that may be – is also transplanted with the heart.

  9. 67 Not Out (Mike Perry) says:

    Fascinating! We know someone who had a heart transplant and this led to slight changes to their previous food likes and other interests.

  10. A New Soul says:

    amazing stories! Thank you so much for sharing.

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