Past Lives -

Skeptics rightly remind us of the brain’s fragility and creativity. A sense of “past life memory” can be a beautiful metaphor—the brain’s way of encoding inherited trauma, archetypal imagery, or a deep longing for continuity in the face of death. The famous case of “Bridey Murphy,” a 1950s American woman who recalled a 19th-century Irish life under hypnosis, was eventually shown to be a collage of memories from books and neighbors. Memory is notoriously unreliable, and the self that feels so permanent is, neurologically, a story the brain tells itself moment to moment.

This belief reduces victim mentality. Instead of "Why me?", it shifts to "What do I need to learn from this?" Past Lives

In-Yeon (인연) suggests that even a simple brush of clothing with a stranger means there was a connection in a past life. Key Themes: Skeptics rightly remind us of the brain’s fragility