Barbara Lane, Ph.D., is
a clinical hypnotherapist in private practice specializing in
past-life regression work. She has been trained by some of the
most prominent regression therapists in the U.S. and is a member
of the International Association for Regression Research and
Therapies.
Barbara’s
clinical work combines a variety of alternative and traditional
healing techniques. Trained in intuition, she is also a master
of Reiki, Shinju, and Kinjite. This diverse background has made
her ultimately aware of the body/mind/spirit connection. In
addition to her hypnotherapy work, Barbara is an empowerment
coach, designing motivational and self-improvement modalities,
encouraging people to develop to their full potential. In addition,
she is a corporate trainer for the American Management Association,
specializing in strategic people-building skills.
Barbara
holds a Ph.D. in Metapsychology, a B.A. in History and is an
accomplished communicator, both in the media and training. She
has had more than six year’s experience in radio and television
and has a background in the teaching profession, social work
and public relations.
As
a regressionist, Barbara spent a great deal of time working
with people who were fascinated (even obsessed) with other periods
in history such as the Civil War and the Middle Ages. These
people were interested in reenacting the past with such fervor
that Barbara began to wonder whether their focus on the past
was a subconscious memory of a former life. Most of these people
were skeptical about reincarnation. Nonetheless, under hypnosis
these same people recalled historical information they had apparently
acquired firsthand from a prior life. Barbara’s quest to connect
these memories with the actual past led her to hundreds of hours
of historical research and visits to cemeteries, battlefields,
archives and other historians. Her research became the subject
of three books, Echoes from the Battlefield, Echoes from
Medieval Halls and 16 Clues to Your Past Lives.
Her
work has been the subject of a segment for the Sightings
television show. It has also received coverage in such newspapers
as the
Washington Post and the Philadelphia
Inquirer. She has been
a guest on numerous radio and television programs. Barbara was
also a guest speaker and performed a group regression at the
135th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg.
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