Thank you Dr. Gunjan Gaur ![]()
Thank you so much for sharing such a divine case with use , I am speechless after reading it, we have to focus on our meditation more , you and client are really blessed souls, painting are WOW superb, Heart felt gratitude
Thank you so much Ashmita ![]()
@deepakchaks thanks for the translation,
can we call this our first case of Xenoglossy in Amarantos Family? @ATT your views please
Xenoglossy is a supernatural ability that may be exhibited by mediums and clairvoyants during altered states of consciousness, such as a trance. My client is entirely sacred and divine, and this phenomenon should not be mistaken for paranormal activity. People clearly perceive divine beings around her and within her. I have witnessed this myself. She is deeply connected to them and communicates with them effortlessly.
During a past life regression, my client revisited a lifetime in the Lemurian community, where she spoke in light codes. However, after the regression, she was unable to recall those light codes accurately.
@Jackie Phenomenal work on the case report! It’s thorough, precise, and exceptionally well-presented ![]()
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@venu This is what I found on google about- Xenoglossy-
Documented Research Cases Involving Xenoglossy
- Dr. Ian Stevenson’s Research (University of Virginia)
• Dr. Stevenson, a psychiatrist and pioneer in reincarnation studies, documented multiple verified cases of xenoglossy.
• Example:
• Case of “Jensen”: An American woman under hypnosis spoke Swedish fluently despite never learning it.
• Case of “T.E.”: A woman began speaking in Bengali during regression sessions; linguistic experts confirmed grammatical accuracy.
- Dr. Denys Kelsey & Joan Grant (UK)
• Reported clients speaking ancient Egyptian or archaic French dialects during PLRT sessions, with emotional and contextual accuracy matching the regression narrative.
- Dr. Helen Wambach’s Regression Studies
• While her large-scale regressions focused more on historical recall, several participants showed linguistic fragments from Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit roots.
In Sanskrit philosophy, this aligns with the idea of “Vāsanās” — subtle impressions from past existences that carry samskāras (karmic residues) influencing present behavior, speech, and memory.
“Vāsanābhir gatiḥ pūrvā — one’s tendencies are driven by past impressions.”
(Yoga Vāsiṣṭha 6.1.17)
Skeptics and science suggest possible explanations such as:
• Cryptomnesia — forgotten exposure to the language earlier in life.
• Subconscious reconstruction of sounds.
• Therapist cueing or suggestibility.
However, when language proficiency surpasses learned exposure, researchers acknowledge xenoglossy as an unexplained but real linguistic phenomenon.
Thank you so much Jackie for sharing this!