(Conducted on 8th December 2025)
Duration: 4 Hours
Session I
Vitals: Kushagra/ M/32/ Scientist/Married
VAK: 5/5/5
Eye roll: 2/4
Hypnosis score: 5/10
Theme: The Unseen Ailment
Pain level before: 9
Pain level after: 0
(Conducted on 8th and 9th December 2025)
T: Therapist
C: Client
Case History
Kushagra lives in Ontario. At the time of birth, the doctor noticed his face was swollen, his eyes were red, and blisters on his body. He was restless since birth due to these symptoms. Slowly, at a very young age, some new symptoms came into notice, like nausea, vomiting, headache, dizziness, fatigue, followed by a latent period with few symptoms, then severe issues like hair loss, skin burns, infections (due to low white blood cells), bleeding, bruising (Hematopoietic System) and potentially central nervous system failure (dizziness, and confusion), severe diarrhoea, abdominal pain, dehydration, loss of appetite. Redness of skin, itching, ulcers, and burns when he started working in a biochemical factory as a scientist.
Recently, he reported non-specific symptoms, including tingling sensations, which some people attribute to exposure to electromagnetic fields (EMF) from devices like mobile phones and Wi-Fi, a condition referred to as “electromagnetic hypersensitivity” (EHS).
At the age of 30, he was diagnosed with lung cancer. Symptoms included a persistent cough, shortness of breath, wheezing, chest pain, coughing up blood, fatigue, unexplained weight loss, recurrent infections, hoarseness, shoulder pain, and swelling on the face and neck.
When radiation therapy started, he developed radiation pneumonitis (acute inflammation) and later radiation fibrosis. Currently, he has some fears, like “I’m going to die because I was exposed to radiation,” “I’m severely sick, " It’s hopeless,” “I feel so weak and helpless,” “I’m terrified of long-term effects like fibrosis or cancer,” and many more.
I assured him the oath of confidentiality that whatever transpires during the sessions would stay between us. He consented.
(Completed stages 1 to 9)
Session II
(Conducted on 9th December 2025)
Duration: 6 Hours
(Dave Elman, Progressive Relaxation, Pyramid, Garden, Lift, Cliff, Boxes, Tunnel of light, Affect bridge, Past Life)
Past Life I
Therapist: What are the first impressions that you see around you or feel where you are?
Client: I’m on a beach. The ocean’s really blue, the sky is really blue too, it sounds like a lovely day.
Therapist: Tell me more about the beach.
Client: There isn’t much to it; it’s bare. There are houses behind me. The beach ends abruptly, and there’s like a cement wall that goes up, and the houses are a little further up on top of it.
Therapist: Are you standing or sitting?
Client: Standing
Therapist: Do you feel Barefoot on the beach?
Client: Yeah
Therapist: Do you sense that you are alone?
Client: Yeah, I am alone.
Therapist: You are alone, okay, so let’s connect with your body there, standing on the beach barefoot, look down at yourself, your body, how do you perceive yourself?
Client: I’m a man.
Therapist: You are a man! How old do you feel?
Client: Thirty
Therapist: What are you wearing on your body?
Client: It’s kind of like a tunic-type thing. I’m not wearing pants; it has a sash on the waist, and it’s not shorts either.
Therapist: Are they longer than shorts?
Client: No, it’s just the tunic, it’s just like a tunic thing, but it’s long. It stops like mid-thigh, and the material is rough.
Therapist: What colour is your skin?
Client: It’s like a deeper Brown, more like tanned from working in fields or on a boat.
Therapist: All right, and how do you feel at this moment, standing on the beach?
Client: Just kind of, I’m not really feeling much, almost like empty, I’m just taking in the feeling of the surrounding calmness. There are houses behind.
Therapist: Now, you mentioned the houses behind you. How do you perceive those structures?
Client: They’re wooden, it’s like, dark lacquer wood.
Therapist: Does it seem a little community of some sort?
Client: Yeah, that sounds about right.
Therapist: Let’s see where you live. What does this look like for you?
Client: It’s further inland, so I’m not sure what the farm is. I keep seeing lily pads, kind of like lotus flowers, but it’s nice, it’s just simple, and clothes are hanging up to dry. There is an area on the inside deck that has two doors leading into it. Beyond that, another set of sliding doors leads into what we would call a living room.
Therapist: What material are they made of?
Client: The ones on the outside, they keep going back and forth. I’m not sure if it’s supposed to be wood or glass; they have wood panels. They’re dark wood panels that we can put up to protect the glass during the monsoon season.
Therapist: Where do you sleep? What does that look like?
Client: It’s in the same living room area, like one main room.
Therapist: What does your bed look like?
Client: It’s just mat on the floor, it’s a futon.
Therapist: All right, do you feel that you share the space with anyone? What does that feel like?
Client: I think I shared it with anybody before, but right now it doesn’t feel. I only see one mat, one futon.
Therapist: Allow yourself to go back in time when others were. Connecting to those people you were closest to, be here now, what do you notice here?
Client: My mom was with me.
Therapist: Your mother was living with you!
Client: But I haven’t seen my dad, and I’m not sure where he went.
Therapist: All right, so does it feel like it’s just you and your mom?
Client: I think I had a sister there before, but I think it’s been a while since either she or my dad was there.
Therapist: Do you still feel like an adult?
Client: No, I’m more like a teenager.
Therapist: You’re a teenager! How do you feel about your mom?
Client: I love her a lot.
Therapist: You do! Great!
Client: She did a lot for me when we were growing up. I keep seeing myself combing her long, grey hair. I think she died not too long after that.
Therapist: I am sorry to hear that! Would you like to talk about your mother? It sounds like you take very good care of her, and she takes care of you. Just tell me if her energy feels familiar to you today, listen for the answer?
Client: I think it’s my mom now. She has the same hair.
Therapist: As you spend this time with your mom, allow me to ask you how you feel about the family members you mentioned, your father and a sister?
Client: I am not sure. I don’t really feel too bad. I think my sister got married and has gone with her husband’s family. That’s just the way it goes.
Therapist: Anything surrounding your father?
Client: Not really. I think he was just like an absent person.
Therapist: You’re not sure if he died or just left?
Client: Maybe went off to join the military.
Therapist: All right, allow yourself to move ahead now to an important day, just be there. This is an important day. Where are you? What is happening?
Client: I’m going back between two different ones, but the one I see the most is my mom lying in a bed on one of the futons in our house. She’s really sick. I don’t think we have the money for medicine.
Therapist: That sounds incredibly stressful! What are you doing to make her comfortable?
Client: Just feeding her like brothy soups and padding the sweat away from her hair or her forehead, petting her hand, just holding it.
Therapist: How old do you feel here?
Client: I still feel like a teenager, maybe an older teen, maybe 19.
Therapist: Let’s move ahead with the count of 1 to 3. Tell me what happens to your mom?
Client: She just passed away. It’s very quiet, it’s still during the day, and I’m just holding her hand, and she stops breathing.
Therapist: That is heavy to hear! I am sorry for your loss! What do you do with your mother’s body? Tell me what your traditions are?
Client: I’m not sure where she gets cremated, but she gets cremated, and I know if I do it myself or if there are people who do it for me, and I put her in an urn, and she stays in an alcove in the house, where I can talk to her.
Therapist: All right, let’s move ahead to another important day, with the count of 1 to 3, when something important is happening. Be there.
Client: Now, I’m on the beach again. I think it’s summer. The water’s warm, but I only have my feet in the water.
Therapist: What are you doing there?
Client: I’m here with my wife, I think she’s my wife, and there’s a little girl in the water.
Therapist: Okay, how does this feel?
Client: Today, we’re just calm and happy.
Therapist: Tell me about your wife. What does she look like?
Client: She’s pretty, has long black hair, but she keeps it up because she works in the fields too, with me, and she has a scar running down her face.
Therapist: When you say working in the fields, what fields? What do you do to work there?
Client: It’s like the Lotus Fields outside my house, there are other fields too, lots of fields that are drowned in water for the plants to grow.
Therapist: All right, let’s connect with your wife, and if she feels familiar to you today.
Client: Her eyes remind me of my sister. That’s who she feels like.
Therapist: Great! Allow yourself to move a little forward to when your little girl comes out of the water. Let her be close to you. How old is she?
Client: I think she’s only like three, she’s just happy, but she doesn’t get to grow up.
Therapist: What are the reasons she hasn’t grown up? Let’s connect with your little girl, tell me if she feels familiar to you.
Client: She feels newer, kind of like my friend Sam, but I haven’t. It’s similar, but I don’t think it’s Sam.
Therapist: All right, we’re going to move to an important moment again with the count of 1 to 3, be there now.
Client: We didn’t see the bomb drop. We didn’t see it, actually, but we saw the cloud coming from it.
Therapist: Bomb dropped! Can you describe it to me?
Client: It’s mushroom-shaped, and it gets very huge very quickly. We just felt the blast wave. We didn’t know that it was going to cause so much damage.
Therapist: Really tough time! I can’t imagine what that must have been like! I am with you! So, what do you do next? What happens next?
Client: I felt all burnt up, and I went to try to check on my wife and my baby, my little girl, but it got worse somehow.
Therapist: It sounds like you are dealing with a lot right now! I am really sorry to hear that! Are you still on the beach?
Client: Yes, I’m still on the beach right now. I haven’t left yet. It happens pretty quickly.
Therapist: Tell me what’s happening with your wife and little girl?
Client: I think I passed out. I’m not sure, but they’re all burnt up like me, but they don’t move after that. I’m the only one who manages to get up.
Therapist: It’s a painful situation! When you do get up, what do you notice? What do you do?
Client: I go back towards the houses. I’ve resigned; my family’s gone, so I go up to find out what happened so that I can help, and there are a lot of people in a similar situation. There are a lot of burnt people and collapsed houses and stuff like that.
Therapist: That’s devastating! I am here with you! Allow yourself to notice how this affects you today. Notice how this experience in this life affects you today. How does it make the body feel today?
Client: It just makes me really sad. Like Anything could happen at any point in time, and then I’d be left alone again.
Therapist: Take a slow, deep breath. What’s happening to your body, to your skin?
Client: It’s very charred, like not all of me, but it seems like half of my body is just blackened. I can’t really feel it, though I see other people, and some of them have black skin too, but some of them have boils, like from burns, and they feel it a lot more than I do.
Therapist: How do you help these people? What do you do? What do you offer them?
Client: I don’t think I actually managed to help anybody. I’m walking through the community and seeing people crying and stumbling around.
Therapist: Terrible! That’s a difficult situation to face! What happens next?
Client: I think it takes a little bit of time, but I think people show up in military uniforms, and they try to help the people who are hurt. But there’s not much they can do. I do end up seeing myself helping to move bodies into rows.
Therapist: You can do.
Client: I don’t feel much.
Therapist: How is your health?
Client: Not good. I don’t last very long after that.
Therapist: Sorry to hear that! Let’s move forward to those last moments before your transition with the count of 1 to 3. Where are you? Is anyone with you?
Client: No, I’m alone
Therapist: Where are you?
Client: I’m sitting against a building, but it’s just another building in the community. It has a stone wall, so the wall managed to stay standing, and I’m sad, and I’m leaning over, and I stop at some point.
Therapist: Allow yourself to move ahead and float above it now with the count of 1 to 3. You’re on the other side of it. Allow yourself to look back at this experience from a higher perspective, and as you look back at it, what thoughts come to your mind?
Client: I was near Hiroshima, but a little further north, close enough to get caught. It caused a lot of damage.
Therapist: It did. Let’s float up now. What was the year of your death in that lifetime?
Client: August 6, 1945
Therapist: What is the main lesson of that lifetime?
Client: I have learnt profound lessons about unconditional love, transforming suffering into peace, the fragility & preciousness of life, letting go of attachments to physical form, and recognising that true power lies in compassion, not destruction, emphasising the soul’s journey beyond physical trauma.
Therapist: What else do you notice here?
Client: Spirit guides. They’re ready to welcome me back. They’re just all white light. There are five of them.
Therapist: Great! Do you perceive them as male or female energy?
Client: Male. They’re really kind.
Therapist: All right, so I’m going to ask if they can give us their name. What name can we call them?
Client: Zephyr. I think that is what I’m hearing.
Therapist: Okay, Zephyr! How has this life been affecting you today? Just take your time. Listen, and when you’re ready, you can tell me what they’re saying.
Client: I just experienced a lot of loss. I ended up being alone. A lot, so it’s not necessarily a fear of abandonment, just the fear of losing and being alone again.
Therapist: You experienced that with your mother, and then, after you lost your wife and daughter, what else do they want to tell you?
Client: That it’s going to be okay, no matter what I go through. This life is not supposed to be hard, not in the same sense as the previous one.
Therapist: Yes, well, there are five guides. Does anyone else want to step forward to give a message before we move on?
Client: No, Zephyr is escorting me to some place. He is saying it is The Healing Temple. This is a beautiful place, and I may have been there before on my travels, but this is a very special place that I can go to and help clear any energies, anything that is limiting and hurting me today, and I can help to heal it in this place and leave it in this place.
Therapist: Wonderful! Let’s move ahead with the count of 1 to 3 and have Zephyr take you there now to this sacred place to allow you to heal. Just be there. What does this look like to you?
Client: It’s a pool of water. I see a lot of things, like orange stones around there. I think it’s colourful. There are many colourful gemstone-type things around.
Therapist: Beautiful! Is Zephyr there with you still? Do you feel his presence?
Client: Yeah, he’s just at the edge of the pool.
Therapist: Okay, and are you being asked to get into the pool?
Client: Already, he put me in there.
Therapist: You’re already in there, all right!
Client: Because water’s important to me. Zephyr is saying, as I submerge there in the pool, releasing that life energetically, I won’t forget it, but I don’t need to carry it with me any longer,
Therapist: Allow the water to completely remove the pain, the sadness, the grief, the loss, just leaving it there. Whenever you’re ready to come out of the pool, just let me know once you have finished.
Client: I am getting a message that Zephyr is going to channel some light language for me. This will assist me as I continue my journey in my current life. It’ll also help me to heal my heart. Zephyr is saying that I will not understand the language itself, but receive it in my heart, and I think I’m feeling good now.
Therapist: Great! so what happens next? Tell me where he wants to take you next? Is there anything else he would like to do or share with you, or show you?
Client: He is going to call in any of my ancestors.
Therapist: Let’s go ahead now. Whom do you see?
Client: I see my grandpa. He has a message for me. He says I’m doing great, and he misses me.
Therapist: Beautiful, anything else, anyone else?
Client: I keep seeing flashes of somebody behind him, but it’s like they’re hiding. I don’t think they’re here for me necessarily. I think there’s something to do with my dad.
Therapist: All right, so let’s go ahead and ask if Zephyr or any of your other guides have any final messages for you.
Client: Today, no, no, they don’t. They are showing some flashes like a war field… Vietnam War. It is 1969.
Past Life II
He was born in a middle-class family. His name was Dan Bullock. Sometimes the condition was like hand-to-mouth. Mother was taking care of his sister and him. Father was very strict while working in a factory. They were living in Goldsboro. After his mother’s death, they shifted to Brooklyn. He was eager and happy to join the Marines, inspired by the stories of service and a desire to live a better life. At the age of 14, he lied about his age and falsified documents due to his desire to be a Marine. He was excited to go to Vietnam, seeing it as a heroic path, even though he was just a child. When he was 14, he fought the first war.
At the age of 15, he died in the war due to small arms fire in South Vietnam. The North Vietnamese Army launched a surprise night attack, throwing explosives into his bunker. Before death, he noticed difficulty in breathing, like choking, due to smoke and radiation from the bomb. His eyes were red like blood. His body was half burnt and had blisters on some parts. He died instantly. He was the youngest American killed in the Vietnam War on June 7, 1969, just 21 days after arriving.
(Reframing and re-scripting of the events that the client has undergone is done here. I used psychological and communicative methods to help the client cope with the overwhelming fear, uncertainty, abandonment and physical symptoms of radiation exposure. The goal is to shift the patient’s perspective from helplessness and panic to a sense of control, hope, and adherence. Highlighted the client’s role in his own recovery, like resting, eating, cooperating with medical treatment by the doctors and encouraged him to use his new understanding and coping mechanism in future.)
(Completed stages 10 to 15)
Integration and Closure:
In this case, I tried to integrate all three modalities (visual, auditory, and kinesthetic) simultaneously in my language to ensure continuous engagement with his experience. I tried to handle the sessions with extreme care, emphasising grounding, integration, and a clear distinction between the past life narrative and present life reality. The client was satisfied after the session. He noticed a major shift in his health after the sessions. He was feeling fresh, healthier, and at inner peace. He expressed that he never thought PLRT could help in his case. But he was happy to see the profound and powerful effects on his overall well-being.
After his feedback, I felt a sense of gratification and fulfilment in helping him find inner peace, release suppressed emotions, and gain a new perspective, along with challenges and clarity. Hoping for the client’s continued well-being. It is clearly seen that the client has radiation exposure in both past lives and current life as well. Concluded the session with breathing and affirmations.
Recommendations: To support the client’s healing, I suggested the following:
Maintain a well-balanced diet. Get enough rest.
Engage in gentle physical activity, like walking, if possible and approved by your doctor, which can help manage fatigue and mood.
Follow the prescribed treatment plan.
Communicate openly with your oncologist and his team.
Decontamination (Prompt removal of contaminated clothing and laundry to prevent further exposure.)
I have emailed all the relevant reports, recommendations and an audio tape to the client to listen to relax his mind.


