YES. Through many ways historically related. Playing renaissance music triggered memories of a life in the 1600s. Memories have been triggered by historical movies, places & above all reenacting. Being around the reenactors of periods you've lived in is a strange feeling, very familiar.Edelweiss said:Has anyone here read a historical document, or anything historically related, and have a triggered recall?
I've suspected for years that people who join "reinactment societies" such as American Civil War, Ren-Faires, etc. were attracted to that because of a past life, whether they realize it or not.Lady2 said:Being around the reenactors of periods you've lived in is a strange feeling, very familiar.
I've read that there are WWI reenactment groups, but I haven't run across any. Maybe in England? Later than that is probably still too painful. I had several friends and classmates that went to Viet Nam, but I didn't go. When I was in high school I even thought about going to Canada if I were drafted. One of my friends did go to Canada. His mother saw him get on the bus for boot camp. But when she left he got off the bus and disappeared.BriarRose said:Are there any reenactors of more recent conflicts? I still find anything about Viet Nam painful to watch. It's because people I loved were forced to participate, even though I sat at home and waited. Maybe it takes a few life times for the pain to fade?
Shiftkitty said:Numerous times. Saw a scene in a movie depicting a battle during one of the Crusades and it was like watching a home movie of some place I'd been.
I also read a reprint of a newspaper from the American Revolution and thought to myself "That's not how I remember it..."
What gets me is the revising of history they're doing these days, the extent of which turns my stomach. (The man said "War is Hell," NOT "War is unfortunate"!) It may well turn into a case of "if you get a memory from watching a current documentary, you're getting a false hit."
Don't forget Japan had invaded Korea about 1910 and China in 1931. The U.S. had been dragging their feet on what do to about it for years. U.S. Intelligence had broken the Japanese code and knew that an attack was imminent but they didn't know the exact target, as it was not spelled out in any of the messages. They thought it was going to be the Philippines and warned Mac Arthur to get ready, which he ignored. On the other hand, what if the U.S. had been ready and prevented the attack? What if the U.S. had managed to stay out of the war? What if the Germans had won? Then what? The B-29 bomber was originally designed to bomb Germany from Canada if the British had surrendered. But by 1943 they realized it would not be needed in Europe.OutOfTheBox said:Hi Shiftkitty:
For instance, the so called unprovoked sneak attack on Pearl Harbor. I found out that we were blockading Japan from getting oil. They had a mere two week supply left when they attacked Pearl Harbor. They would have gone back to the stone age or worse if they had not attacked. Roosevelt also knew that attack was coming as we had broken the Japanese code before that. Most good historians now agree on this.