Violent Death in a Past Life: How the Soul Heals

Violent death in a past life — and the way its trauma carries forward into a current incarnation as unexplained phobia or bodily memory — is documented throughout Memories of the Afterlife. This case follows a man whose lifelong, irrational fear of firearms had no origin in his current biography. His regression revealed one: a past life that ended violently, in a role that made the fear not only logical but inevitable. Healing, it turned out, began the moment the memory had a context.

The LBL session, documented in Memories of the Afterlife (2009) by a certified Newton Institute therapist, revealed something more specific. He had died by gunfire. Not in this life — in another one, in the American West in the latter half of the nineteenth century, as a guard for a Wells Fargo express company coach. The death had been sudden, chaotic, and, from the soul’s perspective, unresolved in ways that had been carrying forward ever since.

The Life of the Guard

The therapist reported that the past-life recall came with unusual specificity: the dust of the road, the heat, the particular physical alertness of a man whose job was to watch for trouble. The guard had taken the work seriously. He had been competent, careful, someone who read situations with the practiced attention of a person who understood that his life depended on reading them correctly.

He had, in the session, a very clear sense of the moment everything went wrong. Not wrong in the sense of negligence — he had done nothing negligent. Wrong in the sense of outnumbered, outpositioned, with no version of the scenario available to him in which the outcome was different. He had done what a person in that situation does: he had tried to perform his function until he couldn’t.

The death itself was fast, but the period immediately following it — the between-lives transition — was where the therapist noted the session’s most significant material. The client recalled, from the LBL space, a quality of disorientation that persisted even after the physical body was gone. Something had not processed. The suddenness of the death, the specificity of the violence, the incompleteness of the guard’s experience of it — these had created what the therapist described as an energetic residue, a moment of experience that the soul had not had time to fully inhabit before it was over.

How Trauma Carries Between Lives

According to Newton’s method, violent or sudden deaths present a specific challenge in the between-lives transition. Deaths that occur gradually — through illness, through age — allow a degree of psychological preparation that the soul uses to process what has happened before moving on. Deaths that are abrupt do not afford this. The soul departs with an experience that is, in some sense, unfinished.

This does not mean the soul is permanently damaged by a violent death. LBL accounts are consistent in showing that the spirit world has extensive resources for what might be called soul recovery — guided processes of healing, reorientation, and integration that address the specific challenges of difficult deaths. What it does mean is that unresolved material from a violent death can persist in the soul’s energetic structure in ways that show up in subsequent lifetimes as unexplained fears, physical sensitivities, or physiological responses to triggers that have no current-life explanation.

The therapist noted that the client’s fear of firearms was, from the LBL perspective, precisely this kind of residue. It was not a phobia. It was a somatic memory — the body’s encoding of a specific traumatic event from another time, a warning system that had never received the signal that the danger was over.

The Soul Recovery Process

The most significant portion of the client’s session was what he described in the between-lives space as a process of being attended to. The therapist reported that the client recalled, with considerable emotional intensity, what he understood as a guided process of review and restoration — not a clinical debriefing but something that felt, he said, more like being held.

The guides who accompanied him in this process were not strangers. He recognized them with the quality of recognition that LBL clients frequently describe for between-lives presences: not remembering a name or a face, but knowing, with a certainty that bypassed analysis, who these souls were to him.

What the review involved, as the client recalled it, was a return to the moment of the death — but from outside it, with the expanded perception available in the between-lives state. He could see the scene, including himself in it, without the terror that had characterized the experience from inside. He could see the full arc of the guard’s life — the years of competent, careful service, the relationships, the daily texture of a working man’s nineteenth-century existence — and the death within that arc: a single, abrupt ending to a life that had been, by any measure, lived with integrity.

The incompleteness had been, in the between-lives review, completed. Not undone — the death had happened, the violence had happened, and neither the review nor the guides minimized any of it. But it had been placed in context, seen in full, given the attention it had not received at the time.

What Changes After the Healing

The therapist reported that what shifted for the client after the session was subtle at first and more significant over time. The physiological fear response to firearms did not disappear instantly on the therapy table. But the client noted, in follow-up sessions, that something about the quality of the fear had changed. It had moved from the category of overwhelming to the category of understandable.

Understanding what the fear was for — having seen the specific event that had created it, and having participated in the LBL process of reviewing and contextualizing that event — gave him a different relationship to the response when it arose. He was not controlled by something mysterious. He was experiencing a specific memory from a specific lifetime, and he could recognize it as such.

According to Newton’s method, this is often how LBL therapy addresses what look like inexplicable current-life symptoms. The symptom is not, from the soul’s perspective, inexplicable. It is a direct communication from the soul’s history — precisely accurate information about something that happened, encoded in a form that bypasses conscious memory. The work is not to eliminate the response but to understand it fully enough that it can be released.

What This Means for You

The fears that arrive without current-life explanation — the specific, physiological, non-negotiable aversions that no amount of rational reassurance can fully reach — deserve a different quality of attention than conventional psychology typically gives them.

LBL accounts document repeatedly that these fears are not malfunctions. They are accurate records of past experience, encoded in the soul’s structure and expressing through the current body. They can be worked with. They can, in many cases, be substantially healed — not through suppression or through the slow erosion of avoidance therapy, but through the kind of direct encounter with their origin that LBL therapy makes possible.

The Wells Fargo guard did not deserve to be afraid of guns in his next life. He deserved what the between-lives process offered: a full account of what had happened, held with care, integrated into the larger story of a soul that had been doing its best in a difficult and sometimes violent world.

Your unexplained fears deserve the same courtesy.


This story was uncovered through LBL therapy. Ready to explore your own? Find a certified therapist →

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