When I was in junior high school I had a dream one night that I was French kissing a girl at a dance. Now mind you this was in the early sixties and I live in a very old-fashioned family. I had never knew of this type of kissing until after the dream, when I asked an older boy I knew and he just laughed at me for not knowing.Was this some type of inherent primitive mating instinct surfacing as I came into puberty or a pleasurable memory passed down by some distant ancestor hidden in my DNA.We all know that many other species of life have instinctive knowledge that permits them to survive. Like the spider, its parents are gone when it is born but it knows how to weave a very intricate web in order to trap food. The turtle is born on land but instinctively knows to head to the sea. How is this knowledge passed form the parent to the offspring unless through memories encoded in the DMA that are passed from generation to generation.When I was around 20 I had another dream, I dreamt that I was young boy who worked in a coal mine and I barely escaped with my life after an explosion in the mine. I never gave it much thought until a few yearsago when I was researching my genealogy and found that many of my ancestors on my mother's side did work in the coal mines and many of them were young boys from age 12 and up. This was interesting in own, but in preparation for this article I did some further research and uncovered that two of my ancestors that worked in the mines lived in an area where several mines had reported cave-ins as well as explosions during their life time. Dose this explain my fear of dark tight places. Once again my family was not one to talk about my ancestry; I just assumed that there were some dark secrets that the family felt better left alone. The fact is I never knew of anyone beyond my grandparents before I started working on my genealogy. So is this a coincident or did I get a glimpse of a pass life experience of one of my ancestors encoded in my DNA and passed down through the generations. Our bodies are made up of billions of cells each of this cells contain our DNA. Currently, the function of only 46 Chromosomes, 23 pairs has been identified out of billions, about 2%, and the remaining 98% has been up until lately labeled as "junk". The most in-depth knowledge is about the genes responsible for the bodily structures, the structure genes, which is the simplest part of the system. But the knowledge about the more significant part of this system, the regulator genes, is incomplete. The genetic code language of these genes is only partially known.More than 98 percent of all DNA was labeled "Junk DNA" because molecular biologists were unable to attribute any function to it. They assumed that it was just "molecular garbage ". If so the sequence of the "syllables", i.e. the nucleotides in DNA should be completely random.However this is not the case genetic research has found that the sequence of the syllables is not random at all and has a remarkable resemblance with the structure of human language Consequently, scientists now generally agree that this DNA must hold some kind of coded information.Nevertheless the code and its purpose are still to date Completely unknown.We all know that a portion of the 23 pairs of Chromosomes that functions have been identified control the color of our eyes, hair and the general features that make each of unique. It has also been established that these features can skip a generation or more. I know that my son looks nothing like me but is a mirror image of his grandfather. So what about our artistic or scientific talent. While there is no genetic proof scientists believe that our IQ, aptitudes, musical skills, and athletic ability, might be significantly affected by our DNA. Psychologists have also shown that certain social traits and psychological disorders can be inherited. So my question is, are these attributes not all function of the brain if so for humans, with our fairly complex brain, feelings and memories, what other experiences may be stored in our DNA throughout the countless generations of our ancestors lives? And, can they be accessed by us today.To answer this question I would urge you to conduct your own individual research and to find out for yourself, research your genealogy, just maybe all we need to do is listen to our inner DNA to reincarnate the experiences of our ancestors. Their lives, joys and fears are within us. In that way, they are with us always.
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While there is no genetic proof scientists believe that our IQ, aptitudes, musical skills, and athletic ability, might be significantly affected by our DNA. Psychologists have also revealed that certain social traits and psychological disorders can be inherited. What other experiences might be stored in our DNA.
Read more about Past Life | Karmic dreams | déjà vu | DNA Memories
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