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New Essay: The Question That Forced Me to Define My Research

Over the past few years, what began as a deeply personal exploration of recurring memories, relationship dynamics, and past life inquiry gradually evolved into something much larger.

Without consciously intending it, I found myself building an archive of more than 250 reconstructed case trajectories. As the archive grew, recurring patterns began to emerge across psychology, vocation, relationships, trauma, symbolic motifs, facial echoes, and apparent soul groups. Yet despite writing and speaking about this work for years, I had never clearly articulated what the project had actually become.

That changed after a simple but important question from reincarnation researcher James G. Matlock:

“What exactly constitutes your dataset?”

The question prompted me to step back and examine my own methodology, not by changing the research itself, but by finding the language to describe the journey from individual past life readings to a comparative body of artistic and independent research.

In this first essay published on my new Substack, I reflect on that process, the evolution of the Soul Constellation Map, and how a personal search for answers gradually transformed into an ongoing comparative investigation of recurring patterns across lives.

Read the full essay on Substack:

The Question That Forced Me to Define My Research

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