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NEWS:Child Psychiatrist Says Past-Life Memories Not So Uncommon in Kids

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http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=2232830

 

Child Psychiatrist Says Past-Life Memories Not So Uncommon in Kids 70

Percent of Lives Children Describe Ended Under Unusual Experiences

 

*July 25, 2006 —* - From the ages of 2 to 6, James Leininger seemed to

recall in striking detail a "past life" he had as a World War II Navy pilot

who was shot down and killed over the Pacific.

 

The boy knew details about airplanes and about pilot James Huston Jr. that

he couldn't have known.

 

James' parents say he also had terrible nightmares about a plane crashing

and a "little man" unable to get out.

 

James, now 8, stills loves airplanes, but he is free of those haunting

images of the pilot's death.

 

"He's doing great. He's your typical 8-year-old boy ready to start third

grade," said James' mother, Andrea Leininger.

 

Jim Tucker, a child psychiatrist and medical director of the Child and

Family Psychiatric Clinic at the University of Virginia, is one of the few

researchers to extensively study the phenomenon of children who seem to have

memories of past lives.

 

He says James' case is very much like others he has studied.

 

"At the University of Virginia, we've studied over 2,500 cases of children

who seem to talk about previous lives when they're little," Tucker said.

"They start at 2 or 3, and by the time they're 6 or 7 they forget all about

it and go on to live the rest of their lives."

Do You Believe?

 

Tucker -- the author of "Life Before Life: A Scientific Investigation of

Children's Memories of Previous Lives" -- has seen cases like James' where

children make statements that can be verified and seem to match with a

particular person.

 

"It means that this is a phenomenon that really needs to be explored,"

Tucker said. "James is one of many, many kids who have said things like

this."

 

While about three-fourths of Americans say they believe in paranormal

activity, 20 percent believe in reincarnation, according to a 2005 Gallup

poll.

 

Fifty percent do not believe in reincarnation while 20 percent say they're

not sure.

 

People in other cultures are more likely than Americans to believe in past

lives. Tucker said he was a skeptic about reincarnation, but he identified

some patterns in his research.

 

"Children are describing very recent lives and very ordinary lives usually

in the same country," he said.

 

Seventy percent of the deaths described by children were unnatural or under

unusual circumstances, he said.

 

James' parents say they were once skeptics about past lives and

reincarnation. After James' experience, they are now believers.

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