HEALING ARTS Innate Talents By Charles Wm. Skillas, PhD, DD, BCH, CI
Many people are unhappy in their jobs and they come to see me asking if I can help them find what they really good at and finding work they will enjoy. Most people fall into their work by getting a job when it’s available and when they’re ready, but it may not really be that kind of work they have an innate talent for or that they really want to do because they love it. This can lead to a life of misery and discontent. Having to spend eight hours a day working at a job you don’t really like and for which you have no real talent is like a prison sentence. Wouldn’t it be great if we could find the kind of job and the kind of work that we really enjoy doing and that were really good at? When we do that, we usually end up being successes.
One of the ways that I help people find what they’re really good at, what they really love to do, and what they buy be successful at is to do some past life regression work on them. What I do is to take them back into past lifetimes where they were really successful and happy in their work. If I can find about three lifetimes where there is a common thread in their work, this usually indicates what they’ve been good at before, and what they most probably would be good at in this lifetime. So that’s what I do.
Let me give you a case in point by citing a recent ses- sion that I had with a person, who was very unhappy in his work, didn’t make much money, and dreaded every morning going off to his work.
Jack worked as an accountant and he earned a fair liv- ing, but he hated going to work in the morning and he dreaded, when he contemplated his life, having to con- tinue doing this kind of work for the rest of his life. He was absolutely miserable as an accountant. He got into accountancy work because his father was an accountant and his uncle was an accountant and he always heard that being an accountant was a good way to make a living. He studied hard at school to learn how to be an accountant and passed the necessary examinations to become a CPA. He has spent a lot of money and a lot of time learning how to be an accountant, but he was miserable. He told me he’d rather be dead than spend the rest of his life being an accountant. Obviously this is not the field of work where he was going to be suc- cessful and enjoy his life.
I regressed him back to three lifetimes where he was both successful and happy in the work he was doing. If I could find a common occupational thread between these three lifetimes regarding his work, perhaps this would be then an indication of where his talent and his love of work lies.
Lifetime Number One: in this lifetime Jack was an artist. He loved to paint landscapes and still life and he was very successful in doing so. This is all he wanted to do
Oracle 20/20 November 2011
and he was very happy in doing it. He made a reason- ably good living, married a beautiful woman, had three wonderful children and lived to be old and happy.
Lifetime Number Two: in this lifetime Jack designed and built landscapes to express the beauty of nature. He was very artistic and the way he put together landscape designs and had them constructed so that they exhib- ited the beauty that he saw in nature made him famous and successful, both monetarily and personally.
Lifetime Number Three: in this lifetime Jack was an inte- rior designer and artistically designed homes and other spaces with an eye towards utilitarianism and beauty. He was very successful in doing this work and people from all over would request him to design their homes or offices. He made very good money, was married to a wonderful woman and had two children that adored him and whom he adored. His life was filled with beauty, success and love and he was very content.
All three of these lifetimes illustrate the fact that Jack was an artistic person, and that he was not an analyti- cal numbers person that you must be to in order to be a successful accountant. He was so impressed with the results of these regressions that he quit his job as an accountant and began to look for a job that was artistic in nature. He found such a job as an illustrator for a book company. He would read the books and then illus- trate with pictures the essence of what the chapter was about. Over two years, he was so successful in doing this that many publishers called upon him because his work was so outstanding. He was very happy doing this work, made a very good living, and it changed his attitude towards everyone in his life. His wife was much more happy with him because he cheerful was and his children reacted positively to their father who exhibited such joy in his life.
This case illustrates an old saying that life may not be the party we hoped for, but while we’re here, we should dance. It’s much easier to dance when were happy doing what we love to do. So, if you are unhappy doing the work you now do, consider changing to something that you have an innate talent for and that you would love doing.
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