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as if he was living through her memory. He said to me, “You know, Brandon, my whole life, I have never known what she’d gone through. Even though I was born born after the Holocaust, I feel like I have had a lid over my life because of what she went thru.” I asked everybody in the room, “How


many of you born post World War II feel like you have a had lid over your life?” Nearly everyone in the room raised their hands. He said, “Brandon, I never felt that


I could be crazy, wild, joyous and enthusiastic.” There has always been this lid over my life. I looked at my own life and I realised


Journey’s so effective in dealing with issues that are stored in our DNA. In Australia, aside from the


Aborigines, most people have European heritage, and so carry all of the epigenetic coding and programming that the Europeans carry that has been passed down generationally. Like me. I was born in New York, but my Austrian mother married a lieutenant in the US army. The first time I brought The Journey


to Germany was in 2005. On the second day of The Journey Intensive one man


shared that, in his physical journey process, he went inside his heart. The cell memory he uncovered there wasn’t his own. It was his mother’s. She had been in a concentration camp in the war and had never once spoken about her time there. He said that his mother had gone ‘stumm’ — meaning ‘we don’t talk about this’. Like me, he was born post World War II. And like his mother, mine never once spoke about her time in WWII. He said when he uncovered that genetically passed on cell memory he felt like he was experiencing it directly,


that, even though I grew up in New York, I too had grown up with a lid over my life, that I didn’t feel I could be crazy, carefree, wild and wonderful. It was like I was contained by whatever it was that my mother went through. Part of what The Journey work is doing is lifting off these genetically passed on lids that we all have so that we can live freely expressed as our true selves. It is time we all took the lids off our


lives. l


Connect with other readers & comment on this article at www.livingnow.com.au


Elizabeth Jewell Stephens is the founding editor of LivingNow magazine.


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