In many ways, yes—they both probe your subconscious and may bring to light memories from prior lifetimes. But QHHT (Quantum Healing Hypnosis Technique) also infuses a level of spiritual direction, healing, and actual intelligence that goes well beyond mere past-life remembrance.
What distinguishes QHHT from conventional past-life regression
How the two methods function and the sensations they may evoke in you
The kind of session you can anticipate with QHHT
Suggestions for selecting the method that will serve you best on your personal healing path
Imagine this: You lie comfortably, eyes closed, a practitioner you trust guiding you into the very depths of your subconscious. Whether it’s Lifeline Regression or classic past-life regression, both are like taking an introspective road trip through your memories. But here’s the twist with Lifeline Regression: it doesn’t just help you visit past lives. It also encourages you to chat directly with your objective consciousness—that wise, inner voice you rarely get to meet in daily life. Traditional regression might show you a former life as a medieval healer; Lifeline Regression could reveal that life and then pivot to address joint pain you’ve felt for years with the type of intuitive healing that could only come from a wise inner voice.
The recall of previous lifetimes, mainly for lessons or emotional clarity, is what past-life regression is about.
QHHT also starts with hypnosis, but you move deeper, asking your Higher Self for advice, health answers, and healing.
Both may unveil surprising stories, but QHHT tends to invite more "conversation" with the subconscious.
Here’s a quick metaphor: past-life regression is like watching ancient home movies, whereas QHHT is like having the director of the play of your life step in and explain behind-the-scenes stuff that we are not privy to.
When you have a QHHT session with someone like Alicia Wills, it typically lasts around 2–4 hours. You may start off talking with your practitioner about long-held life goals or current life situations that feel like big obstacles, and then you settle into a gentle trance. You might be thinking, "Wait a minute, you're not supposed to be describing all of this for me to make sense of what's going on?" But Wills and other practitioners assure you: Talking to yourself in a trance state is perfectly normal. And many people—especially those who tend to take a more analytic approach to life—say they feel the most relaxed and comfortable when they're in a state like that.
If you’re just fascinated by who you might have been at any given time, old-school past-life regression could be ideal. But if you’re looking for greater wisdom about your choices, health, or the way things seem to repeat in your life, QHHT could feel like you were given the ultimate universal pass to ask your own soul anything. Involve yourself in a session, and you might finally comprehend the way old-timey prophetic riddles, like those delivered by the Oracle at Delphi, were originally intended to wiggle the human psyche. Or you might come to grips with why certain people, or even your own physical form, keep popping up in your life.
Delving into your unconscious is a profoundly private venture—there's no singular way to do it. Whether you're doing it to unearth long-buried emotions, figure out the strange substance of a recurring dream, or just because you've always been curious, QHHT and past-life regression can potentially offer up some powerful new experiences. If you're game, and if you trust your guide (Alicia Wills), you might just connect with your uncooked Higher Self and see what's possible in the way of healing or offering new perspectives.