The boy who lived before
| Zykanthos
(@chodebalm)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago 3
http://img.thesun.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00185/F_200609_september0_185548a.jpg Another life … Cameron Macaulay told stories of his other family LITTLE Cameron Macaulay was a typical six-year-old, always talking about his mum and family. He liked to draw pictures of his home too — a long single-storey, white house standing in a bay. But it sent shivers down his mums spine — because Cameron said it was somewhere they had never been, 160 miles away from where they lived. And he said the mother he was talking about was his old mum. Convinced he had lived a previous life Cameron worried his former family would be missing him. The Glasgow lad said they were on the Isle Of Barra. Mum Norma, 42, said: Ever since Cameron could speak hes come up with tales of a childhood on Barra. He spoke about his former parents, how his dad died, and his brothers and sisters. Eventually we just had to take him there to see what we could find. It was an astonishing experience. Cameron’s journey to find his previous life is now the subject of a spooky TV documentary. Norma said: His dad and I are no longer together but neither of our families have ever been to the island. At first we just put his stories down to a vivid imagination. Then life took a more sinister turn as Cameron started to become distressed at being away from his Barra family. Norma said: It was awful and went on for years. When he started nursery his teacher asked to see me and told me all the things Cameron was saying about Barra. He missed his mummy and his brothers and sisters there. He missed playing in rockpools on the beach beside his house. And he complained that in our house there was only one toilet, whereas in Barra, they had three. He used to cry for his mummy. He said shed be missing him and he wanted to let his family in Barra know he was all right. It was very distressing. He was inconsolable. Memorable view … Isle of Barra which Cameron said was his former home He wouldnt stop talking about Barra, where they went, what they did and how he watched the planes landing on the beach from his bedroom window. He even said his dad was called Shane Robertson, who had died because ‘he didnt look both ways. I assume he means knocked over by a car but he never says that. Cameron and Norma … he says ‘if you die you come back again’ When we got to the island and DID land on a beach, just as Cameron had described, he turned to Martin and me and said, ‘Now do you believe me? He got off the plane, threw his arms in the air and yelled ‘Im back. He talked about his Barra mum, telling me she had brown hair down to her waist before shed had it cut. He said Id like her and shed like me. He was anxious for us to meet. He also talked about a ‘big book he used to read, and God and Jesus. We’re not a religious family but his Barra family were. The Macaulays booked into a hotel and began their search for clues to Camerons past. Norma said: We contacted the Heritage Centre and asked if theyd heard of a Robertson family who lived in a white house overlooking a bay. They hadn’t. Cameron was very disappointed. We drove around the island but he didn’t see the house. Then we realized that if he saw planes land on the beach from his bedroom window, we were driving the wrong way. Next the family received a call from their hotel to confirm that a family called Robertson once had a white house on the bay. Norma explains: We didnt tell Cameron anything. We just drove towards where we were told the house was and waited to see what would happen. He recognised it immediately and was overjoyed. But as we walked to the door all the colour drained from Camerons face and he became very quiet. I think he thought it would be exactly the same as he remembered it, that his Barra mum would be waiting for him inside. He looked sad. There was no one there. The previous owner had died but a keyholder let us in. There were lots of nooks and crannies and Cameron knew every bit of the house – including the THREE toilets and the beach view from his bedroom window. In the garden, he took us to the ‘secret entrance hed been talking about for years. Researchers also managed to track down one of the Robertson family who had owned the house. Norma said: We visited them at their new address in Stirling, but couldnt find anything about a Shane Robertson. Cameron was eager to see old family photographs in case he found his dad or himself in any. He’d always talked about a big black car and a black and white dog.The car and the dog were in the photos. Since the family returned to their home in Clydebank, Glasgow, Cameron has been much calmer. Norma said: Going to Barra was the best thing we could have done. Its put Camerons mind at ease. He no longer talks about Barra with such longing. Now he knows we no longer think he was making things up. We didn’t get all the answers we were looking for — and, apparently, past life memories fade as the person gets older. Source: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman/62529/.html |
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| Alex
(@alexishungry)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@chodebalm, This was interesting, but I’m skeptical. |
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| Zykanthos
(@chodebalm)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago 1
@alexishungry, Me too. It’s good to question things. |
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| Alex
(@alexishungry)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@chodebalm, Yeah haha. Thanks for posting this. It seems like a really cool fiction/fantasy story, and if it were made into a book, I’d probably read it for fun. But I’m just not one to trust some random lady. People do all kinds of stuff to get on the news. |
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| Kforkonner
(@kwelch5528)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
this would be amazing if every word of it was true! sadly this story has so many points where they could lie or over dramatize it that it probably isn’t. |
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| E.C.F. Doyle
(@chekovchameleon)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@chodebalm, Good post. Interesting read. But I wouldn’t trust the source. The Sun is a newspaper where I live, and I use the word newspaper very loosely. It’s a tabloid, they will spin the truth until it is only a shadow of its former self. It’s the kind of paper that has a huge team of highly paid lawyers to deal with the mountain of law suits they have from printing stories that make allegations based on little or no fact. I’m not saying this should change whatever your opinions are on the afterlife, just that you probably shouldn’t use this story as an example. Thanks for posting, it’s still interesting, fact or not. |
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| Zykanthos
(@chodebalm)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@chekovchameleon, Yeah I was actually gonna mention that fact (what you said about The Sun basically being a tabloid). I knew it was kind of an untrustworthy source, but the message or the point of the article is what I really liked. |
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| Starry Eyed BLiND.
(@cristinelizabeth)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago 1
I watched the series on the you tubes. The boy seemed to be like genuinely touched by visiting his old bedroom and island. His mom and family were so supportive of him too, I believe in past lives. |
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| yoinkie
(@yoinkie)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@chodebalm, regardless of it the story is true or not, still a fascinating read and story. Re-incarnation is something that humans have thought about since the beginning of time, and its interpreted in different ways in every culture across the globe and throughout our history. Seems implausible, but so does most of life. I tend to think it does exist, mainly because ive had strange re-occuring dreams of something that could have been my past life. Ive had the dream many times over the last 5 years. |
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| Zykanthos
(@chodebalm)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@yoinkie, I completely agree. We are reincarnated in some form or another after we die, whether in a physical sense or a spiritual sense. I believe those 2 go hand-in-hand and that you can’t have one without the other, and therefore we never truly cease to exist. We just exist in a different way or form. That reminds me….have you ever seen this clip? |
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| Filip
(@filipek)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
Interesting story indeed, whether it is true or not. What I found mostly doubtful was this: “We visited them at their new address in Stirling, but couldnt find anything about a Shane Robertson.” I mean, it was supposed to be his dad, how is it possible there is no track of him in the family tree? |
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| yoinkie
(@yoinkie)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago 1
@filipek, thats the part of the story that I doubted too. In these days of google and so much other search engines, it should be quite easy to find if a shane robertson lived in that house, or even that city. There are records of everything too. But like I said, that doesnt even take anything away from a good story and an interesting topic which could possibly be true. The kid could have forgotten the name and thought of that name instead. @chodebalm, I have. I zone out to Alan Watts speak to me quite often, love everything he says. |
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| Zykanthos
(@chodebalm)
5 months, 2 weeks ago ago
@yoinkie, Indeed. The man is probably my favorite speaker. Wish he were still alive and giving speeches. |
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