Healing Is Not Erasing
We don’t need to delete the past. We need to grow our consciousness until the past fits inside us without friction.
We don’t need to delete the past. We need to grow our consciousness until the past fits inside us without friction.
“My mother went through so much trauma that never healed. Is it possible to ‘clean’ these deep spiritual imprints (Reshimo) in this lifetime, or is she stuck with them?”
A Reshimo of trauma is not a memory that needs to be recalled. It is a Seal left in the body and soul because the experience did not receive full presence in real time.
Repairing the Reshimo is not done by digging into the past. But by changing the relationship in the Present.
The Soul does not seek to reenact the pain. But to stop identifying with it.
The “cleaning” begins when a person stops viewing the trauma as an identity or a fate. And is willing to meet the sensations without a story and without guilt. Out of quiet presence.
The moment the pain is given a place— Without struggle and without repression— The Light enters on its own, and the seal softens.
Correction in this incarnation is possible when the Will aligns with Life. When a person chooses Truth, Self-Compassion, and Connection. We do not clean a Reshimo by force. But by finally letting the Soul be who she is, without holding onto the wound.
When the Present becomes alive, The Reshimo loses its grip. And the past is repaired by the very fact that it no longer runs the life.
The Deeper Truth: In the Reshimo itself, there is no trauma. And there is nothing to “clean.” Because a Reshimo is not a wound, but a Neutral Existential Impression of an experience that was not grasped by Consciousness (Da’at).
All suffering is created not from the Reshimo, But from the Gap between the Reshimo and the Da’at (Consciousness) that is capable of containing, understanding, and attaining it.
Therefore, the Repair is not cleaning, but Development of Da’at. As a person grows in consciousness, Their attainment expands. And the Reshimo is assimilated into life without causing friction.
When Da’at “develops,” What was previously experienced as pain, fear, or confusion ceases to be so. Not because it was erased. But because it was included within a broader vision.
This is the depth of the Teaching of Redemption (Mashiach): Not to erase the past, nor to heal memory. But to grow until the Reshimo stops being felt as a problem, And becomes a quiet part of Being.

