Amazon Page Make Over

An overdue, but finally I got time to redo the Amazon introduction page: Carol’s Lives paperback, and Kindle edition.

The old introduction was a bit vague:

Carol’s Lives: Two Soul’s Journey in Two Cities and Beyond is a memoir with three storylines, but with the same two souls – in the 1920s of New York City, in the new century of Vancouver, how they have met, how they meet again, and how hypnotic trances were used for their exploration. These storylines stand alone, yet they cross time and space, weaving into each other in ways that transcend the individual stories and lead to yet another new dimension. Kemila tells the story from inside out and outside in, adding her personal courage and professional expertise into the intricacy of the complex, yet simple stories of where two souls meet, the first time, once again.

After putting a little more thoughts to it, here’s the new introduction:

Carol’s Lives: Two Souls’ Journey in Two Cities and Beyond is a reflective, genre-blending work that sits between memoir, metaphysical exploration, and narrative storytelling. Drawing from real past life regression sessions conducted by a clinical hypnotherapist, the book follows the unfolding experiences of two individuals as their lives—across time, place, and identity—begin to reveal unexpected connections.

Set primarily between Vancouver and New York, the story traces a series of vivid regressions into other lifetimes, including the life of “Carol,” a woman navigating love, ambition, and constraint in early 20th-century Manhattan. As these sessions deepen, patterns emerge—emotional themes, relational dynamics, and questions about purpose, memory, and the continuity of the soul.

Blending personal narrative with session transcripts and reflective insight, the book invites readers to consider the nature of identity beyond a single lifetime. It explores how past experiences—whether understood as memory, metaphor, or something more—may shape present relationships and inner landscapes.

Accessible to both skeptics and believers, Carol’s Lives offers a grounded yet open-minded look at past life regression as a tool for self-discovery. It does not attempt to prove or persuade, but rather presents lived experiences and allows readers to draw their own conclusions.

At its core, this is a story about connection—between people, across lifetimes, and within the deeper layers of the self.

Follow by Email
YouTube
YouTube
Set Youtube Channel ID
Pinterest
Pinterest
fb-share-icon
LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Share
Instagram
RSS
WeChat
WhatsApp