Through regressive hypnosis, a lost legend of the history of mankind has been retrieved from the recesses of time. Did the American Indians descend from the inhabitants of an alien spacecraft that crashed in the Alaska-Canada region thousands of years ago? Keepers of the Garden told the story of the original seeding of the planet Earth by aliens from outerspace. Starcrash indicates that aliens continue to come to Earth, some intentionally and some by accident, throughout our history. In order to adjust to harsh conditions, they were forced to interbreed with the local aborigines. This was the only way to ensure the survival of their race. Does their blood still flow in the veins of certain American Indian tribes? Dolores Cannon, hypnotist and psychic investigator, researches this unique case of past-life regression.Table of Contents1. The Discovery of the Legend2. Calling the Spirits3. The Village4. The Legend of the Old Ones5. The First People6. When the Moon Walked a Different Path7. The Blanket Design8. The Hunter's Tools and the Animals9. The Children's Stories10. The Creation Legends11. The Wise Man's House12. The Life of Tuin, the Hunter13. The Death of Tuin and the Aftermath14. The Origin of the Old Ones15. Survival16. The Artifacts17. The Magic of the Old Ones18. Research19. The End of the Adventure
Dolores Cannon (1931 - 2014) was a self described "past-life regressionist" and hypnotherapist who specialized in the "recovery and cataloging" of "Lost Knowledge". Her roots in hypnosis went back to the 1960s, and she was specializing in past-life therapy since 1979.
Dolores became, perhaps, the world's most unlikely expert on the prophecies of Nostradamus. A retired Navy wife from Huntsville, AR, USA, Dolores was nearly fifty years old when she began experimenting with hypnosis and past-life regression. The results were, to say the least, quite spectacular!
Working through several different subjects, Dolores was able to establish communication with the living Michel De Notredame, better known as the prophet Nostradamus. His revelations and their impact on our own time are both fascinating and at times frightening.
Dolores has written the three volume set "Conversations With Nostradamus", the series on the translation of Nostradamus' quatrains. This series contains the translation of almost 1000 prophecies, all interpreted for the first time and have been in print since 1989. It is considered the most accurate interpretation of the prophecies ever printed.
Dolores has been a UFO investigator for twenty years, using her skills as a regressionist to help people that had been involved in abduction cases. She has written several books on the UFO information volunteers have revealed while under hypnosis.
Her unique technique of hypnosis is being taught all over the world via the Quantum Healing Hypnosis Academy.
Dolores has written 17 books about her research in hypnosis and UFO cases. Her books are translated into over 20 languages. She founded her own publishing company, Ozark Mountain Publishing, in 1992.
Dolores has toured in the USA, England, Europe, the former Soviet bloc countries, Australia, New Zealand, and parts of Asia to promote her works, and to discuss her particular brand of psychic research. She has spoken to radio and television audiences worldwide. She has given lectures at such locations as: Whole Life Expos in Los Angeles, New York and San Diego; Global Science Congress; various A.R.E. Edgar Cayce Foundations; Conscious Living Expo and MBS Expo in Australia; The College of Psychic Studies in London, England; The Theosophical Society in London, England; as well as many other organizations. Dolores was the first American and the first foreigner to receive the "Orpheus Award" in Bulgaria, for the highest advancement in the research of psychic phenomena.
Articles by/about Dolores have appeared in several magazines including: "Body, Mind and Spirit"; "Magical Blend"; "Connecting Link"; "Kindred Spirit" (an England magazine); "People Magazine" (an Australian magazine); "Conscious Living Magazine" (an Australian magazine); "After Dark" (the Art Bell magazine); "The Unknown Magazine"; "The Washington Post"; and "New York Times". Also magazines and newspapers in Russia, Spain, South America, Bulgaria, Japan and Arab countries.
Dolores appeared on various TV specials including "A Current Affair" (in Australia); BBC Documentary Series "Divine Magic"; "Ancient Mysteries of the World" (a two hour special on CBS); "Ancient Prophecies I and Ancient Prophecies II" (two hour specials on NBC); "Encounters" ( a one hour special on FOX network); "Good Day LA" (in California); "Mysteries, Magic and Miracles" (the Sci-Fi Channel); "Marilu Talk Show" (ABC); "Biography" (series on A&E Channel); "America After Hours" (CNBC); "CNN International Entertainment News".
She has spoken on over 1000 radio shows including Art Bell’s Dreamland, George Noory’s Coast to Coast, and Shirley MacLaine, plus speaking at innumerable conferences worldwide. In addition she had her own weekly radio show, the Metaphysical Hour, on BBS Radio for nine years.
It’s been a little while since I last read one of the late Dolores Cannon’s works. I enjoyed what I read from the books “Jesus and the Essenes” and “Hidden Sacred Knowledge,” and just recently I found a whole load of books from her recently brought in to one of my favorite local bookstores. Sometimes certain knowledge you’re looking for comes into your life at just the right time.
For those that don’t know who Dolores Cannon was, she was a regressive hypnotherapist that founded what is called quantum healing, or QHHT by hypnotizing patients and regressing them into their past, interdimensional, or interplanetary lives and then gaining the overarching message that their subconscious mind or oversoul wants to tell them. I had this done on myself by one of Dolores Cannon’s student’s who just happened to live in my hometown of Mattoon, IL. It really opened some doors for me and aided me in my spiritual/metaphysical quest. Cannon sadly passed away on October 14, 2014, and she is sorely missed among the metaphysical community that adored her.
In this particular book, Dolores regresses a woman that goes back to her previous life as a male hunter from an isolated tribe of people that lived at some point during/after the last Ice Age in the wilds of what would someday become Canada. This tribe referred to themselves simply as “The Tribe” and believed they were the only people that existed. They had never traveled over the nearest mountains because it was considered too far a journey for them.
What I found so fascinating about these people was that they descended from a group of beings that traveled all the way from the Pleiades star cluster distant aeons ago, crashed on our planet, and interbred with a previous aborigine-type people that came before the people that spawned that hunter that Cannon was channeling. Now, a lot of folk may laugh at this and dismiss it as “utter b.s.,” but Dolores Cannon’s particular subject, as is similar with a lot of her subjects, was an ordinary, everyday woman not prone to flights of wild fantasy.
The part that I found the most interesting about this book was the artifacts of the alien ancestors that were considered holy relics and kept in a place of reverence by the Wise Man of the tribe in his hut. It also speaks of how sometimes those on Earth can enter parallel dimensions unaware until they see something really strange and alien that catches their attention.
What happened to these people and these relics, and what as the story behind their alien ancestors. Well, you’re going to have to read this book to find out, because I don’t want to spoil the story for you.
I give “The Legend of Starcrash” by Dolores Cannon a 4 out of 5.
I love most of Cannon's books but this is my least favorite. It seems that she picked a pretty mundane life to explore in in a 300 page book. The latter part of the book where she conducts research on native americans is very interesting although probably dated at this point because the book was published in 1994. I would recommend the Convoluted Universe series...it's more more interesting than this book.
Incredible story yet felt that it resonated with me
As I read the book, I was totally captivated and intrigued with the telling of the story. I am familiar with many of the native people's legends. This gave me a common core from which the other stories originated. Good read.
I try to read Dolores' books in the order they were written. But I omitted "Legend of Starcrash" last year after I felt sort of disentchanted with either "Legacy from the stars" or "The Custodians" - I don't recall. Something drew me to this title now and it was indeed divine timing. The ideas and concepts presented in this book complimented my current fields of interest and research perfectly.
I noticed that some reviewers judged the life Dolores investigated in this book to be petty and boring, to me it appeared harmonious and beautiful. The life of Tuin the hunter is life as it should be: in complete harmony with everything that exists. People just take what they need from nature and they are grateful for what they are provided with. Everybody is respected and cherished for what he / she is able to contribute to society, everybody is doing the work they love and in the end all contributions add up to a working whole. There is no lack, there is no need to have more and therefore there is no unrest (or any punishable behaviour as it is pointed out). The premise of this life is harmony, because Tuin's people noticed that if everything is balanced out there is no trouble, there is no sickness, there is no fear.
We're living on a planet built of and working through polarities and the only healthy way to deal with this is finding balance in everything we do, in every decision we make, by always choosing the path that causes the least harm for every being. And yes, this starts right in the grocery shop...
I loved the intimate insights in the workings of an indigenous tribe and how much we today can learn from it, while we're in the midst of losing our respect for EVERYTHING - nature, animals, our fellow human beings. I realised that everything from which Tuin drew his calm, his strength, his spirituality, is still here. We just have to make the effort to leave our homes and cities and go out into nature. Sit under a tree or by the sea and become still, listen. Just listen... Just by observing nature, we can see that everything is in flux and that everything in nature regulates itself in a perfect way. Just as everything in life works out in a perfect way if we just give up the struggle. And the rush...
The concept of song / sound fits perfectly with what I am learning about frequency and harmony. More and more I am coming to believe that sound underlies all life on earth. Countless creation myths (like that of Tuin's people) are based on the theory of primordial sound (Om, the Big Bang, in the beginning was the Word...). Perhaps sound and its vibrations can fill the holes in our souls that our modern lifestyle and lack of balance has torn in them.
Tuin's story also relates that people will always be people, no matter how many thousands years they may live apart (let's forget for a moment that time is just a concept): even back in his days there were those for whom seeing was believing. How quickly we fall back on using only one or a few of our senses, instead of using them all - including our intuition. For Tuin, it was natural to use all his senses because his observation of nature had taught him to do just that. He knew that he could rely on his intuition, something that we have to struggle to re-learn.
I loved this book, I loved Tuin, how the subject (a young woman) relating the story wasn't even remotely interested in it. Maybe she even only returned for the sittings, because they opened up the possibility of OBE's to her, enabling her to pay secret visits to her love interest... I loved Dolores meticulous research and the many conclusions she was able to draw from it. As an archeologist I can see how useful information like this can be in filling the gaps of material culture as it has come down to us.
I have mixed feelings about this book. Parts of it I found great and others very frustrating. Luckily the ending chapters were very good, so that compensated for the sections that bothered me.
To really enjoy it, I suppose one must believe in the transmigration of souls and in past lives regression hypnosis. I don’t know if I can believe in either of them. Of course, I’ve read accounts of people whose memories, behavior, or knowledge of certain things couldn’t be explained other than (maybe) by reincarnation. But I am skeptical. As for hypnosis, even if hypnosis in general could probably work on suggestible subjects, I have my doubts that it can truly access memories so deeply hidden that they might be coming from past lives. Maybe it can, but I don’t know, again I am skeptical… I need to see to believe, or perhaps I need it to happen to me to believe it.
The method of questioning that the author is using in her interviews under hypnosis makes sense, but the text conveying the results lacks consistency. For example, since Tuin, the character whose memories she retrieves, has lived possibly thousands of years ago, he can use only simple words to describe his life and his surroundings, and certain words from today’s vocabulary must be explained to him. Fine, but other times Tuin uses words and concepts a lot more complex than what he is supposed to understand. Also, if his persona is the one taking over during the sessions, so much so that the present-day patient doesn’t even remember any of this when she wakes up, how come he speaks English at all?
The section with which I struggled the most is the one where Tuin’s spirit is contacted directly in that realm where spirits exist in-between lives. While there, the spirit knows everything, nothing is hidden to him anymore, he has access to any time and any place. He can now tell the whole story of the Old Ones. But wait a minute… What?! I thought we were accessing memories… Memories, by definition, refer to the past, don’t they? I don’t pretend to know where they are stored, or if the brain is a place of storage or a place of access. Why then do the research presented in the final chapters to try to locate Tuin’s tribe in space and time, when the spirit could have provided that information directly? And wasn’t that spirit incarnated in the present day’s patient? How was it in the in-between world at the same time?
Despite all my doubts and frustration, I am not doubting the good faith of the author. The book tells a story, not exciting enough to be (science-)fiction, but quite interesting as non-fiction, including a strange creation myth. In a way, it reminds me of “Looking for Something”, Frank Herbert’s first sf short story. A lot of food for thought.
Personally, I've never been particularly attracted to Dolores Cannon's work, and in truth, I have found her style a bit off putting when I've encountered her in videos.. but I decided to check this one out, and it was better than I would've expected. The story seemed quite credible, and it was fascinating to consider the very real possibility that our ancestors actually did come from another part of the galaxy, like so many people have long suspected. I think there's a good chance the book is genuinely describing something that occurred during a past age on this planet, which is pretty fucking crazy, wouldn't you say?! A lot of the material isn't really all that exciting, since it's just a regular, simple guy from way back in the past that she's talking to through most of it.. but it gets really interesting in the last section, so it's worth it to hang in to the end, trust me. Overall, a quick and intriguing read.
I loved this work! Dolores questions her hypnotic subject "Beth" through a previous life known as "Tuin". Then expertly manages to call his "Higher Self" to fill in the missing pieces of the stories/legends that were shared by "Tuin" earlier. This research matches nicely to accounts found in the "Thiaoouba" book by Michel DesMarquet. It appears the inhabitants of planet earth are a soup made from galactic visitors from many parts of our galaxy. It also explains how there is so much diversity within the human form. I've read this book twice now. I'll probably read it again eventually.
3-1/2 stars! “Legend of Starcrash” by Dolores Cannon reveals through past-life regression that Native American legends stem from a crashed alien spacecraft in ancient Alaska-Canada, with descendants of these extraterrestrials interbreeding with local humans, explaining mysterious origins and continued alien visitation, offering a cosmic perspective on human history and spirituality.
While I found this book thought-provoking, it didn't quite meet my usual five-star standard for Dolores Cannon. The narrative moved more slowly than her previous works, with several passages that felt repetitive or sluggish.
If you don’t resonate with metaphysical or spiritual concepts, this book, and likely Cannon’s work in general, may not be for you.
Dolores’ husband, Johnny Cannon, served in the Navy during the Vietnam era and was trained to hypnotize military personnel and their spouses for behavior modification, such as weight loss and smoking cessation. This book focuses on one of their clients, Anita, who participated in an experimental hypnosis session to uncover her past lives in hopes of addressing her medical issues. Under hypnosis, Anita recalled five distinct past lives, and even more astonishingly, her spirit came forward to speak directly with Johnny and Dolores. Following these regressions, Anita’s blood pressure dropped, she lost excess weight, and her kidney condition improved.
After a near-fatal car accident, Johnny’s hypnotism career came to an end, but it marked the beginning of Dolores Cannon’s remarkable journey into past-life regression and quantum healing. Over the next four decades, she became a world-renowned hypnotherapist, exploring thousands of cases that expanded humanity’s understanding of consciousness and the soul.
StarCrash is the best of Dolores Canon’s books so far. The transcriptions are limited to one subject who has experienced encounters with a particular set of ETs over her lifetime. I found it to be succinct and interesting, especially in her descriptions of childhood experiences which resulted in particular biological symptoms. Sometimes Dolores rambles, but in this book she gets to the point and stays there. If you have never read another Dolores Canon book, I suggest starting here before taking up a longer book that involves multiple subjects.
I find this story leaving me with a lot to think about. I have read so many other books by Doloris and love them all. This book left me really wondering about the true story of how the human race came about and now I see a little more of the puzel to how we ended up like we are. Just look at our world situations right down to our own lifestyle. We could learn a lot from our real history to change our future for the better.
One of the best books I've read by far. Dolores Cannon answered many questions I had about my own life and my rare blood type. It also tied a lot of Native American ancestor history together for me. Love this book and highly recommend this book to anyone who might say they are a awakened individual.
I might be influenced by the fact of having read the convoluted universe books. The concept of this book is like something you'll find in one chapter of the convoluted universe books. So all in all a rather long book. There for I might have enjoyed it more if I wouldn't have read the CU books before this one.
The journey i take through delores cannons books, which is also her life and the lives and past lives of others is amazing, and captivating. The light of truth rings through her words, and gives hope and awe of the source of all. I hope that my soul has had awesome journeys similar to these folks.
A past life regression to a hunter of one of the first peoples in what is now the Yukon. Excellent book, many wonderful insights into ancient first people culture, some of the beliefs have been carried on to present day.
I found the information fascinating and something that makes great sense to me.. I think Tuin was an amazing man and I hope he realises how grateful we are for his sharing of his life history and stories.
This was my favorite of the past regression stories that focused on an indigenous person of north America in ancient times - and the tie into star people.
Really enjoyed this story. Had thought provoking theories and led me to want more information. With all the interest in DNA history, I wondered if there was some need to search for this type of DNA. Who knows?