Carol Bowman examines children's past life memories and how young children spontaneously recall details from previous incarnations before such memories fade with age. Her research documents numerous cases where children describe specific historical periods, locations, and personal details later verified through historical research. Bowman discusses how children's past life memories differ from adult recollections, often emerging spontaneously through play or nightmares rather than through regression techniques. The conversation covers verification methods and cases where children's historically accurate details could not have been learned through normal means, providing compelling evidence for reincarnation. She addresses how parents should respond when children report past life memories, examining how to support children while investigating claims without reinforcing fantasy or causing psychological harm. Bowman explores patterns in children's past life accounts and what they reveal about consciousness survival and the mechanics of reincarnation. Her research reveals how trauma from past lives can affect current life through phobias and psychological issues that resolve once the past life source is recognized and addressed. The discussion examines implications of verified past life memories for understanding consciousness, death, and the continuity of personal identity across incarnations. Bowman's work demonstrates how children's accounts provide some of the most compelling evidence for reincarnation while revealing how such memories serve therapeutic purposes in current life healing.