The Witchita Eagle this week covered the release of a documentary called "The Indigo Evolution." The film is an exploration of Indigo Children, especially perceptive and highly evolved kids who operate at "a different frequency" than the rest of us according to aura readers.
Reporter Dianna Marder writes of Dina Melendez, a Philedelphia resident who was was taken aback when her 4-year-old started talking about his past lives, describing brothers, sisters, two dogs and a cat.
"And then he told me he died when he was 6 and that he waited before being born again -- waited for me so I could be his mommy," Melendez, tells the paper.
But it's what Matthew says about the future that both rattles his mother and leads her to conclude that he is an Indigo Child.
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"I'm not going to grow up," Matthew says nonchalantly when he is questioned about the future. "Not everybody grows up."
Melendez told the paper she's convinced Matthew is not imitating Peter Pan but predicting his own death.
"That really frightens me," she says.
Indigo children are described as "old souls" returning to Earth to usher in an era of environmental renewal and political rebirth born of peace and compassion. While there are skeptics in the medical and scientific fields, the movement has gained thousands of believers since it began in the 1980s, spawning books, Web sites, services and specialists. This weekend, followers are expected to line up to see "The Indigo Evolution," which premieres at some 500 churches and community centers around the world, including the Great Plains Earth Institute in Witchita.
James Twyman is the producer/director of the film.
"These new humans, this evolution we're seeing, is in answer to the mess we have made of the world," he says. Twyman also executive produced, "Indigo," another film on the same subject, which grossed nearly $1.4 million on its opening weekend, according to the paper.
Indigo believers say that we're simply not as aware as these children, who are sometimes very restless individuals, often mis-diagnosed as ADHD. Consumerism and the hectic pace of modern life have gotten in the way of our awareness and Indigo Children get frustrated.
According to self-help and spiritual publisher Hay House, sales of Indigo-related books are at the half-million mark. It seems that despite any skeptics, the phenomenon resounds with a lot of people. Believers remain undaunted, noting that medicine and science are often slow to catch up. For instance, it's only recently that meditation has received its long overdue acceptance as a benefit to the mind and body.
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