>>/7996/
I'm not sure what the "common perception" is about how it happens. Before when anon on /fringe/ talked about using some drug and I replicated the mentality to see what he had seen, I got a view over an "incarnator function" over asia. It was literally a thing up in the atmosphere picking out souls from a passing stream and sending them to a large vortex in China, which happened to match the energy circulations I saw in some of these city walk vids on youtube back during Covid, when people were comparing before and during lockdown. There were a few from large Chinese cities showing how the walking straits seemed to be circular around the city center. But there was no feeling of the monumentality of European cities where a square has a church, a government building, and other foundational historical functions like castles which the roads are laid out in adaptation to. It was just a large mass of buildings of no particular significance and large masses of people moving around it.

So maybe the "wheel of samsara" refers specifically to China, and the thing I saw there, and isn't relevant to other parts of the world in the same way.

For me, I take "re-incarnation" literally. To incarnate is to "make into flesh", when the soul assumes control of a flesh body and identifies with its role. To re-incarnate is to do this a second time after having already done it before. It's not important to me if the "re" part is included in the word, what matters is the spirit taking control of the body, not if it had done so before. 

Kind of like saying "re-eating" when you're having the second meal of the day, because you ate before? What's the point, really. It only seems to make sense if you were to have some peculiar materialist outset. In Christianity they make a huge deal out of "the spirit becoming flesh", as if this was something worth mentioning. It's super common, only hivemind people and zombies don't have spirits who became flesh (incarnated).