PSYCHED UP agreed. He said of studying the stars: "It is no science at all, but mere foolery . . . and it behooves us never to engage in it." Despite Maimonides' and biblical warnings, Jews have been as prone as anyone to trying to see into the future. In the Middle Ages, an itchy sole meant an upcoming journey; a candle was lighted each day between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, with an extin- guished flame meaning death before the year's end; and gazing into a clear sur- face provided answers to one's questions. Many Jews today still believe in the power of talismans, , such as the red thread wound seven times around Rachel's tomb out- side Bethlehem, said to be a safeguard against evil. And what simchah would be complete without repeated utterances of "mazal tov," which originally meant "May the stars [signs of the zodiac] be in your favor." T his is no ordinary office. Walk in as a housewife or a truck driver and come out with the knowledge that you were once Cleopatra or Napoleon. Elaine Lewis reads Tarot cards: "I'm interested in where you are and what you want to do to better yourself." 28 FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1990 The conduit to the past is a chaise lounge in the Southfield office of Sol Lewis, director of both the Michigan Hypnosis Institute and the Michigan Metaphysical Society. Guests come in, relax and are guided slowly, slowly into the past to meet their former selves. Lewis has believed in rein- carnation since he was 6, when he brought a dead sparrow he had found to his father. Sol buried the bird, and prayed for it every night. The rain fell heavily for several days, then Sol discovered the sparrow in a muddy puddle of water. He told his parents, "God doesn't want the bird." His friends laughed. But Sol's mother took him aside and comforted him. "The bird's spirit did go home," she said. "Only the body is left." The youngest child of Or- thodox Jewish parents, Sol Lewis' first experience with those he calls "in spirit," otherwise known as the dead, occurred after his father died in 1929. Lewis looked on in amazement as his brothers and sisters wept when pallbearers carried his New Age music and the smell of thick incense fill the Michigan Metaphysical Society Bookstore. The shelves here are replete with booklets with titles like Poetry of Reincarnation and Freedom from Harmful Voices. father's coffin. "What are you crying for?" he called. "My father is with God! You're following an empty casket!" That night when he went to bed, Lewis cried out to his father: "Pa, what's going on?" The answer came in a dream. "You look so young," Lewis said to his father. "We control time here," he answered. Then his father introduced Lewis to a man in a long, blue robe. "This is your teacher." The dream ended. Throughout his youth, Lewis sought answers to his questions about death and religion.