The emergence of new questions is sometimes roaring progress, and some new questions have arisen regarding reincarnation and context.
When one reincarnates into a new brain, one also is reincarnating into a new overall context different from the general context of the previous lifetime. The new brain processes information in some different ways, ones relatives are different from before, one is moving into situations which have different trend lines than in the previous lifetime, etc.
One question: Is it the new general context itself which buries older memories in the unconscious mind? Each memory one lays down is marked by the general context at the time, and it is difficult to pull a memory back out of the unconscious if one does not remember the context that marks it. If context is an important factor in pulling back memories, then if one can remember the general context of a past lifetime, then that causes one to consciously remember things that happened in that past lifetime.
In any case, a second question is: What kind of skill is involved in being able to attach oneself to a new brain which is in a different general context? It certainly indicates significant skill in being able to change contexts and work with new contexts one has never been in before, but how much skill?
In addition, how could this skill in changing contexts and working with new contexts help one on one's spiritual path? For example, could one reach a goal more quickly if one could imagine what context that goal would be nested in?
And, could one train oneself to more quickly and accurately imagine what contexts goals one wants would be nested in?
Related to this, some people have been saying that if one can imagine what it would be like in the future to succeed in something,including the steps to get there, that helps one to actually be successful. Do the people who have been saying this have an intuition relating to the above context questions?
There is a lot to think about here. As an experiment, if you would like to do one: Select a goal you want. Then, try to imagine exactly what the context would feel like if you were successful. You could also imagine what the contexts would feel like at several points partway to the goal.
Remember that contexts are subtle organizers of ideas, feelings, actions, events, etc. One doesn't actually see a context with ones eyes, or hear it with one's ears, but rather, one subtly understands what is there.