tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-45166993912116315732024-03-13T23:13:38.779-07:00Phase EvolutionMy blog is dedicated to the experimentation, discovery, and practice of astral projection, out of body travel, lucid dreaming, and all other phase experiences. Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.comBlogger27125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-10139160473737051942016-11-17T10:45:00.000-08:002016-11-17T10:45:36.703-08:00How to Astral Project - The Importance of Micro-Sleep<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/GZkxLTC9akY" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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One of the most common issues that I am contacted with revolves around an inability to push their astral projection practice any further. Questions that I receive typically sound something like this:<br />
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<i>"I have been lying here for over an hour. I am remaining completely still, but nothing is happening. What do I do?"</i><br />
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or<br />
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<i>"I am starting to make progress, and I can feel my body starting to fall asleep, but the process won't go any further. What am I doing wrong?"</i><br />
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or<br />
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<i>"I am feeling tingling in my limbs and torso, but I just can't get it to evolve into the vibrational state. What do I do next?"</i><br />
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The answer to all of these questions is the same.<b> Relaxation</b>.<br />
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This may sound absurd to many of you, especially if you have been laying there for hours on end, you may say,<i> "I am as relaxed as it is physically possible for me to be"</i>. What you have to remember here is that you are not trying to reach a level of relaxation typical to waking life. What you are attempting to do is reach a level of relaxation that is usually only possible through sleep. This bring me to the topic of micro-sleep or micro-blackouts as I have referred to them in the past. Micro-sleep is the action of dipping quickly into sleep and immediately emerging into wakefulness again through a strong intent. This is something that everyone has done at one point or another in their life unconsciously.<br />
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Think of a time when you were very tired, but had an upcoming engagement. Maybe you had agreed to meet a friend, maybe it was a job interview, maybe it was picking up a child from daycare. As you think of a time when you were very tired, but had an upcoming engagement. Maybe you had agreed to meet a friend, maybe it was a job interview, maybe it was picking up a child from daycare. As you closed your eyes to get just a few minutes of sleep before heading out, you may have found yourself waking spontaneously over and over panicking, looking at your clock, thinking you may have missed your alarm. This is your mental intent pulling you back out of sleep. If you have experienced this, it is proof that you are capable of this skill and once you have honed your abilities, you will be able to use it to assist your projection practice.<br />
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It took me about 6 months of trial and error to develop this skill, so hopefully you will be able to learn from my mistakes and accomplish this task with less effort. Over the months, I spent my hour-long lunch breaks laying down in the back of my van, where I would set my alarm to go off every 15 minutes just in case I did not successfully return from sleep. This would guarantee at least 4 attempts per session. I would then lay there, letting myself drift as close as possible to sleep while maintaining an intent that I would pull myself back out as soon as I slipped under.<br />
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When I was successful, I would repeat the process. When I failed, my alarm would wake me up after 15 minutes and I would try again. As I started to get the hang of this procedure, I noticed something interesting. I noticed that after 3 or 4 dips into sleep, it was only my mind that would return to wakefulness, leaving my body in a deep state of sleep. I noticed that muscle groups that I was not even aware of would start to disengage. I could feel the weight of my rib cage on my lungs, my eyes and ears would shut off and it was like my focus was forced inward. There have been occasions where I would return to wakefulness and hear myself snoring as though I was a third party listening to someone else sleep. From here, the process will evolve on its own and if there is ever a point where you feel like progress has slowed or stopped, return to dipping in and out of sleep until progress resumes.<br />
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From what I have learned, I would recommend the following steps to practice and develop this skill:<br />
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<ol>
<li>Select a place other than your bed to practice. This can be a recliner, a couch, the floor, a yoga mat, etc. Your body and mind associate your bed with sleep, so selecting a place you don't normally sleep will make it easier to keep from sleeping too deeply.</li>
<li>When selecting a place, choose a spot that is not too comfortable. This will help you maintain control over your state of consciousness.</li>
<li>Lay in a position that is not your natural sleeping position. Again, this will help you maintain control over your state of consciousness and slow down the transition into sleep.</li>
<li>Let yourself relax and monitor your state as you approach sleep. Evaluate your state of mind and awareness repeatedly as you get closer and keep a strong intent to wake back up if you dip under. </li>
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Set an alarm if you like as I did during your practice sessions in case you don't make it back out.<br />
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Mastering this skill will drastically increase the effectiveness of your direct attempts to induce an astral projection.<br />
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Good luck!<br />
<br />Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-43496922834871626582016-08-29T17:57:00.000-07:002016-11-10T07:18:27.719-08:0030 Days of Veganism<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/yQcSy3D7hTM" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Hello, my friends! With my 30 days of cutting caffeine behind me, I have decided it is time for me to embark on my next experiment in spirituality; 30 days of veganism. I am anxious to find out how it affects my projection, dreaming, meditation, and overall spirituality. There is so much hype around a plant-based diet that I have thought for a long time that I really ought to give it a try. Thank you to those of you who pushed me into making the decision.<br />
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<br />My First Week</h4>
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I am 7 days in and I have to say, so far, no complaints. Things are going well. I believe that this is partially due to the fact that I have really been working up to this for quite some time. I have been cutting out processed foods and meat slowly, replacing them with things like fresh fruits, veggies, beans, and tofu. It also doesn't hurt that I cook for my family so if I want to make something different for myself, I am not placing a burden on anyone else. I am taking a daily vitamin to make sure I don't miss out on anything that I would have gotten from meat and I have also started with a plant-based protein powder every morning so I don't shrink down to nothing at the gym during the next month. All in all, I am getting just as much protein as I ever did as a carnivore, so things are really going well.</div>
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As far as my spiritual practices go, this has been an eventful week. While I would love to just proclaim that it was all due to my change in diet, I think it is too early to make that sort of definitive statement. That being said, I have had two spontaneous lucid dreams, reached the vibrational state unintentionally during dreams, and I have projected once! Like I said, it has been an eventful week. I am so thrilled! I hope it will continue and that it is not just the placebo effect caused by my high expectations. More to come.</div>
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Week 2</h4>
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Two weeks down and halfway through this experiment. Whether I decide to continue after the 30 days remains to be seen, but I do have to say that I am enjoying it. </div>
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Physically speaking I feel great. There has only been one bump in the road this week that I have had to overcome. It turns out that without the naturally occurring probiotics that exist in things like yogurt, a vegan diet can leave you feeling a bit bloated and gassy. I did some research and found some vegan alternatives and that problem has been solved. Aside from that, I have great energy, my morning workout routine is right on track with what I have always done, and I am not losing or gaining any weight. I'll take that as a sign that I am doing things right. :) While I have cut some things out of my diet that i am sure I am better off without, like pizza, for example, overall I would say that coming from an active, healthy lifestyle, my diet really didn't change a tremendous amount and I maintain that this transition has been an easy one.</div>
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From a spiritual perspective, I will say that I have had 6 spontaneous lucid dreams in the past two weeks and one Projection. One Projection is nothing to write home about, but I typically only average between 1 and 2 lucid dreams a month. I don't actively strive for lucid dreams and tend to focus most my efforts on projection, so 6 is quite a few for me. That being said, this is not the first time I have had a sporadic increase in activity when it comes to lucid dreaming. So far I think it is too early to say definitively that this diet is making any sort of difference. I am remaining optimistic, however. It could very well be that I am still purging toxins and impurities from my body, much the way it took weeks to get all the remnants of caffeine out of my system. We will see how the coming weeks play out.</div>
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If there is one thing that I say so far about this diet and how it helps my practice, it is that it leads to feeling light and comfortable when going to bed at night as opposed to feeling heavy and full the way you do after eating mass quantities of meat and greasy food. This makes it easier to reach deep levels of consciousness like the mind awake body asleep state while maintaining control. That heavy full feeling always leads to my falling asleep too quickly. In the past, I have avoided feeling too full by modifying my dinner time so I no longer eat after 6:00 PM. With this vegan diet, I have found that I can eat an hour before bed and still feel light and comfortable.</div>
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Here is some of what I have been eating lately</div>
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<b>Final Thoughts</b></div>
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The 30 days have come and gone, and as with my cutting caffeine experiment, I have decided to continue. While I have not experienced anything profound from a spiritual perspective, there are two factors that have driven my decision to continue with this diet. First, I feel great! I feel like this diet has pushed me cut out a lot of the not so great things in my diet. I have maintained a consistent weight, and I continue to feel like I am getting all the nutrients that I need. Second, I reconfirmed repeatedly over the past few weeks that it is much easier to reach deep meditative states and deep states of consciousness during my out of body practice when your stomach is light. Try to imagine having a productive meditation session right after Thanksgiving dinner. For me, this would be impossible, and while I was definitely able to reach deep meditative states prior to veganism, I have always noticed that it is easier with an empty, not so stuffed feeling stomach and this practice lends itself very well to a consistent not so stuffed feeling.</div>
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Several folks have asked me over the past month to share a bit about what I am eating and how often. As far as what I am eating, it is not so different than what I was eating prior to introducing this diet. It is the same foods with some minor modifications. I replace things like ground beef with tofu. I replace things like grilled burgers or chicken with portabello mushrooms. I replace eggs in baking with flaxseed, and so on. With a bit of research, a bit of creativity, and a willingness to experiment, it turns out it is not difficult at all to remove all animal products from your diet.</div>
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As far as how many times I eat every day, I eat continuously. This is easy for me because I have a desk job and I can always have a bag of fruits and veggies next to me. I eat almost every hour of the waking day, just a little here and a little there. I will munch on edamame, or carrots, or grapes, or dried fruit while I work. I have read that many small meals are better for your metabolism, so this may be another added benefit of veganism. In order to get enough calories, and not feel hungry, I have to eat many small meals. What I have found in regards to this is that I never feel hungry and I never feel stuffed. I am always in the middle in this state of comfort. I absolutely love this. I never have the feeling of "food coma" after lunch that I used to get when I would chow down on a pound of spaghetti and meatballs or leftover barbecue.</div>
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All in all, if you are looking for a way to feel great, eat healthy, and improve your ability to reach the deep states of consciousness in meditation, or out of body travel, I would highly recommend at least giving a vegan diet a shot.</div>
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Thanks for sticking with me through this one.</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-54742704213700022632016-08-22T19:20:00.002-07:002016-08-23T12:33:54.134-07:00The Monroe Institute - Gateway Voyage<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/LMHFSBT4ikw" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Today I would like to talk a little about my experience at The Monroe Institute. I attended the Gateway Voyage program at the end of September 2015. For those of you not familiar with the Monroe Institute, it is a consciousness research and training center, founded by Robert Monroe, and was actually his home during his later years. It is in the Blue Ridge mountains of Faber Virginia, a short drive from Charlottesville.<br />
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I signed up for the Gateway Voyage program because it appeared to be the general consensus among forums and TMI website that it was a good introductory course and it is also a prerequisite for several of the other courses there. I received a letter from the institute stating that it was best to go in with an open mind and no expectations. I had broken rule number one the day I signed up for the course. I had come to the conclusion that this was going to be an incredible week packed full of OBEs. They also had a disclaimer stating that they could not guarantee that anyone would have an out of body experience. This did not keep me from getting my hopes up. I was sure that this week would accelerate my progress far beyond my wildest imagination.<br />
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I arrived at the Charlottesville airport and was picked up by a shuttle, driven by Mike, a super nice guy who has worked at the institute for decades. He recounted stories of Bob, the history of the institute, and the development of Hemi-Sync as we made our way to our home away from home for the upcoming week.<br />
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When we arrived, we were shown to our rooms, provided with a journal and a packet of information about this course, other courses, and available Hemi-Sync tracks that could be purchased from the institute store. We were each given a CHEC unit, which would serve as our bed as well as our practice space over the coming week. The CHEC unit was like a bed, but with walls built around it. The mattress was about 6.5 feet in length and about 3.5 feet wide. There was a small gap in the wall where you would climb in, and then a blackout curtain that would remove all light. At the head of each unit was a jack where we plugged in our headphones. These would be the source of Bob's voice as he guided us through the various focus levels and as we learned to reach the mind awake/body asleep state.<br />
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A typical day began with waking up early to some goofy music composed by Bob while he gave us an inspirational message to begin our day. I grew rather attached to this wake up by the end of the week and wished I could take the track home with me to use as a daily alarm. This was followed by an optional yoga class and breakfast. After breakfast, the day of exercises would begin. We would congregate in the large living room, talk about the exercise to come and then disperse to our CHEC units where we would attempt to experience various states of consciousness. Once the exercise was done, we would return to the living room where we would talk about our experiences, ask questions, and begin preparing for the next exercise.<br />
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Half way through the week, I was feeling seriously bummed out. I had not had a single OBE and I felt like this course was not what I had expected. I thought we were going to cover Conditions A - D, and the physiological states between awake and projection. Instead, we were spending all our time learning relaxation, following guided meditations, and doing creative visualization. I knew that this sense of disappointment was my own fault. I was doing exactly what they had expressly told me not to do. I finally said, I need to fix this. I am in a beautiful place, with time, that is dedicated solely to this practice, surrounded by the most incredible open-minded people, and I am wasting it. At that moment, I let go of all expectations and I had an incredible week going forward.<br />
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I never got out of body, but I did learn visualization and relaxation skills that I use to this day that help me achieve the out of body state. I got to talk to Joe McMoneagle about his career in remote viewing. I made some amazing friends, and when I came home, I felt like a new person. I plan on going back to the Monroe Institute in 2017. I will be going through the Out of Body Intensive this time around. I am looking forward to meeting William Buhlman, another one of my favorite people.<br />
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I am attaching some photos of my time there. Enjoy.<br />
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Bob Monroe (I love this man)</div>
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My CHEC Unit</div>
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All my incredible friends</div>
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One of two giant crystals</div>
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The dining room</div>
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Chatting with Joe McMoneagle</div>
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Bob's research center / Laboratory</div>
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Bobs's house. Our home away from home.</div>
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<br />Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-78942467174969394272016-07-20T19:39:00.002-07:002016-07-20T19:39:23.118-07:00Astral Projection Troubleshooting - What am I doing wrong?<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/2wahZvrDEsw" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Over the past two and a half years, I have run into numerous roadblocks with my projection practice. Since starting my YouTube community, I have discovered that many others run into the very same issues that I had to learn to overcome. With that in mind, I wanted to put together something of a troubleshooting guide for your projection practice. This is intended to be a living document that I will continue to add to as new issues and solutions surface.</div>
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How long does it take to learn to consciously project?</h4>
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Our very first question, alas, does not have a clear-cut answer. I had my first success by accident and it took me almost five months to induce my next experience. Over the first year success was scarce, in fact, there were several times where frustration almost overcame me and I almost talked myself into quitting on more than one occasion. I was lucky to have three to four projections a year in the beginning. As time passed, I started to get familiar with the state of mind and body that is conducive to the practice, and I learned more and more about what does not work and my success rate climbed to more of a monthly basis. It wasn't until just this year that I have been able to raise my achieve close to weekly success. I tell you all of this not because it will take you two and a half years, but to demonstrate that for some, this sort of investment of time and energy is required. Perhaps you will be one of the lucky who take to this practice in a matter of weeks or months. I hope that you are. I will say, regardless of whether it takes two weeks or two years, the effort is well worth the prize at the end. I never regret the time I have put into learning this skill. It is profound, life-changing, exciting, and the closest thing to magic that I have experienced on this earth. Stick with it, give it your all, and you won't be sorry.</div>
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What if I am unable to keep my mind awake as my body falls to sleep?</h4>
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A few ideas here. First, there is more than one method to achieve projection. If you have a hard time with the mind awake/body asleep method, perhaps try your hand at the <a href="http://www.phaseevolution.com/2016/04/how-to-astral-project-1-indirect.html" target="_blank">indirect method</a> or using <a href="http://www.phaseevolution.com/2016/06/how-to-astral-project-5-projecting-from.html" target="_blank">lucid dreaming</a> to induce a projection. If you are dead set on the direct method, there are some things that can help you as you try to reprogram your mind to allow your body to fall asleep first.</div>
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<ol>
<li>Use the wake-back-to-bed method. Wake up after four to six hours of sleep and remain awake for 15 to 45 minutes. During this time, write in your dream journal, review your plan of action for your next projection, repeat affirmations, or read a book about projection practice.</li>
<li>Once your 15 to 45 minutes is up, lie back down in a place other than your bed. Your body and mind associate your bed with sleep. Find another location, a recliner, a couch, a yoga mat, etc, that can become your projection space. Only lie down to relax in this space when you intend to project. This will help build the association with your intent in your subconscious mind.</li>
<li>Make sure you are not too comfortable. Lie in a position that is not natural to sleep. If you usually sleep on your side, lie on your back. </li>
<li>Wear loose fitting clothes and little or no covers. Warmth typically causes sleepiness. Being a little bit cold will help you maintain control over your awareness. You don't want to be freezing, just not cozy and warm. If it is too warm in your house, turn down the temperature a bit just to make it a little less comfortable.</li>
<li>Find something repetitive and monotonous to focus your mind on. Repeat a mantra, count backward from 300, or repeat affirmations in your head. If at any point you find yourself losing count or you realize you are no longer reciting your prepared phrase, just pick up where you left off.</li>
<li>Experiment with varying amounts of caffeine. During the wake-back-to-bed method, drink a small amount of coffee or some other caffeinated drink. If you find that it wasn't enough to be effective, up the dose a bit next time.</li>
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</h4>
<h4>
<br />What do I do about a heavy chest sensation? </h4>
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Once you learn to put your body to sleep, it is common for the heavy lead blanket feeling to cause panic or at least discomfort when it reaches your chest. Suddenly, your muscles relax, your rib cages sinks in on your lungs and there is a noticeable strain on your breathing. This sensation is intense enough, it has lead to myths about creatures or old hags sitting on your chest. The best fix I have found for this is to keep your breathing short, shallow, and comfortable through the entire experience. Deep breathing is great to get you relaxed, but after a few deep breaths, see how shallow you can make your breath without causing the sensation that you are depriving yourself of oxygen. Once this pressure on your chest arises, you will be able to avoid panic or the illusion that you are going to suffocate because you will already be breathing with very little movement to your chest.</div>
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What if my experiences are too short? </h4>
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Experiences are always too short at the beginning. This can be corrected through practice, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJNn-Pcij3k" target="_blank">maintaining, and deepening.</a> First and foremost, it is critical that you learn to leave emotion at the door. Nothing will disrupt the stability of an experience faster than fear or excitement. This is a challenge at the beginning as fear is a common reaction to the very physical sensations that are experienced, then comes the day when you succeed and that fear is quickly replaced by excitement and anticipation, which seem to ruin this fragile state just as effectively. The only way to accomplish this is through experience. You need to learn to maintain the inward drive and excitement that is needed to push your practice forward while staying outwardly indifferent to everything that you run into.</div>
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Once you overcome this hurdle, learn to immediately use maintaining and deepening to stabilize your experiences as the very first step of any projection. Once this becomes a habit, you are well on your way to having much longer adventures.</div>
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<br />What if I need to swallow? </h4>
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Swallowing, like any other movement, will set you back when you are trying to achieve a mind awake/body asleep state. The best method I have found to reduce the need for swallowing is to prop your head up or to sit in a reclined position. If you prefer to lie down, place an extra pillow or two behind your head so you are almost looking straight down at your feet. A recliner or arm chair is a good alternative because you can prop yourself at an angle and prevent spit from pooling at the back of your throat.</div>
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What should I wear? </h4>
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Wear comfortable, loose-fitting clothing and try to get by without a blanket if possible. Being too warm or too comfortable will result in your falling asleep too quickly and it will be difficult to maintain control of your mental awareness.</div>
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<h4>
<b>How do I remain in the vibrational state? </b></h4>
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This one is going to take some practice. The vibrations can range from a gentle hum, similar to that of a vibrating cell phone, all the way to a sensation that rattles your teeth and feels like you are being hit by a live power line. As you can imagine, it is difficult to not react to this phenomenon, but that is exactly what you need to do. In order to let the vibrational state build to the required frequency, you need to become indifferent to it. You need to surrender completely and just notice it vaguely as though it is occurring in your peripheral vision. Continue doing whatever it was you did to bring about the state, treating the sensations with a mild curiosity and nothing more. This is easier said than done, and nothing other than repetition and practice will work. No amount of reading on the subject can prepare you for the actual event. Most likely, the first few times, your heart will pound, your breathing will become fast and uncontrolled, and you will panic. That will pass with time. I personally had to reach the vibrational state a half dozen times before I learned to anticipate and enjoy the sensations.</div>
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<h4>
<br />What if I lay there forever and nothing happens or I can't reach sleep paralysis?</h4>
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Unfortunately, laying there on its own, is not enough. You have to take your physical body to a point of relaxation that never occurs naturally in waking life. For me, many times, the only way that I can achieve this deep state of relaxation is to actually let myself dip in and out of sleep. I think of these as micro-blackouts. I dip in just barely, hanging onto the intent to resurface again. Often, I will have to dip into sleep three or four times in order to sink deep enough to allow the process to evolve any further. This will take some practice. I would suggest starting out by practicing somewhere uncomfortable like a hard floor where it is difficult to fall asleep. Then, allow yourself to dip in and out over and over again so you can learn what that intent feels like. You can also do things like holding your arm up, resting your elbow on the bed so your hand will fall as you dip into sleep, causing you to wake back up. Another option would be to set an alarm to go off every five to ten minutes just in case you don't come back out so you can begin another attempt. Once you get to a deep enough state of relaxation, the process should progress on its own.</div>
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<h4>
What is a ramp timer doesn't work for me? </h4>
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Ramp timers, unfortunately, are a hit and miss approach. One day they may lead to an incredible experience and then they may fail miserably to produce any results for the next 3 months. To have the best possible chance of getting a ramp timer to work, you will need to do some experimentation. Try it at different times of the night or early morning. Try different intervals. Try to get to the shortest base interval that will still allow you to fall asleep between beeps. Be patient and try not to get frustrated, as frustration will most likely stop any further progress.</div>
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<h4>
How often should I practice? </h4>
Practice as much as you like, so long as it doesn't interfere with your physical life responsibilities, cause sleep deprivation, and as long as you enjoy it. If you find that practice leaves you tired, save your efforts for the weekend or a night before a morning when you will be able to sleep in. If you find that you are getting frustrated, take a break. This is a practice that cannot be forced and enjoying the process is critical to regular success. I would suggest learning to love every aspect of your practice from meditation to the pre-exit sensations. If you can learn to love the practice, you will be happy whether or not you get out of body and if you do manage to project, it will be an added bonus to your already enjoyable practice.<br />
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<h4>
What if I can't get the direct method to work?</h4>
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To be frank, the direct method is the most difficult method of learning to project in my opinion. It is probably the most widely talked about, therefore, seems to be the most popular and everyone's first choice, but if you just can't get it to work for you, perhaps try your hand at the <a href="http://www.phaseevolution.com/2016/04/how-to-astral-project-1-indirect.html" target="_blank">indirect method</a> or using <a href="http://www.phaseevolution.com/2016/06/how-to-astral-project-5-projecting-from.html" target="_blank">lucid dreaming</a> to induce a projection.</div>
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<h4>
What if I'm scared? </h4>
Fear is a natural reaction to much of what is experienced in this practice. Even those who have been doing this for years find themselves in situations where they feel real fear. First, evaluate where your fear is coming from. Are you afraid of being hurt or that you won't be able to return to your body? If either of these is the case, you can rest assured, you are indestructible when out of body and once you have a few experiences under your belt, you will realize that the challenge isn't in coming back, but in staying out longer. If your fear stems from religious beliefs, again, realize that you can't be harmed and then perhaps do some research on the many bible verses that are believed to have been influenced by astral projection. This is not an evil practice, demons are not waiting around every corner to invade your body while you are out, and nobody has ever died doing it. Maybe think of it as something akin to a rollercoaster. It is a thrill that may get your heart and adrenaline pumping, but in reality, is 100% safe. It also doesn't hurt to go into this practice with a positive attitude. You will find the out of body state to be very thought responsive, and if you expect to meet scary entities, you most likely will. Again, they won't be able to hurt you, but they will do their best to make you too scared to return for another visit.<br />
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<h4>
What if I have a stuck body part? </h4>
Stuck body parts are a fairly frequent phenomenon. You get half way out and then your leg is stuck, or your head won't separate, or you just can't pull your arms out. There are a couple of solutions to this that I have found over the past couple of years. First, call out for help with your mind. You may be surprised how quickly something responds to assist you in completing your separation. If you decide to go this route, be prepared for anything. Quite often the help does not come in the form you would expect it to and it can be surprising bordering on frightening, but if you ride it out, you will have an incredible experience to show for it. Another option is to just use imagined body parts. to rebuild your non-physical body. If you can't get your leg out, just manifest a new leg that is not stuck. Create yourself a new pair of arms. As mentioned the out of body state is incredibly thought responsive and generating portions of a new body is often easier than dealing with stuck parts. Finally, there is no rule that says you need a body at all. Many seasoned projectors discard their human form at some point and just travel as a point of consciousness. Give this a try, knowing that there is nothing your body can provide you when you are in the astral that can't be accomplished in other ways.<br />
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-86727222978526285732016-07-20T19:07:00.000-07:002016-08-21T10:31:44.545-07:00Astral Projection Experiment - Cutting Caffeine for 30 Days<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/h9j4dlX2K2o" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
<br />
Over the past couple of years, I have tried to do a number of things for my health in hopes that it will help my projection practice. I have increased my intake of raw fruits and vegetables, cut down on red meat, cut out fluoride, cut out sugar along with any fake sweeteners, and taken up an aggressive daily exercise routine. The one thing that I have only tried half-heartedly over the past two and a half years is the elimination of caffeine from my diet. I go a day here and a day there, and then I fall back into the habit of my morning and afternoon coffee.<br />
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Some recent digging into the effects of caffeine on the brain and its effects on things like the creation of serotonin have convinced me that I need to give it another shot. For real this time.<br />
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This brings me to my experiment, and I would love it if any of you would join in so we can compare experiences along what is likely to be a difficult journey full of yawning and long meaningful glances at my coffee maker. For the next 30 days, I will forego all caffeine in any form and will continue with my daily/nightly projection attempts. I will record my experiences periodically along the way. If at the end of the 30 days, I have attained new unimaginable levels of enlightenment, I may just continue this experiment. If I don't notice any difference, I may just sink back into my old love affair with my 24-ounce cup of black delicious perfection.<br />
<b><br /></b> <b>Update - Day 7</b><br />
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Seven days in and I can definitely tell a difference with my practice. Unfortunately, it has had a negative impact. We'll get to that in a minute, but first, let's talk about the physical aspects of cutting caffeine.<br />
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I didn't experience any headaches as I have heard others report, but the first two days, I was incredibly sleepy in the afternoons right around the time I typically have my second cup. The mornings were not so bad because I am in the habit of going to the gym and running 4 miles on a treadmill would wake anyone up. The tiredness in the afternoons lasted until about day 4 or 5. By day 7, I was feeling just about normal in the afternoon.<br />
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Now, onto my projection practice. As I said, it has not had the effect I was hoping for. As I have mentioned in previous posts, I am in the habit of putting my body to sleep while keeping my mind awake every night whether or not I wish to project, just for practice. Since cutting out caffeine, I am hitting less than a 50% success rate when it comes to keeping my mind awake during this process. I have also found that I no longer have spontaneous awakenings during the night which means I don't get to practice the indirect method, so that is strike two. Finally, my dream recall is down from 4 to 6 dreams a night to an abysmal 0 or 1.<br />
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I am hoping that this is just part of the transition to a body free from the effects of caffeine and that I will have better news to report next week.<br />
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<b>Update - Day 14</b><br />
<b><br /></b> I have a slightly more optimistic report for you all this week. First, no tiredness whatsoever, in fact, I have more energy now than I did when I was drinking my two cups a day. Another added benefit that I have read can be attributed to cutting caffeine is a decrease in mood swings. I just feel good all day long.<br />
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Now for my projection and dream practice. My mind awake/body asleep success rate is still hovering right around 50%, and I continue to sleep more deeply than I used to, so spontaneous awakenings have not returned as of yet. The good news is that my dream recall is back up to the 4 to 6 per night I was at before this experiment began. My dreams are as vivid as they ever were. Not lucid yet, but vivid, so that is a step in the right direction.<br />
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Two weeks down, two more to go. I hope that the rest of my practice will come in line with my dream recall in the weeks to come. We'll see...<br />
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<b>Update - Final Thoughts</b><br />
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Well, the experiment is almost officially over, but I have decided that I will be continuing with my "no caffeine" way of life. Physically speaking, I have far more energy than I had when I was relying on a cup of coffee to pick me up every day after work and I have found that my overall mood is far better than it was when stimulants were causing occasional depression and mood swings.<br />
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From a projection and lucid dreaming standpoint, I am still recalling between 4 to 6 dreams a night, which is right back where I was before undergoing this endeavor. My mind awake/body asleep practice is right back where it was. I am hitting a 90% to 100% success rate in my attempts again all thanks to a friend who recommended that I just need to be a little more aggressive in keeping my mind awake than I used to have to be. That seems like an obvious conclusion right? Somehow, it didn't occur to me as I continued going through the same motions that have worked for me consistently for over a year. I modified my practice so that I began counting down from 300 as usual, but I counted my heartbeats rather than my breaths. This was enough to keep the internal dialog a little more frequent and did the trick.<br />
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I have yet to experience a projection since beginning this experiment, but I am optimistic based on the fact that my other efforts and practices are returning to normal and overall, I just feel great!.<br />
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My final thoughts on caffeine, in general, is that it makes no difference. Obviously, cutting it out or possibly introducing it when it is not a regular part of your diet will impact your practice since it plays a role in regulating sleep chemicals and brain stimulation, but if you are accustomed to consuming caffeine, or accustomed to a life without caffeine, I don't see that there is any benefit from a projection standpoint to change your habits.Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-50987567837162363122016-06-24T08:05:00.000-07:002016-06-24T08:05:55.746-07:00How to Astral Project #5 - Projecting From a Lucid Dream<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/RqoDxYSagCA" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
<br />
I wanted to continue on with our "How to Astral Project" series. Today we will talk about projecting from a lucid dream, or converting a lucid dream into a projection. There may be several different ways to do this, but today I will share the method that I found works for me. This is the result of weeks of experimentation, trial, and error.<br />
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The method I have found to be most effective is to use a lucid dream as a springboard into using the <a href="http://phaseevolution.blogspot.com/2016/04/how-to-astral-project-1-indirect.html" target="_blank">Indirect Method</a>. If you are unfamiliar with the Indirect Method, feel free to click the preceding link and review it in detail if you wish. I will, however, go ahead and just describe it briefly here so we can all start on the same page.<br />
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The whole idea behind the Indirect Method is that you want to catch the transition between asleep and awake, and take advantage of those early moments to turn your attention to projection and separation. The challenge for me here has always been that it is difficult to remember to immediately focus on separation while remaining completely still. Instinctively when I wake up, I tend to yawn, stretch, maybe scratch an itch, and then I begin thinking about my day. By this time, it is too late to take advantage of the indirect method in most cases.<br />
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This is where lucid dreaming comes in. First, when you are having a lucid dream, your body is asleep, and your mind is awake and aware. This is requirement number 1 for projecting and it is already taken care of for you in this instance. You also have the added benefit of being able to plan out your projection and separation while still in the dream state. This prevents the risk of potential movement or stray thought interrupting your efforts upon awakening. This is what makes this such a great method of projecting, especially for those who either naturally take to lucid dreaming or have difficulty with some of the other projection methods.<br />
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Here is the process I go through to induce the projection.<br />
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<ol>
<li>Prior to going to sleep, I set my intent to focusing on projection during any upcoming lucid dreams that night.</li>
<li>I become lucid in my dream and I turn my focus to my plan of action, which in this case is to induce a projection.</li>
<li>I decide upon an exit technique. For me, this is typically rolling out.</li>
<li>I initiate the wakeup process in as slow, gradual, and controlled a manner as I can, all the while, performing my exit technique.</li>
<li>As I shift from my dream state back to physical wakefulness, I continually roll like a log, over and over. At some point in the transition, this sensation becomes real and I find myself next to my bed on the floor.</li>
</ol>
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This method takes advantage of the door to the astral still being propped open, however slightly, during the waking process. Your constant efforts to separate, help squeeze you through that door before it can close. If by chance, you miss your chance and the door closes, you still have the added benefit of a mind that has been focused continually on projection all the way from the sleep state. This greatly reduces the likely hood of accidental movement or stray thoughts interrupting your attempts at regaining the correct physical and mental state using the indirect method and cycling of techniques upon waking so you can push that door back open and roll out.</div>
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One more thing to mention, I have found that lucid dreams are a great training ground for things like gaining comfort with exit sensations. For example, from the waking state, it may take me 15 to 45 minutes to induce the vibrational state or the jet engine roaring sensation in my ears. In the early days, these sensations were so jarring that almost the instant they hit, fear, excitement, or anxiety would almost immediately ruin the state. At that point, I could either go through another 15 to 45 minutes to reinstate that process or more likely I would wait for another night. Due to the relaxed state of the body in a lucid dream along with what I imagine is a direct connection to your subconscious mind, I am able to induce exit sensations almost instantly while in a lucid dream just through simple intent. I will simply focus on kicking off the vibrations, and BAM! they begin. At that point, I will either remain in the lucid dream, explore the sensations and gain comfort with them, or I will allow myself to slowly regain consciousness, emerging from the dream state directly into waking vibrations. From there, I can again, remain in this state to gain familiarity with it, or I can practice raising their frequency, building their intensity, and practice my exit techniques.<br />
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Please let me know, how do you use a lucid dream to project? I would love to hear about your experiences.<br />
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-42264502997713255462016-05-29T08:52:00.000-07:002016-05-29T10:30:01.181-07:00Astral Projection Experience - NO CHEATING!<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/mWqFLOYUbTc" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
<br />
I wanted to share an experiment that I performed last night with you all and the results that followed that experiment. The idea for this experiment originated with the fact that for as long as I can remember, anytime I am touched at the base of my spine while sleeping, I experience a surging, jolting sensation that runs up my spine, making me arch my back. It is brief but intense. Over the past couple of years as I have progressed with my projection practice, I have noticed that this jolting sensation originates from the same point as the vibrations. This got me to thinking that maybe this jolting sensation is caused by interaction with an energy center, and if that is the case, it made me wonder, what if I could interact with that energy center through some nonautonomous method while sleeping. I have been mulling this idea over in my head for a long time now, but until last night, I never had a practical way of actually accomplishing this desired interaction. I used my FitBit.<br />
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For those of you who are not familiar with this technology, it is a small computerized pedometer. One of the handy features of a FitBit is its silent alarm, which results in the FitBit vibrating so you can wake up without bothering anyone else. I thought, maybe I could use this device to interact with this suspected energy center at predefined intervals throughout the night. I started by removing the FitBit from its accompanying wristband and safety pinned it into an Ace Bandage, you know, the long wrap-like bandages that you use when you have a sprained wrist or ankle? I then wrapped the Ace Bandage around my waist, placing the FitBit right at the base of my spine. I then set four alarms. One for 12:30 AM, one for 12:45 AM, one for 1:00 AM, and then finally, at 1:15 AM. After that, the only thing left to do was to go to sleep and hope for a bit of magic.<br />
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The first alarm went off and it worked just as I had hoped it would. I got that familiar jolt up the spine. I remained still, evaluating my current state. I was still relaxed, and I found that I had a gentle tingling at the base of my spine. I mentally played with the sensation for a couple of minutes but was unable to intensify it or make any use of it so I went back to sleep.<br />
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Each subsequent alarm resulted in that same jolt up the spine, but with one distinct difference. The tingling sensation continued to build. By the fourth interval, it was more a buzzing vibration than a gentle tingling. It almost instantly built into the energetic rushes that precede the vibrational state. This vibrational state then converted into one of the most lucid, most vivid projections I have experienced to date. I believe the clarity probably was a result of the wide awake, and yet very relaxed state I was in. I am anxious to see if this energy center interaction consistently provides this level of clarity.<br />
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On to the projection.<br />
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As is my usual practice, I quickly headed for my bedroom door. When I reached my door a male voice behind me said in a soft sing-songy voice "You're Cheating!". I looked around and was unable to see the source of the voice, but I had no doubt as to what this meant. I had just reached this out of body state through no work of my own, but through a small computerized device, and whatever this voice was attached to, was making sure I knew, that he knew. I quickened my pace and headed down the hall. Just as I passed the bathroom, the voice came again. Still slightly sing-songy, but this time, more notably upset and far louder than the previous message. "YOU'RE CHEATING!". At this point, I broke into a run and ran down the stairs, turned the corner, and headed down the second set of stairs, trying to make a break for the garage. As I reached this lower level of the house, I stopped and I could feel this thing right behind me. I felt its chin against my shoulder and felt its face brush against my cheek as it began to breathe heavily in my left ear. It then said in a loud, terrifying whisper, "YOU'RE CHEATING!". It then grabbed me around the waste. Looking down, I saw no arms, but could clearly feel them wrapped tightly around me. Muscular arms that I could not fight against. This entity then dragged me backward up both flights of stairs, down the hall, back into my bedroom, and then slammed me back into bed, reconnecting me with my body. I woke to a pounding heart and pumping adrenaline. Try as I might, I could not relax sufficiently for the rest of the night to give it another go.<br />
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Needless to say, I will be continuing this experiment. :)<br />
<br />Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-50940692327749988402016-05-23T17:50:00.000-07:002016-05-29T08:14:29.280-07:00Astral Projection Experience - Source of the Vibrations<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/yxSdW2qpJTI" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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I recently finished reading Explorations in Consciousness by Frederick Aardema and one of the things that he stated in his book that I found interesting is that vibrations exist outside of us at various points surrounding our bodies; to the left, to the right, to the front, to the back, above us, and below us. This made me think of the writings of Robert Monroe where he instructs the practitioner to reach above their head 4 to 6 feet and pull the vibrations down into their head. Frank Kepple talks quite a bit about raising your point of awareness up from behind your eyes and out the top of your head. Could it be that he too was shifting his focus to this external vibrational energy source? </div>
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I decided to experiment with this idea and to investigate the source from the out of body state. At 2:30 AM, I woke up to my alarm as usual and spent the next half hour writing down my dreams in my journal. Around 3:00 AM, I laid back down on my back and began my practice of deepening to the void state. The process moved quickly and easily. The familiar energetic pulses built into the vibrational state and I enjoyed them for a good minute or two before sitting up to look around my non-physical room.</div>
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Upon sitting up, I recalled my plan of action. I wanted to find the origin of the vibrations and see if they were visible to the non-physical eye when in this state. I noticed that the portion of my body that was still in contact with the physical, from the waist down, was still vibrating pleasantly. I experimented by laying back slightly and as I came back in contact with my body, the vibrations worked their way up my spine toward my head. Sitting back up, the vibrations faded once again from my upper body and remained light and comfortable in my lower half.</div>
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I began looking around for a visible source and the only thing I could see were two slightly pulsating large pill shaped objects next to each of my hands in bed. They looked electrical or mechanical in nature like they were made of some sort of transparent metallic material. They pulsated from white to grayish purple. I looked up, to the front, and to the back, but there was nothing I could see that I would associate with electrical current or this energetic state. These two objects were all I could see. I experimented by touching one and intense vibrations shot up through my finger and radiated up my arm and into my neck. I jerked my hand abruptly away as though I had been shocked. It wasn't painful, but it was surprising. I reached down and took hold of both pill shaped objects, wrapping my fingers tightly around them and my entire body was filled with vibrations so intense that it felt as if my head was going to burst. The noise was deafening and lights started popping in front of my non-physical eyes. More and more frequently until I was just staring into a blinding white light and it was over. I was back in bed to contemplate what it all means.</div>
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Were these objects the source of the vibrations? Was I not supposed to come into direct contact with them when just being in the general proximity seems to do the trick? Are these energy points the same for everyone? I would suppose not since I saw nothing above my head as Monroe reports. Do these astral batteries move around and change position? So much more exploring to do.</div>
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Let me know what you think.</div>
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Talk to you soon.</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-10872158016158218082016-05-17T15:28:00.000-07:002016-05-17T15:28:21.341-07:00Sleep Paralysis<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/6BEKHBCvjUw" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Today I thought we could start a conversation on sleep paralysis. For those of you who are new to this topic or who have never experienced this phenomenon, sleep paralysis is a physiological response to dreaming. Simply put, your body will paralyze at night when you dream to prevent your body from acting out your dreams so you can remain safe while you sleep.</div>
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Now I will tell you up front, I do not have a great deal of experience when it comes to the terrifying, debilitating, "lock you into place so severely that you couldn't break free if your life depended on it" type of sleep paralysis. For me, the process usually starts with a general heaviness, works its way to on overall numbing sensation, and finishes with a complete disassociation from the body. In this state, I know somewhere, my physical body must exist, and with some effort, I could tell you where it is and maybe even what position my arms are laying in, but it would require some effort to return to that level of physical awareness. </div>
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In contrast to my minor effort required, I have talked with people who get a wave of sleep paralysis so deeply that they can struggle with all their might and still cannot break free. For one individual I spoke with, the more he struggles, the stronger the paralysis becomes. What makes matters worse is that this deep paralysis is often accompanied by hallucinations and noises. Shadow people walking your room, creatures on your chest, and aliens encounters. </div>
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I asked a friend to describe his experiences to me and he pointed me to a documentary called "<a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3317522/" target="_blank">The Nightmare</a>". He said that the episodes described in this film depict what he goes through incredibly well. My reaction to this very frightening film was probably not the response the director was looking to invoke in the viewer. I was not frightened, on the contrary, each scene, each image of "the hat man", each encounter with aliens and demons excited me! I wanted that! Let me explain. I am far enough into the practice of astral projection and inducing out of body states, that I am well beyond the point of fearing any sort of physical harm. Thoughts of some threatening non-physical creature breathing in my face induce the same response in me that a roller coaster may induce in you. It is a thrill. A completely safe act of surrendering to fear that will make your heart pound and make you feel alive! I have said it before, any non-physical experience is worth having. Some of my most profound experiences have started as some of the most terrifying. If one day I am fortunate enough to experience these nightmares, I will let you know if I still consider myself fortunate. :)</div>
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I will end by sharing a couple of theories that I have about sleep paralysis to get your thoughts.</div>
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First, as I think about my out of body travels, it is perfectly possible that I do indeed experience this deeply paralyzed state. It could be that at that moment of separation my body is paralyzed, but I just don't recognize the condition because I am no longer bound to that physical. I am out on an adventure, leaving my paralyzed shell behind. I believe, to verify this, I would have to try to reattach or simply remain in the physical when I get to the point of separation. I will add that to my to-do list.</div>
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My second theory is that my body simply does not require that debilitating level of paralysis. I fall asleep quickly. I always have. I do not toss and turn. I select a position, fall asleep, and wake up 8 hours later in that same position. I sometimes wonder if my body has adapted to my lack of movement and therefore applies a gentle numbing, but no more than that, because that is all that is required to keep me safe in bed. This thought occurred to me as I was talking with a friend who is in the regular habit of sleep walking. He also has some of the most severe sleep paralysis stories I have ever come across. It made me think, maybe his body has to counteract his incredibly active impulses at night with an equally heavy dose of paralysis.</div>
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So there you have it. That is my entire experience with sleep paralysis in a nutshell. I will add more as I experience more. In the meantime, what do you think?</div>
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-22692495147291544672016-04-27T20:13:00.001-07:002016-04-27T20:13:43.176-07:00How to Lucid Dream<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/LMxKg3cNk1M" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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There are some upcoming topics that I want to cover that use lucid dreaming as their foundation, so now seems like a pretty good time to do a "how to" post for lucid dreaming. For those of you who have not come across this term before, a lucid dream is a dream in which you become conscious of the fact that you are dreaming, and thereafter you are able to take some measure of control. This can occur from the very beginning of a dream or at some point during the dream, but once you are lucid, your actions from that point become logical and intentional.<br />
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Before we delve into techniques to reach this desired state, let's first spend a minute or two on the types of Lucid Dream induction.<br />
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<ol>
<li><b>Dream Induced Lucid Dreams (DILD) </b>- This is the probably the most common form of induction. It is simply the act of becoming aware that you are in the dream, whilst in the dream.<br /><b><br /></b></li>
<li><b>Wake Induced Lucid Dream (WILD)</b> - This method provides lucidity from the very beginning. WILDing is the act of drifting from the conscious state directly into the Lucid Dream.</li>
<li><b>Mnemonic Induced Lucid Dream (MILD)</b> - This technique was created by Steven Laberge and is based on the practice of repeating an affirmation or mantra before going to sleep that will hopefully make its way into your subconscious and spark lucidity.</li>
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Of these three, I personally found the WILD method to be the most difficult to learn, and even to this day I struggle with it and using it, I only have about a 30% success rate. That being said, there is no reason you can't employ more than one at a time and there are some highly effective practices that you can put in place to help increase your overall success rate.</div>
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<br />Building your Dream Recall</h3>
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First, it is important to have good dream recall. If you are someone who never remembers your dreams, what does it matter if you have a lucid dream? You won't remember it anyway. So what if you are one of those people who do not dream? Good news! You are not! :) We all sleep in cycles and every 90 minutes or so you begin another cycle. Each of these cycles contains an REM sleep period where we dream. If you don't remember dreaming, don't fret, with some persistence and determination, dream recall is a skill that can be learned. Just follow the simple (although not always easy) steps below:</div>
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<li><b>Keep a dream journal! - </b>This is incredibly important! Write down every dream you have; even if it is just the tiniest snippet of a dream or even the vaguest of impressions. Over time, those vague impressions and tiny snippets will likely turn into paragraphs and then pages.</li>
<li><b>Take advantage of your first waking moments -</b> Get in the habit of turning your very first thoughts in the morning to last night's adventure. Before you even open your eyes, think back to what you were doing just five minutes ago. </li>
<li><b>Use leading statements - </b>If you don't remember your dream upon first awakening, prompt your subconscious with leading statements like "a moment ago I was...", or "I was just about to...", or "I was on my way to...". </li>
<li><b>Review common themes - </b>If using leading statements doesn't do the trick, I have found that just reviewing random (but common) scenarios rapidly for a minute or two will often spark a memory. I will think about work, and driving, and then about biking, then about having a conversation, or cooking a meal, or mowing the lawn. Each of these thoughts will be just a brief second or two unless I hit upon something that suddenly feels familiar. </li>
<li><b>Work backward - </b>If I can only remember a very brief segment of a dream, I will try to work my way backward from that memory. Quite often that memory is the end of the dream, so working my way backward will sometimes lead to the recollection of the entire experience.</li>
<li><b>Don't wait! - </b>(Now for the hard part) Write down your dreams when you have them. If you wake up at 2:00 AM and you remember a dream, get up and write it down. Don't wait for morning. Our brains seem to have a built-in dream eraser that is almost guaranteed to wipe out any recollection of even the most vivid dreams if they are not recorded right away.</li>
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What you journal on is up to you. It just needs to be convenient and close at hand. I personally use an Android app called Diaro. It was a couple of bucks, but well worth it. My dreams are backed up to the cloud and dropbox, exportable to PDF, and it is easy to give them a title and then tag them with keywords so they are easily searchable later.</div>
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Reality Checks</h3>
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One of the best habits to get into when attempting to learn to lucid dream is that of performing reality checks. A reality check is simply a check that will tell you if you are dreaming or not. This is where daytime practice becomes critical to success. You need to start performing reality checks throughout the day. Some examples of reality checks are:</div>
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<li><b>Flip on and off a light switch</b> - light switches tend to misbehave in dreams and lights will remain on or off when flipping them.</li>
<li><b>Look at your hands - </b>another strange phenomenon is that our hands almost never look normal in a dream. If you have never looked at your hands while dreaming, give it a try and you will see what I mean. They may be fat and bloated, or covered in waxy peeling skin, or they may melt right before your eyes.</li>
<li><b>Breathe through a plugged nose</b> - Obviously, we don't need to breathe in a dream, but we can, and even better, we can do it right through a plugged nose.</li>
<li><b>Try to read text - </b>Text has the habit of changing sporadically and small text, in particular, has the habit of not even being legible at all. If you are having difficulty reading text or the text in front of you is turning into hieroglyphics or jumping around on the page, there is a pretty good chance that you are dreaming.</li>
<li><b>Try to use any sort of electronics - </b>I can't say I have heard this one anywhere, but personally I have found that electronics don't work right in a dream. My phone makes regular appearances in my dreams and it never functions correctly.</li>
<li><b>Jump - </b>If all else fails, this is a great one. Jumping in a dream will often lead to floating, jumping far too high, or not being able to get your feet off the ground at all as if you now weight two tons.</li>
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Your goal now is to select a few of these reality checks (or one of your own) and practice them throughout the day. You can start by setting an alarm to go off once an hour and every time that alarm goes off, you will do your reality check. What works even better is if you associate a reality check with a common place or event that appears regularly in your dreams. This is where a searchable dream journal comes in handy. If you dream about your phone regularly, every time you look at your phone in waking life, perform a reality check. If your dreams regularly include trips to the bathroom, do a reality check every time you go to the bathroom. When you perform these checks, do not just do it half-heartedly and then go about your day. Stop for a moment, do the check, and think to yourself "what would be different if this were a dream? How is it that I really know I am not dreaming?". You need to build the habit during waking hours so it will happen spontaneously while you are dreaming.</div>
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Identify Dream Triggers</h3>
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Dream triggers are people, places, or things that make regular appearances in your dreams and can make you question whether or not you are dreaming. To really make an effective list, you will need your dream journal to go off of. For example, there is a particular building that I dream about almost weekly. There are dozens of mentions of this building in my dream journal and yet, this is a building that I never go to in real life. Anytime I am in this particular building in my dreams, it acts as a trigger. I say to myself, I am never here in waking life. This must be a dream. I then follow that realization with a few reality checks just to make sure. A trigger could be a loved one that has passed on or an old car you used to drive in high school. It could be anything as long as it is out of place and is encountered frequently.</div>
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Mantras and Affirmations</h3>
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Written or verbal affirmations as your last waking thought can go a long way in improving your chances of success. Before bed, take a piece of paper and pen and write an affirmation 20 or 30 times. Then as you lay in bed, just repeat your affirmation or mantra over and over again, keeping this as the last thought in your mind as you drift off to sleep. Some example phrases that can be used as affirmations are:</div>
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<li>Next time I sleep I will realize I am dreaming</li>
<li>Tonight I will have a lucid dream</li>
<li>I am dreaming.... I am dreaming... I am dreaming...</li>
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Feel free to come up with your own. Pick something that resonates with you.</div>
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Following the steps above will help you make great strides towards both the MILD and DILD methods of lucid dream induction.</div>
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Wake induced lucid dreams</h3>
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I find that the WILD method takes a bit more work. I didn't actually learn to successfully employ this method until after I had learned to project using the direct method where you put your body to sleep while keeping your mind awake. When I am in the void state where my body is deeply asleep, I can let my mind start to wander. Sometimes I even give it a little help and I start imagining nonsensical scenarios or I remember previous dreams. The less logical and abstract these thoughts are, the more effective they seem to be. This act of cycling through dream-like thoughts will kick off a slew or hypnogogic imagery. If I can follow that imagery and allow the transition into sleep to proceed very slowly, I can sometimes hang onto my rational mind as I make the transition and step directly into a dream, lucidity intact. This sensation is a lot like inducing an out of body experience without the associated physical sensations. I would be interested in hearing how others have employed this technique because as I said, even after loads of practice, my success rate is probably only around 30% using the WILD method.</div>
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<br />Wake-Back-To-Bed (the Deferred Method)</h3>
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As we talked about briefly, we sleep in cycles. REM sleep occurs at the end of each of those 90-minute cycles. What this means is that you will very rarely, unless you have had a recent nap, jump directly into a dream when you fall asleep. Due to this cyclical pattern of sleep, your chances of lucid dreaming are greatly increased after you get some good rest in; four to six hours to be precise. For the best shot at inducing a lucid dream, you will use the wake-back-to-bed or deferred method. This is the practice of setting your alarm to wake you up after four to six yours, getting up for 15 to 45 minutes, and then going back to sleep. Doing this means that you are no longer exhausted and that 15 to 45-minute break wakes you up a bit so you won't fall asleep to quickly or deeply when you lay back down. This would also be a great time to repeat your affirmations or mantras. So what should you do during that waking period? How about re-read this post? :) Write in your dream journal. Read previous dream journal entries. etc.</div>
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Once your 15 to 45 minutes is up, don't go back to your bed. Find a different place to lay down that is not usually associated with sleep. This will become your lucid dreaming practice space. It could be a couch, or a recliner, or a mat on the floor. This is one more way to train your mind so it will know what to expect. Subconsciously your mind will say "oh! I am laying in the chair! It must be time to practice lucid dreaming!"</div>
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Maintaining and Deepening</h3>
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One of the things that you will quickly find as you start practicing lucid dreaming is that these experiences are never as long as you would like them to be. Once you gain lucidity, it is a constant effort to remain in the dream environment. This is where Maintaining and Deepening come in. Maintaining and Deepening are techniques that will anchor you in the dream state a little longer and will add clarity to your experiences and good news, they are incredibly easy to learn. Your goal is to engage your senses and don't linger too long focusing on any one thing. You should constantly be looking around scrutinizing small details of the objects around you. You should be picking things up and touching things briefly from every angle possible. Once you have engaged with some object, quickly move on and turn your attention to another object. Put food and non-food items in your mouth. Crawl on the floor and run your hands through the carpet. Sing or even just talk to yourself.<br />
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These actions need to be done almost constantly to guarantee the longest experience possible. If you feel the dream start to fade, refocus your efforts on engaging your senses until the dream becomes clear once again. You might think this will make it hard to do any real exploring if you have to spend all your time touching everything in sight. Be creative with it. When I want to travel, I will run or fly, dragging my fingers on the ground or running my hands through trees. Other things that have helped me improve my clarity are spinning quickly in circles and a technique I took from William Buhlman, simply demand "Clarity Now". It is incredible how responsive the dream environment can be to your demands.<br />
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<br />Saturate Your Mind</h3>
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One of the things that lead to more lucid dreams than anything else for me aside from regular reality checks is constantly bombarding my mind with information about lucid dreaming. Watch YouTube videos about lucid dreaming, read books about lucid dreaming, talk to your family and friends about lucid dreaming. Keep it at the forefront of your mind throughout the day and it is likely to work its way into your dreams at night.</div>
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Practice and Persistence</h3>
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Don't give up on this. Even after a couple of years of practice, my lucid dreams tend to be hit and miss. They do become more frequent with effort and persistence, though, so rest assured, you will get there if you put in a little effort.</div>
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That is about all the advice I can offer based on my experience. Please let me know how this goes for you and I would love to hear if you have additional steps that you take that lead to your success that I have not covered here.</div>
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Good luck and happy dreaming!</div>
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-3798534263309715352016-04-21T16:59:00.000-07:002016-05-29T08:10:44.147-07:00Binaural Beats<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/g2DiZETAVMM" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Today we will enter the fascinating world of Binaural Beats. Let's start out with a bit of introduction for those that have never heard of this odd auditory phenomenon and the reported benefits that they provide. In a nutshell, our ears are used to hearing the same sound from a slightly different perspective. This assumption that our brain makes when listening to two distinct, slightly different, pure tones results in what is called a Binaural Beat.<br />
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What does that mean? Let's say you put on a pair of headphones and I play a 193hz tone in your left ear. Now in your right ear, I play a tone at 197hz. The difference between the two tones on their own is almost indistinguishable. When played together, however, something interesting begins to happen. Your brain compensates for the difference in the two tones and the result is a wavering tone that makes up the difference between the two pure tones. So playing a tone of 193hz and a tone of 197hz, results in you hearing a modulating 4hz tone that doesn't really exist. It is actually generated by your brain. Studies have shown that listening to these modulating tones can actually help you bring your own brain wave frequency in line with the frequency you are hearing in your head. Due to this, Binaural Beats have become a tool used in meditation, astral projection, accelerated learning, intense concentration, etc.<br />
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There are five different frequency ranges to discuss that can be generated using Binaural Beats and these frequency ranges match up with the wave frequencies found in our brains.<br />
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The first is <b>Delta</b>. Delta waves are usually associated with deep and dreamless sleep. These are the slowest of the wave frequencies and live down in the 2hz to 3hz range.<br />
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Next up are Theta waves. <b>Theta</b> waves are associated with deep meditation, deep relaxation, and NREM sleep. Theta waves range from 4hz to 7hz.<br />
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<b>Alpha</b> waves are associated with a state of mind conducive to conscious relaxation, pre-sleep, or pre-sleep drowsiness. This is also the range that your brainwaves fall into when you are dreaming. Alpha waves range from 8hz to 13hz.<br />
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<b>Beta</b> waves are the frequency that is associated with concentration and cognition. They range from 14hz to 39hz.<br />
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Finally, there are <b>Gamma</b> waves. These are the fastest and are found in the mind when you are actively problem-solving or using intense concentration and perception.<br />
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There are countless videos on YouTube that contain Binaural Beats. I would caution you, however, I have run across several that are not true Binaural Beats; audio files where the sound really is modulating rather than relying on your brain to create that synchronization of the two tones. There are also several apps out on the Android Market that can produce these tones. My personal favorite is one called "Beat Player". It was inexpensive and offers a lot of flexibility, presets, and the ability to save your own presets for later use.<br />
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<b>What is this "Hemi-Sync" that I have heard of?</b><br />
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Interesting story I was told during my week at the Monroe Institute:<br />
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Robert Monroe was a pilot and during his career, he witnessed instances where the engine on one side of the plane and the other side of the plane were slightly out of tune. The result was this modulating, wavering tone that filled the gap between these two tones. What's more, this modulating tone was a danger to pilots because it would often result in them falling asleep at the wheel. This observation of the effect sound could have on the human consciousness stuck with him and during his career in the radio business, he began experimenting with this phenomenon. His primary goal at first was to use it to induce learning while asleep. This later was to evolve and become part of Bob's method for teaching other how to reach the out of body state. Today this is known as "Hemi-Sync".<br />
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So what is the difference between Hemi-Sync and Binaural Beats? It basically comes down to production. Hemi-Sync uses Binaural Beats, but layers them, covers them with pink noise, and either adds Bob's voice as he provides guided meditations and exercises, or music where the root note lines up with the Binaural Beat's tone so the actual modulation is difficult to hear. The idea is that these various added components make it easier to listen to these tones for long periods of time, increasing the benefit that they provide.<br />
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<b>Other Sound Technology:</b><br />
<b><br /></b> Graham Nicholls, another well-known phase practitioner, has created his own variation of sound to assist in projecting. He calls his product "Infra-liminal Sound". This again starts with the use of Binaural Beats, but then it adds a phasing stereo quality and patterns that speed up and slow down over the hour of audio. His goal was to produce a sound that would help practitioners get closer to the state required for astral projection by playing audio that is reminiscent of the sound and sensations that can be experienced.<br />
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<b>Does it Work?</b><br />
<b><br /></b> I have used them all and I can tell you that all three have their strengths. First, Binaural Beats are easy to tweak to fit your desired state of mind, especially with an app like Beat Player. They are also not hidden by any pink noise, white noise, or music and I find that this leads to them being more potent. They can get me into a deep meditative state much more quickly than something like Hemi-Sync. That being said, they are difficult to listen to for hours on end, so if your goal is to listen to something all day at work, you would be better off with Hemi-Sync. The Wave CD's produced by the Monroe institute are great for guided meditations. I personally love Bob's voice. I listen to him guiding me through his exercises and always find myself wishing I could have met this remarkable man. Infra-liminal sound is probably the least well-known. The real benefit I have found with this is the stereo phasing effect that Graham uses. In my other posts, I have mentioned how powerful imagined movement can be when trying to reach the vibrational stage. I use Graham's Infra-liminal sound during the day to practice that imagined sense of movement. The stereo sound gives his audio a real sense of motion and adds to the efficacy of visualization practice.<br />
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When it actually comes to projecting, I have heard many people swear by these audio technologies. I have to say personally that I find them great for meditation and practice, but when I am projecting, my goal is to disconnect myself from all physical ties to this world and that includes my sense of hearing. Having these sounds play in my ear tends to keep me too focused on the physical. If you have trouble projecting while listening to these sounds, I would recommend using them for 15 to 30 minutes prior to your projection attempt as a meditation to get you closer to that desired state of mind. I find that this is far more effective.Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-20934967011078452652016-04-14T12:46:00.001-07:002016-05-29T08:09:30.124-07:00Astral Projection - Is Exhaustion Beneficial?<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/GzY8vVeCNRI" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Just like anything when it comes to Astral Projection, there doesn't seem to be just an easy "Yes, No" answer to this one. Thinking back, I believe that exhaustion can be placed into one of three categories.</div>
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<b>Physical </b>- Your body is worn out. Your muscles are tired. Your mind is clear, optimistic and positive, but you could easily fall asleep if you were to try. This could be after a hard workout, a long physically taxing week, or anything else that leaves you in a physically fatigued state.</div>
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<b>Mental </b>- When I think of mental exhaustion, I think of those long days at work where I spend eight to ten hours in a cubicle with very little if any physical engagement. This sort of exhaustion can come from a hard day of problem-solving, or something like a week of preparation, cramming, and memorization for a final exam. Everyone has experienced this at some point in their life. It is the feeling of being mentally drained.</div>
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<b>Emotional </b>- This sort of exhaustion for me personally comes from situations like dealing with disgruntled employees or having a fight with my wife. It could be the result of road rage, a misbehaving child, or a heated disagreement with a family member. The feelings that I associate with this state are frustration, anger, and depression.<br />
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So what role do each of these states play in your ability to project if any?<br />
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Let's start with physical since that is that is an easy one. I can say hands down, without a doubt, physical exhaustion is beneficial to my own projection practice. I have seen this manifest itself in my life dozens of times. This is likely for several reasons. For me personally, exercise is an escape. It is a chance to clear my head. When we exercise, our brains release endorphins, adrenaline, serotonin, and dopamine. This results in a feeling of happiness, contentment, and optimism. I have emphasized multiple times in previous posts that your mood and state of mind plays a critical role in your level of success when it comes to projecting. Aside from the general good feeling that comes with physical exertion, there is the fact, plain and simple, that if your physical body is incredibly tired, it will fall asleep more quickly. The faster you are able to make that transition to the void state; mind awake and body asleep, the better chance you have of remaining conscious through it. During a 10 day trip to Ireland with my wife, we walked between 15 and 20 miles a day. That physical exhaustion resulted in the easy induction of back to back projections during our final nights there. I can also say, the only success I have ever had projecting during daytime hours has come after working all night long and remaining awake for over 24 hours. Not necessarily my ideal scenario, but effective.<br />
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Mental exhaustion is a bit trickier. I have been successful projecting when mentally exhausted and I have also run into insurmountable roadblocks when mentally exhausted. The conclusion that I have come to when talking about mental exhaustion is that if I am mentally drained but able to focus, I can succeed and my mental state is not a hindrance to the process. If I am still repeating problems, scenarios, and questions that I was unable to resolve during the day, which lead to this state in the first place, that lack of focus will ruin my attempts. I need to just shut down that analytical part of my brain and say to myself, I will continue tomorrow, but for now, it is time to focus on projection. If I can redirect my focus successfully, I can usually achieve positive results.<br />
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Finally, let's talk about the arch enemy of projection. emotional exhaustion. If physical exhaustion is one end of the spectrum and ideal for inducing the desired state, emotional exhaustion is the polar opposite. I can confidently say that I have never been successful when I am emotionally drained, upset, depressed, or angry. I think there is a combination of factors at play here. First and foremost, that positive optimism that lends itself so well to this effort is not there. Second, when I am re-playing angry conversations in my head, thinking of what I should have said, redirecting my focus to this effort is nearly impossible. Finally, the natural physical state when you are angry or upset is tension. Muscle tension in your shoulders, tension in your jaw, clenched fists, etc. Being that relaxation is an absolute requirement, if you cannot release that tension and just let that negativity go, you will not succeed.<br />
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There you have it; my experience with exhaustion.<br />
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Physical = Good<br />
Mental = "It depends..."<br />
Emotional = You might as well try on another night.<br />
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So what is the takeaway here?<br />
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Get out there and exercise! Wear yourself out doing something you love and improve your chance of success at the same time. :)</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-50613361247713148862016-04-10T14:33:00.000-07:002016-05-29T08:06:59.826-07:00Astral Projection Experience (Still Overcoming Fear)<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/DmCYOyI7a9M" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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I lay down just as I always do and go through physical relaxation, making it to that void state that I enjoy so much. I start engaging myself in the roller coaster technique and without too much effort, the vibrations roar in and I am ejected at high speed from my body as usual. This is always a good method for seeing some place new until I can finally get the hang of teleportation. </div>
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I land in a large city that looks a lot like New York. I am standing on a sidewalk in front of a short haired Indian woman. She is middle aged and has a good hoop piercing in her right nostril. She introduces herself. Her name is Usha. She asks me if I remember what it is we were discussing last time we met. I am wracking my brain and I can't remember even ever meeting her before. I respond "no". She doesn't seem disappointed. She just says "that's OK, we will start from here." I agree that his sounds like a good plan. She says "Today, we are going to focus on fear." I don't know what that means, but I agree that focusing on fear sounds fine to me. </div>
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I follow her and she leads me into an alleyway between two skyscrapers. There is a water spillway behind us as we sit on a cement ledge side by side. She looks at me and says very seriously, "Stay put". I agree to stay put, waiting for more instructions, but she just looks up. I look at her looking up and then I look up to see what it is that she is looking at. She is looking at the tops of the skyscrapers. As I too, stare at the tops of these immense buildings, they begin to crumble. Large chunks of concrete and brick begin tumbling toward us. I instinctively jump up and begin running. I call to her to run as well but make little effort to save her. (Quite the hero, right?) </div>
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I listen to the sound of the rubble hit the ground and it is deafening. Finally, I turn around and see smoke rising from the rubble that is now covering the spot where I was sitting moments before. Usha is gone and I phase back to my body.</div>
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This feels like a test; a test that I apparently failed. Two years, four months, and seven days into my work with phase experiences, completely aware that I cannot be harmed, that connection to the physical still takes over and fear still wins. I need to work on this if I am going to move forward.</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-65057220238696433762016-04-10T14:32:00.003-07:002016-05-29T08:05:41.926-07:00How to Astral Project #4 - The Indirect Method<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/h8kix-pAp3g" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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We have spent the last few posts talking about the direct method, or techniques where there's no lapse in consciousness between the waking state and your projection. Those techniques require quite a bit of practice due to their use of the void state and the requirement of putting your body to sleep while keeping your mind awake. The indirect method is significantly easier to achieve because you can eliminate all of that pre-work. It does, however, require its own type of practice because there is still a new skill that you're going to have to develop; a new reflex you are going to have to ingrain in your subconscious mind. Overall, however, I find that they are far easier to achieve and they are a great approach to start with. </div>
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The idea with indirect techniques is that they are performed immediately upon awakening, or ideally, during the process of awakening. The moment you begin the transition to wakefulness, the goal is to remain completely still and immediately turn your attention to your projection attempt. If you grab hold of this transition soon enough, you can actually roll right out of your body or appear at some predetermined target without any further effort. It's almost as if the door to the astral is open while we are asleep and that door closes slowly as we regain consciousness. That transition back to wakefulness is your chance to catch that door part way open and to squeeze your way through it.<br />
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Training</h3>
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The challenging part of this method is building that reflex to immediately attempt projection upon awakening, and if unsuccessful, immediately begin cycling through techniques. Ideally, this should become a habit to the point that this process is instinctually performed during the transition out of sleep. This should be your very first thought prior to moving and prior to any other thought.<br />
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This is the most difficult part of the indirect method. I personally had such a struggle ingraining this immediate plan of action into my subconscious, I ended up recording my voice, reminding me to project and then used that audio file to create an alarm that would go off periodically throughout the night. Hearing that instruction to remain still and project every time I awoke, over and over and over again eventually helped me turn that action into a reflex that will now naturally come as my first waking thought.<br />
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<b>Second Chance</b></h3>
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If by chance you miss that split second and the door is closed, don't fret. You will now attempt to push it back open. This can be done by cycling through a series of techniques that you will decide upon beforehand. This list of that I provide are a somewhat modified version of the techniques originally created by Michael Raduga. I have made changes or expanded on Michael's techniques where I have found that for me, changes needed to be implemented to provide a higher level of success. I have also found personally it is beneficial to branch out and experiment with different techniques from time to time. There will be days when a technique that has never provided solid results in the past suddenly begins to bring on the phase. Select three or four of the techniques below or even come up with one of your own that resonates with you and run through them in your mind before going to sleep. One thing I would suggest is to select a technique from more than one category so you have the best chance of finding something that your unique state will respond too. If you were not able to immediately leave your body during that transition back to the waking state, begin cycling through your list of techniques. Spend three to five seconds on one, if no results occur, move to the next one, and repeat. If at any time you start to get any sort of phase related sensations, continue with the technique that brought about those sensations. Do at least four cycles even if it doesn't feel like it is working. I have often thought I was either two awake or just not in the right state of mind, only to have a later cycle produce results.</div>
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<b>Visual Techniques</b></h3>
<b>Observing Images</b></div>
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Immediately begin searching the backs of your closed eyelids for imagery. Perform this action for three to five seconds. If you begin to see images or anything else of a visual, non-physical nature, continue this process. Examples I have personally experienced are seeing remote locations as if looking through a window and more commonly, seeing through my closed eyelids and sleep mask into the room around me.</div>
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<b>Visualization</b></div>
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Immediately implement the target technique. Put yourself in a location you are familiar with and start to scrutinize the objects in that room. Take in your surroundings and try to engage all your five senses. Alternately, you can just visualize a specific object that you are extremely familiar with. It could be a cell phone, your car keys, or anything else that will help you engage your senses. I like using my ring of house and car keys because it is something I handle every day and very easy to imagine. Feel all the details of each key. Shake them and hear the sound of the metal as it jingles. </div>
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<b>Movement Based Techniques</b></h3>
<b>Phantom Wiggling</b></div>
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For three to five seconds, begin trying to move body parts without moving a physical muscle. Wiggle a finger, move a hand, reach for a wall that is much too far to physically touch. If you begin to get the sensation of movement, continue this action past the three to five-second mark. Personally, I have found that the more intent you put into these imagined movements, the more effective they are. Don't just halfheartedly wiggle a finger. Direct all your effort and concentration into feeling this movement. There have been times where I have pictured myself violently swinging my arms side to side and withing just a few moments, I was overcome by the actual physical feeling that I was performing this action. I have reached a hand down far beyond my normal range of reach and run my fingers through the carpet on the floor and even pushed my hand through the floor, into the room below.</div>
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<b>Imagined Movement</b></div>
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Try to imagine the sense of movement. As I have mentioned in previous posts, for me, the feeling of going through loops on a roller coaster is very effective. Others have reported that rotation in bed is effective. Imagine yourself rotating from head to foot over and over, or use the technique I mentioned in one of my other posts and watch an imaginary dot cross the ceiling and slowly go under you, forcing your body, while in its flat board-like position to do sort of a summer salt in order to continue watching its progression around the room. Make this movement as strong and fast as you possibly can. Feel the wind in your face, feel the asphalt under your bare feet as you run, feel the seat of the car pressing into your back as you slam on the gas. As with phantom wiggling, this cannot be a halfhearted action. Put everything you can into this action for three to five seconds, and as with the other methods, continue after that time if you begin to get any inkling of phase related sensations.</div>
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<b>Auditory Techniques</b></h3>
<b>Intense Listening</b></div>
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Most of us are familiar with the ringing sound we occasionally experience in our ears. This technique can make use of that sound. Immediately upon waking, begin to listen intensely to the sound inside your head. First, hear the ringing, but then try to go deeper. If you are like me, you will find that that ringing has multiple layers. I can almost always hear a slight ringing if I plug my ears at any point throughout the day, but something that is unique to those first moments of wakefulness is a low rumbling like an engine in my head. Unless I focus inward, this sound will almost always go unnoticed. First, I will try to hear the layers of ringing, then the low rumble, and then I strain hard to hear the bursts of static that I am so familiar with. If I can hear those bursts of static, I will remain on this technique and through intent and continued listening in, allow them to build in speed and intensity.<br />
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Other Techniques</h3>
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<b>Straining your Brain</b></div>
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Immediately, for three to five seconds upon waking, begin causing intensely imagined strain in your brain. This one I have found to be very effective in quickly bringing on the vibrational state, but I will admit, it really took some time to get the hang of this technique. For weeks after reading the term "strain the brain" in Michael Raduga's writing, I was baffled as to how one would actually do this. I don't have any muscles in my brain. How on earth can I strain it? I will try to provide a detailed account to clarify what I have found works for me when employing this technique in case you read "The Phase" and found this technique as frustratingly confusing as I did. First of all, the pressure sensation that I generate is similar to that of being upside down. Do a handstand, or stand on your head, or even just hang your head between your legs for a minute or two until you can feel the pressure building in your head. You know what I am talking about? Your veins in your forehead start to bulge and your face gets all red? OK, so you have memorized that feeling. I then will try to pulsate that pressure feeling. (Keep in mind, you are not literally aiming to force blood into your head, I am just trying to provide some details on how this feels to me so when you are successful, you will recognize the feeling.) Now upon waking up, feel the pressure and weight of your head against your pillow. Try to move that pressure up from the base of your skull from the back of your head forward. Try to expand that pressure until it is similar to what you experienced while upside down. Now for fun, try to pulsate that sensation, almost as if the inside of your head is throbbing with this pressure. As with all other techniques, it is important that you are not inducing these sensations physically. This is all non-physical. Just strobe this pressure over and over again or occasionally hold it at its peak. The interesting thing about this technique is that I can't generate this sensation during the day, but it comes fairly easily most of the time immediately upon awakening.<br />
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<b>Straining the Muscles without Moving</b><br />
This is a very similar concept to straining the brain, but instead of your brain, you are creating imagined strain all throughout your body. I personally have a hard time getting this one to work for me. Being that my muscles are really possible to physically strain, I tend to unintentionally tense various muscles which is counterproductive. Straining the brain while maybe more difficult to imagine, is easier to do correctly because there are no muscles in your brain to strain even if you wanted to.<br />
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At this point, if all goes well, you are either out of body or you have reached the vibrational state. From the vibrational state, simply continue as we have discussed in the past. Let the vibrations build in smoothness and frequency and then roll out, stand up, float out, climb an imagined rope, etc.<br />
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Tips</h3>
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Perform this method after four to six hours of sleep. I have the best results between 2:00 AM and 4:00 AM.</div>
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If cycling through your selected techniques doesn't work for you, remain positive and optimistic with an intent on repeating the process on your next awakening and just go back to sleep.</div>
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I have found that if I tell myself that every technique and cycle that I am performing is relaxing me more and bring me closer and closer to sleep that they tend to be more successful. This helps me prevent accidental muscle tension or from coming too far out of that borderland state for any techniques to be effective.</div>
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Don't give up. Once you have built this reflex upon awakening, the phase state will be substantially easier to achieve. In Robert Monroe's final book he commented that after decades of projecting as he was first going to sleep, he found one day that rolling out upon awakening, in comparison, was "absurdly easy". Once mastered, this will most likely be the most reliable method of reaching the phase that you can find.</div>
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-34297832430315387412016-04-10T14:32:00.002-07:002016-05-29T08:03:06.014-07:00Astral Projection Experience (Astral Rain and Trying to Remember)<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/V0i5qydRKyw" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Immediately upon returning from my visit with Usha, I began using the Indirect Method to leave my body once again, hoping that by some chance I would be allowed to repeat this test of courage that I had just failed. I wanted to sit there by Usha and let the rubble smash me just to see where that would lead. Unfortunately, I didn't make it back to that city. On the upside, I was able to project. I rolled out of body and landed in my room. As I do when I am out of body, I immediately turned my focus to the next item on my list of tasks I want complete or things that I want to experience. I have mentioned before that time spent in the astral is never enough. Experiences tend to be short and never as frequent as I would like, so it is important to me that I spend the time out of body in a productive manner.</div>
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As I was reading through my dream journal last week, it occurred to me that I have never experienced any sort of adverse weather conditions while out of body. I thought it would be really interesting to experience rain. To that end, I left my room, ran down my hall and into my living room. I stood at my front door and before opening it, put all my intent into making it rain behind that door. For those of you who have projected, you can confirm that the astral is very thought responsive. This is especially the case when dealing with places that are out of your line of sight; behind closed doors, around corners, etc. I swung the front door open and it worked. I had manifested rain. It was truly remarkable. I have always been amazed at how these things that I create take on a life of their own. I could feel the humidity of the moisture coming through the screen door. I hadn't even thought of that. It was just there because that is what happens when it rains. I walked outside and looked at the sky, marveling at how lucid, solid, and intense the feel of rain on my face and body could make a projection. </div>
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I looked around and there was a little boy smiling as he pushed dirt around with a toy bulldozer in the front yard. I should mention, this was not my front yard. I was in a lush green neighborhood with large lots. It looked like it could have been a mountain town or some place in the south. I watched the boy play for a bit and then I noticed a bush with pine needles on it off to my right. I decided it was time for one of my favorite things. If you have read my previous posts, you can probably guess where this is going. I grabbed a handful of pine needles and shoved them in my mouth. I chewed them and tasted the pine and the rough texture as the needles ran down my throat. </div>
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Having completed my task I decided to go look for someone to interact with. I looked at the house next door, a large blue house with a red brick pillar that held up a wooden balcony which wrapped around the house, also serving as a front porch. I took the approach to travel that I love more than anything else, I jumped into the air and soared from the road across the front lawn, landing right at the front door. I then entered without knocking.</div>
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I began searching the house for people or some form of life. On my way through the kitchen, I decided to grab something else to eat. I opened the pantry and pulled out a bag of tortilla chips. I ate a few. They were crunchy, and salty, and had some kind of lime seasoning on them. They were delicious. I continued eating chips as I made my way through the house. Reaching the back bedroom, and still not finding anyone, I decided to leave the house and continue my search for life. Just as I was approaching the front door, I heard two voices. The voice of a small girl, blonde, maybe three or four years old, talking to her mother. They walked through the front door and their conversation stopped when they saw me standing in their living room.</div>
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The mother looked similar to the little girl. Slender, round face, straight light brown hair that dropped just passed her shoulders. What happened next is exactly the opposite of what I would have expected. Rather than scream at me to leave, or ask who I am, this woman ran to me and threw her arms around my neck and said: "I am so glad you are home!". I just stood there, arms at my sides, confused, trying to figure out who this lady is why she is saying I am "home". She recognizes that I am not returning her embrace and she pushes away, puts her hands on my face, and looks into my eyes. She says "Whats wrong? Don't you remember me?". She has tears in her eyes and I can see that I am upsetting this woman. Not wanting to make things worse, I respond, "oh yes! Of course, I remember you!"</div>
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I should mention now, that there are no secrets in the astral. This communication, this conversation we are having is all non-verbal. This is a sort of telepathy where words are shared through feelings, intent, and images. She knows that I am lying. She responds by hugging me tighter and by sending a barrage of images, and scenarios, and memories into my head; trying to do everything she can to help me both her and this house. I close my eyes, trying to focus on these images, doing my best to remember. As I review these images in my mind, I phase back to my body and it is over.</div>
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-36226486305343751732016-04-03T08:58:00.000-07:002016-05-29T08:01:33.167-07:00Low Energy Projection<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/JZzpkFv4hbI" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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Let me start by saying that once you have projected a few times, you start to recognize the state of mind that is conducive to this sort of work. Today was a good day. I was feeling incredibly positive and as I laid down to go to bed, I just knew that I was going to be able to project. I could feel it. Physically I felt tired, but mentally, I felt a content, positive optimism.<br />
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I laid back and put my body to sleep. I reached the void state and decided that I would just let the process progress on its own. After remaining in this state for what felt like 45 minutes or so, it was becoming clear that the process was not going to happen on its own tonight. It was time to give it a little help.<br />
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I went through my usual process of riding my imagined roller coaster in backwards loops. I almost hit the vibrational state over and over again, but just couldn't get it to start. I switched to my dot watching technique where I watch a dot move across the ceiling, down the wall, and under the bed, resulting in my doing forward somersaults. Again, close, but I just couldn't get those dang vibrations to start. I moved to a technique where I pulsate pressure in my head and got so incredibly close, but again, no cigar. Finally, I decided, maybe I had been wrong. Maybe tonight was not the night after all. I rolled over onto my side intending to go to sleep.<br />
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Almost immediately the rushes began; those little bursts of energy that shoot up through my head. I ignored them in just the right way and allowed them to continue. They sped up and built into the vibrational state as they always do, but this time, something was different. There was no accompanying noise. The vibrations were completely silent. The vibrations were rough and jagged feeling and after what seemed like far too long, they were still not building in frequency or smoothing out. I tried through intent to help them level out and build into the familiar hum that means it is time for me to stand up, but they just remained harsh and jagged.<br />
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What felt like 10 minutes went by. This is an incredibly long time for me to remain in the vibrational state. They started getting even more violent and I could feel the teeth in my mouth vibrating. I could see through my closed eyelids, but this time, the room wasn't lit by the familiar ambient light. Through the dark gloom, I could see my wife in the bed next to me. I just laid there, watching her sleep. Then suddenly, it was like watching a movie in fast forward and my wife grew old. Then she disappeared and she became a different young woman. That young woman grew old and became a young man. He grew old and was replaced by another young lady. Finally, I, as I could see through my eyelids and the vibrations just didn't seem to be getting any smoother, I decided I was just going to get out.<br />
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I rolled out of bed and was surprised to find that I had no strength in my legs. I fell to the floor and could barely keep my chest off the floor with my arms. The person in the bed next to me at that moment, whoever it was, grabbed my wrist and told me to come back to bed. That I wasn't ready yet. With help, I pulled my heavy body back onto the bed and reconnected with the physical body and was back.Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-86225106937694050592016-03-25T11:36:00.002-07:002016-03-25T11:37:21.536-07:00Sculptures, Carvings, and Relics Seen on the Astral Planes<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/qAundWTuRvo" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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In my very first experience reaching what I assume to be the Astral Planes, I was surrounded by what looked like carvings, sculptures, or relics of some sort. They looked like they were made of stone and bronze and had patterns, etchings, and symbols carved into them. Below are drawings of the two that I had a chance to look at most clearly during my experience there.<br />
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<br />Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-12090785381724728452016-03-25T09:56:00.000-07:002016-10-04T11:03:25.268-07:00How to Astral Project #3 - Mind Awake Body Asleep<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/cFnu2xGRZQA" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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I bet you thought I was done with this mind awake, body asleep stuff right? Well, so did I, until I reread some posts by a guy named Frank Kepple. Frank spent years commenting on a forum called the Astral Pulse. At some time, someone took all of his posts and compiled them into a single PDF which documents his progress and experiences over the years as he is learning to project. As it so happens, one of the techniques he talks about, one which I have never personally had success with, takes advantage of this mind awake, body asleep state.<br />
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William Buhlman also talks about a similar technique in his book Adventures Beyond the Body. William has decades of experience and if he says that this is an effective technique for many folks out there, who am I to argue? I will present this the way I understand it and will update my description later if by chance I am ever able to gain success using this method.<br />
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The idea of both William and Frank's accounts of this technique is that you need to disassociate yourself from your body. You need to transfer your consciousness to another location, and this is done through creative visualization and engaging your five senses. William calls this his Target Technique.<br />
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To employ this technique, in the physical, go to a place you are very familiar with. William uses his mother's living room. Once in this room, take in everything, engaging as many senses as you can. What color are the walls? What is the texture of the ceiling or the floor beneath your feet? Are there any smells that are unique to this location? Are there any sounds that you associate with this location? Once you have a good grasp of this room and can really feel every aspect of it with your senses, locate three objects. William recommends that you select objects that are meaningful to you. Maybe they have sentimental value. William uses the example I believe, of a figurine that he created in school as a child that his mother has kept on a shelf. Walk up to this object and pick it up. Scrutinize it from every angle. Look at it up close. Feel every inch of it. Memorize its texture and weight. Does it have any flaws? Now put down that item, again, take inventory of everything in the room with your senses, then move on to item number two and repeat this process of scrutinizing every minute detail. Now repeat with object number three. Repeat this entire process over and over until you are confident that you can rebuild this entire room and each object in your imagination.<br />
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Go to bed, put your body to sleep, and reach this void state that we have discussed previously. Now begin walking through your selected physical location in your mind. Reproduce each sensation you experienced earlier with your senses. Pick up each object and look closely at them. Weigh them in your hands, feel every inch just as you did in the physical. Repeat this process over and over again, making it as real as you possibly can.<br />
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At some point, you should experience a shift. Your consciousness will transition to the location you have been imagining and you are out of body.<br />
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Frank's approach to this is very similar. Frank does not emphasize the need for a location you are familiar with. In fact, your location can be completely imagined. In Frank's approach, the use of your five senses is paramount, but it doesn't matter specifically where you use them. Frank recommends selecting a task that will engage each sense that is repetitive. The example he provides is sitting at a wooden table and peeling potatoes. Imagine this. You are sitting at a wooden table with a paring knife or potato peeler in front of you. To your left is a bucket of unpeeled potatoes. To your right is a bucket of water where you will place each potato once it is peeled.<br />
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Now, in your mind, once you are in that void state, begin peeling potatoes. Pick up a potato. Notice any dirt. Notice the texture of the skin. Pick up the peeler and listen to the sound as you drag it across the potato. Feel the wet smooth potato in your hand once you have it peeled. Smell that starchy smell. Now drop it in the bucket of water and hear it splash. Pick up another potato and repeat the process.<br />
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Take inventory of what is around you. What does the table look like? Is it old beat up wood? Is it new and glossy? Are the peelings falling directly onto the table or are you peeling over a bowl or plate? Make this scene as real and convincing to your five senses as you possibly can. As with William's target technique, at some point, you will make the shift and you will be the one peeling potatoes; your body left far behind.<br />
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This technique has some benefits for those that can't seem to get used to the jarring sensations associated with normal exit techniques. From what I have read, this results in a much more controlled gradual phase shift. No violent vibrations, noise in your head, and no feeling as though you have just been ejected from your body at full speed, landing who knows where.<br />
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I would imagine that like anything that requires visualization, this one is bound to take some practice. Give it a try, and please let me know how it goes for you.Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-29697291737895161852016-03-22T19:33:00.001-07:002016-05-29T07:54:52.857-07:00How to Astral Project #2 - Mind Awake Body Asleep<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/YVEp862FOus" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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I think we left off in that mind awake, body asleep state, with our consciousness, just floating in that peaceful empty void. Something worth mentioning once you've reached that void state is that keeping your mind awake suddenly becomes substantially easier. Robert Monroe talks about learning to reach the borderland state that you can hold indefinitely. That is this state. Once you have successfully taken your body out of the picture, your mind seems to snap awake with a renewed clarity. It is as if your mind simply had a job to do, put the body to sleep, and now that it's job is complete it is ready to resume in its usual capacities. As Monroe states, you could literally hold this state indefinitely. Without the nagging exhaustion, you felt just moments before, remaining conscious suddenly seem laughably easy.</div>
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In my experience, there are a couple of options once you have reached this state. There is the road of those who prefer to wait for the magic and the road for those who wish to try to give the process a little help. Waiting it out for me is the more reliable of the two methods, but I will cover them both below as they tend to lead to slightly different experiences. </div>
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If you choose to just allow the process to develop on its own, all you need to do is continue to relax and try to sink further and further inward. Try to become less and less aware of the physical world around you and more and more aware of the nothingness you are becoming a part of. At some point, if your experiences are on par with my own, the next phase of this experiment will begin. For me, this takes the form of regular energetic rushes. This feels like a rush of energy that moves up to my head. At first, they are so faint that they are almost imperceptible, but if ignored in just the right way, as if you have no real interest in them, other than a mild curiosity, they will build in intensity. These energetic waves soon take on an audible quality. The sound of these rushes is like a pulsating static, that again, if ignored in just the right way will begin to build in volume and speed. The static will continue to build in volume and speed as the energetic waves build in intensity and frequency. The moment the static become one continuous roar comparable to that of a jet engine in your head, the vibrations hit in full force. </div>
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As I mentioned in my post about the vibrational state, this procedure starts out as an incredibly delicate process. You have to approach it as though you are indifferent to every sensation. Keep your breathing steady, keep your emotions under control, and just surrender completely. If you can do this, you will reach a point where it is as if you have reached the top of a hill and are now on the downward slope of the opposite side. At this point, it is difficult to stop the process even if you want to. The vibrations will become smoother, and build in frequency as the sound in your head turns from a roar into more of an electric hum. This is the point where I personally can now see through my closed eyelids and my mask. This is the moment where all that is required is to sit up or roll out. The movement will feel just as if you are moving your physical body, but you will quickly find, you are no longer residing in the physical world.</div>
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So lets say you want to try to give this process some help. This will require some practice and some creative visualization. Once in the void state, without pushing too hard, you must begin a visualization that generates the feeling of movement. A popular approach is to picture yourself climbing a rope. I personally have more success when I use a visualization where I am being forced to move rather than initiating the movement on my own. I have two favorite methods, both of which generate the same sort of movement. Several months back I found a first person perspective video on YouTube of a roller coaster called the Ring of Fire. Some of you may be familiar with this. It typically resides at small fairs and carnivals. Once you are in the car, it simply does loop after loop. Then it will do the same, but in reverse. I watched this video for about an hour, over and over again, memorizing the scenery at every point in the ride, remembering times I have ridden this myself, trying to remember the sensation in my stomach and the feel of the wind in my face. Since then, I have used this visualization of being on this roller coaster many times. </div>
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The second method I use is to imagine a dot on my ceiling. I make this dot travel across the ceiling in the direction of my feet, down the far wall, across the floor, and then under me. I watch this dot through its entire progression around my room causing my imagined self to do a sort of summer salt. This has the same effect as the roller coaster. For me, the upside down motion is critical. I have never been able to produce results with imagined swaying as if in a hammock or just imagined forward or backward motion as if in a car.</div>
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I want to emphasize that you need to do more than see yourself performing these actions and these movements. Visualized sight is a good start, but in order for this to work, you need to be able to visualize what these movements actually feel like. Feeling the movement is the key.</div>
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So what does all this visualization do for you? This for me accelerates the bringing on of the vibrations. I never reach the energetic waves, I never hear the pulsating static, I go from the void straight to jet engine in my head and massive vibrations just at the flip of a switch. It hits so suddenly that all I have a chance to feel to prepare me for it is one rush that goes from my lower spine up to my head in a fraction of a second. The other biggest difference between this method and the slower more controlled method laid out above is that this technique always results in me being ejected from my body at a high speed. It is like that movement that I have started gains momentum and carries me to some unknown location. These are always locations that look like they could be part of the physical world, but places I don't recognize. As you can imagine, this is a little harder to grow accustomed to than the gradual onset of these sensations, which always leave me in my own room after the exit.</div>
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I would recommend doing your own experiments. Try the gradual onset. Try the roller coaster. Try climbing a rope. Just remember, it is the feeling and not the visual aspect of these imagined scenarios that is important.</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-26920772666669451512016-03-18T14:02:00.000-07:002016-05-29T07:53:47.288-07:00Meditating in the Astral<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/tdSvaIeJjRM" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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During my projections, I always try to have a plan. Time in the astral is valuable and I want to be sure to use it to its full potential. This leads me to my latest experiment; meditation while out of body.<br />
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I left my body as I do, found a spot on the floor near my kitchen table, sat in the lotus position and closed my eyes. It all came with surprising ease. Reaching the void state that can require a great deal of preparation and effort int he physical was almost instantaneous. I turned my attention inward, and almost immediately felt as if I were falling into myself. As that falling sensation intensified, I entered the vibrational state. Feeling the vibrations once out of body is rare for me. As the vibrations intensified, I could feel my pounding heart and I began to feel the buzzing, phasing sensation building in my head. </div>
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In the early days, I used to lose focus and react to the sensations that occur while trying to leave the physical body. Just as I lost control in those days, I lost focus and control here and I was pulled back. I was not, however, pulled back to the physical. I was pulled back to the astral. I opened my eyes and there I was, still in the lotus position on the floor, next to the table.</div>
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I had a sudden epiphany. I was so excited by the prospect of what I had almost accomplished. I was sure I had almost left my body; my astral body. I closed my eyes once again and turned my attention inward, but my excitement and emotion, just as they have been detrimental in the physical, halted my progress now.</div>
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Shortly after, I was pulled back to the physical by my alarm.</div>
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I spent the day contemplating what I experienced. I have read many accounts that talk about the different levels of the astral and its various planes or realms. I have never experienced the astral planes in that context. Every one of my projections has resulted in a visit to a world that looks very much like the physical; what Robert Bruce calls "the real time zone". Could it be that projecting a second time when already in the phase could lead to a second exit and result in a visit to one of these astral planes or astral realms that I have read about?</div>
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I don't know, but I intend to find out. </div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-14072268866233474552016-03-18T12:38:00.000-07:002017-03-03T09:48:34.523-08:00How to Astral Project #1 - Mind Awake Body Asleep<div dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt; text-align: right;">
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: black; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;"><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eqx645Gt5-k" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; color: black; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;"><br /></span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">This will be the first in a series of posts that will cover all the "How to's" of phasing. There are literally hundreds of techniques out there that have been talked about over the years to reach the out of body state. What I have found is that all of these can be grouped into one of three categories. This post will focus on the first of those three categories. "Direct Techniques". The term Direct Technique was coined by Russian Author Michael Raduga and while this is one of the more difficult approaches to experiencing the phase, it is also probably the most widely known and most commonly talked about. What sets Direct Techniques apart from all others is that there is no lapse in consciousness as you shift from the physical to the astral. You are awake, you achieve the required level of relaxation, you put yourself in the proper state of mind, and you make the transition. There are those who have been able to achieve this through meditation. Personally, I have only experienced this through what Robert Monroe calls the "Mind Awake, Body Asleep" state.</span></div>
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<b id="docs-internal-guid-bfeb1282-8b2a-c9be-014a-66be67d4df6b" style="font-weight: normal;"><br /></b></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">What is it that makes this approach one of the most difficult to become proficient in? Because evolution has wired our minds and bodies over thousands, maybe millions of years to let our minds drift to sleep before our bodies. I personally had to break a 30+ year habit in order to reverse that cycle. Perhaps you are starting to grasp the difficulties that this presents. I spent literally months trying experiment after experiment, trying to develop new neural pathways that would allow me to reach this state. In the end, I am unsure which of my experiments worked. Most likely, it was the combination of more than one that did the trick. That being the case, I will share with you everything I tried and you can take the pieces that resonate with you.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">I will start with those things that I am most sure about; things that I still do to this day, and save the more experimental measures for last.</span></div>
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<div dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;">
<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">The first, and probably most important thing is to get rid of all distractions. Put your phone on silent. Lock the pets out of the bedroom. If necessary, wear an eye mask and earplugs. The more you can deprive your physical senses the easier it will be to turn all of your attention inward and focus on this monumental task. I found personally that it can be incredibly frustrating as you are learning this process if you share a bed with a partner who tosses and turns at night. After months of frustration, I found a solution, albeit somewhat extreme, that I would highly recommend if space and money allow. We got rid of our bed and bought two twin beds. They are positioned about half an inch apart, but with their own box springs and own supports. No longer having my achieved state broken by every little movement has turned out to be one of the biggest contributing factors to my success.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">Second, lie down in a position that is not natural to sleep. I typically sleep on my side, so when putting my body to sleep, I always lie on my back. This will help you slow the transition into sleep and retain more control over it.</span></div>
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<div dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;">
<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">Third, remain absolutely still. Take time up front to find a position you can hold for an indefinite period of time because any movement, once the process is underway, will start you back at square 1. Movement in my experience includes everything from the more obvious, like scratching an itch and rolling over to the less obvious like swallowing and looking around under my closed eyelids. The urge to swallow was a hard thing to overcome. What I found was most effective for me was to prop my head up almost to the point where I am looking down at my toes. This keeps the spit from pooling in the back of my mouth and prevents the swallowing reflex. As far as what to do with your eyes, this is a tricky business. Close your eyes for a moment, select a spot to look at, and try to keep them still. Now hold that for one minute. Now hold that for five minutes. You will find that it is an incredibly difficult thing to do. They are always twitching this way and that, almost as if they have a mind of their own. For this, I have found that letting them gently roll back and towards the center of my forehead tends to be effective. This position is natural to sleep and gives me a target to look at so I can reduce the unintentional movements.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">Fourth, those #@$%&* itches! There will come a point where your body starts to wonder if you are still awake and its methods of verifying your level of consciousness can be incredibly difficult to ignore, not to mention annoying. Just when I am starting to feel good about my progress, it happens.The feeling of a spider web strung across my face, particularly around my nose. Tiny pinpricks of tickling, itching insanity that I have lost my progress to more than once. The good news is that these are not ordinary itches that will remain until scratched. If you ignore them for 10 or 15 seconds, placing your attention firmly elsewhere, your body will be satisfied that your mind is asleep and they will simply fade away. An interesting note about these itches. On those occasions when I have lost the battle to those itches, the instant I reach up to scratch them, they are gone. They disappear before my hand can even reach my face. My body has won and I have fallen for its trick. All I can advise here is learn to ignore them and they will go away.</span></div>
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<div dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;">
<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">Fifth, relaxation is crucial. You may ask, "why is relaxation fifth on your list?". It is fifth because, at the beginning, relaxation is not too difficult. We all fall asleep every night, and you have to be relaxed to do so. Relaxation only becomes a challenge when you begin to make progress. Up front, the things you will want to consider revolve around general comfort. Is it too warm? Too cold? Too warm and you will fall asleep too quickly, too cold and you will never reach the required state of relaxation. For me, this usually means a light blanket or just a sheet, along with comfortable loose fitting clothes. All other relaxation concerns will not come into play until the sleep process begins. The sensations when your body is falling asleep are anything but mundane. I found that my initial involuntary reaction to many of these sensations was to tense muscles, or clench my jaw, or hold my breath; all of which will wreck any progress. The solution to this is practice. As you start to feel that lead blanket feeling creeping up your legs, begin taking inventory of your body and various muscle groups over and over. Start at your feet and evaluate each muscle, moving your attention slowly up your body. Ask yourself as you get to each muscle, is it relaxed? Is there any tension? Can I let that body part sink any further into the bed? Once the answer is "no", continue to the next body part. Repeat this process as you progress.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">My first experiment came at the suggestion of Robert Bruce. Robert recommends propping your elbow up on the bed, fingers facing the ceiling, and letting yourself fall asleep over and over again. As you drift off, your arm will start to fall, waking you. You then return your arm to the initial position and repeat this process over and over again. I was not successful with this technique. I found that with my arm in this position, it is simply impossible to relax enough to ever make it anywhere near sleep. That problem intensified after holding this position for 45 minutes to an hour. The muscles in my arm started to ache and burn and I was not able to dip into sleep even once. The idea was a good one, but in my opinion, it was not effective in its current state. I needed to improve upon it.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">My first attempt at improving upon this idea was to create an Android app (did I mention I am a geek?) that would very simply, cause the phone to vibrate any time you let go of the volume down button. At first, this seemed like it was going to work. I laid there in bed, phone in hand, thumb on the volume button, and as I started to drift off, my thumb lifted, the phone began to vibrate, and it pulled me back into consciousness. In the end, however, I am sad to say that this method suffered from the same problem as Robert's technique. Fatigue. My thumb started to get tired and eventually I couldn't hold consistent pressure and the phone was just vibrating non-stop. I needed something else. Something that didn't rely on muscle tension that could potentially lead to exhaustion.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: "arial"; font-size: 14.666666666666666px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: 400; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap;">I came across an interesting article about Thomas Edison. As it turns out, Edison found that he could access inspiration and untapped creativity in the hypnagogic state. He would sit in a straight-backed chair, steel ball bearings in each hand, metal pans on the floor beneath the bearings, and he would let himself fall asleep. As he drifted off the ball bearings would drop into the pans and wake him up. He would repeat this process, allowing him access to this borderland state. This gave me an idea. I went into my garage and found a small steel weight that I could tie a string through. I tied that small weight to my finger and held it in the palm of my hand. That night, I laid in bed, letting my hand hang just off of the bed, and let myself fall asleep. It worked. As I was falling asleep, my muscles relaxed, the weight fell, and the string pulled at my ring finger, waking me back up. Even better, with the string being fairly short, I could pull the weight back up while remaining in that semi-relaxed state and repeat the process. I did this night after night, over and over again.</span></div>
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Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com20tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-39883019089674836972016-03-11T16:34:00.002-08:002016-05-29T07:52:43.896-07:00Viewer Questions #1 - Is Projection Scary or Dangerous?<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/9waRdBCPQns" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
<b><br /></b> <b>Question:</b> Is astral projection dangerous.<br />
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<b>Answer: </b>The short answer is "No". If that is enough for you, please enjoy the rest of your day. If you would like more explanation, please feel free to continue reading.<b> </b><br />
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This is a question I have never personally asked, and I have always wondered why others do so. It has always seemed strange to me that something non-physical could even be considered even remotely unsafe. There is absolutely no physical harm that can possibly befall you when you are projecting. You are as safe when you project as when you are just lying in bed asleep.<br />
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So, you might say, "no physical danger. Got it. What about non-physical danger? What if I can't come back? What about the severing of this silver cord I hear about? What about demons possessing my body while my soul is out gallivanting through the known universe?". Here are some general thoughts on that. Once you experience astral projection you will quickly realize that the challenge is not in coming back, but in staying out. The worry that you might get stuck out of body will quickly vanish. The "silver cord" connecting the astral to the physical has been reported by many practitioners, but I have never personally seen it. It does seem to be the general consensus, however, by those who have seen it, that it will only be severed at the time of death and you could not break it if you tried while you are in the out of body state. That brings us to demons. I am sure my answer will not be popular or satisfactory to some, but here goes.<br />
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There is no such thing as demons.<br />
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I am not a religious man, so if the previous statement caused you a twinge of annoyance and you internally threatened to stop reading my blog, forgive me. If it helps ease your mind a bit, Robert Monroe projected for 30 some odd years and was never possessed. He was also not a religious man. The common thread that I have seen is that religious people tend to be more susceptible to seeing these things because, one, they believe in them, and two, the astral is a very thought-responsive place where your thoughts can quickly become manifestations. I would recommend approaching this endeavor with an open mind and a positive attitude. Optimism goes a long way in the astral.<br />
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<b>Question: </b>What are some of your scariest experiences in the phase?<br />
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<b>Answer:</b> There is no doubt, even knowing that there is no danger, the astral can scare the bejesus out of you. I will share my three most alarming, scary, and otherwise bizarre experiences that left my heart pounding.<br />
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1. I am lying in bed on my side, putting my body to sleep like I usually do at night before I let my mind drift off. My body falls asleep as usual. The familiar lead blanket works its way up my body. Nothing strange here. Just the usual sensations. My sight and hearing click off as usual shortly after the wave of sleep has reached my head. It precisely the moment when my ears shut off to the physical world that I start to hear footsteps crossing my carpet. The side of my bed sinks down and I feel something or someone climbs into bed behind me. This being wraps its arms around me and I feel the front of its knees pressing into the backs of my own. This thing is spooning me. I am trying to keep cool, trying to keep my breathing steady, trying to just ride the experience out to see where it goes when all of a sudden, this creature takes its left arm off of me and reaches down from behind and starts pushing its hand between my legs towards my genitals. That was enough. I jerked out of my trance state, got out of bed, and didn't sleep much the rest of the night. This thing did not feel inherently dangerous. In fact, it felt more like it just wanted to be close to me, but it crossed a line and it was not a line I was prepared for it to cross. This thing has never returned for a second encounter. Perhaps it doesn't handle rejection well.<br />
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2. I am in a bed and breakfast in Ireland and I have just put my body to sleep. The vibrations begin surprisingly quickly, probably due to the level of physical exhaustion I am feeling after a couple of 20-mile hikes. The vibrations build in frequency until they are the familiar smooth hum that means it is time for me to get out. I sit up in bed, looking at the beautiful light shining through the window and radiating off of everything in the room. Motion to my right catches my eye and I look to the rocking chair that sits by the wall. There is an old woman with cataracts yellow, blind-looking eyes rocking. She notices that I am awake and with surprising speed, she moves toward me and stops with her face just an inch from my own. With a jolt of panic, I lay back down into my body and end the experience. Again, this did not feel like a dangerous situation, but another invasion of my personal space in an abrupt and unexpected manner. Maybe she was near-sighted and she just wanted to get a better look at me. I wish I would have had the courage to remain there. I am sure we could have had an interesting conversation.<br />
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3. I get out of body through the usual method and I start to walk around my house. I look into the bathroom as I walk passed and there is something moving on the floor. As I take a closer look, it is a creature that looks like it is composed entirely of black static, almost like television static, but black. This creature was about two or two and a half feet tall and had no face. Its head was shaped a little like a lopsided boomerang, and it's arms and legs came to points rather than hands or feet. I stood there, staring at it, more curious than scared. This was not a large creature and it was odd, but didn't really frighten me. I walked over to it and quickly snatched it up by the neck. Holding it at arms length, the hand I held it in started vibrating violently. This shortly resulted in a return to my body. What caused these vibrations? Was this creature vibrating at a lower frequency than I was and that difference in frequency caused this sensation like two gears out of sync with their teeth grinding together? I would be interested if any of you have seen this little guy. Here is a poor artist's rendition of my little friend.<br />
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Have you seen me?</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-67452736887860612432016-03-09T11:27:00.005-08:002016-05-29T07:50:47.698-07:00The Vibrational State<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/H3aWm5bzufI" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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I thought this would be a good time to introduce one of the most common and yet one of the most inexplicable and exciting parts of the Phasing process. This is known as the <u>vibrational</u> state. This is a state that is commonly reported to occur just before the projection experience begins. I have been asked; "how do I know when I have reached the vibrational state?". My answer to that is if you are not sure whether or not you have reached it, then you have not reached it.</div>
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Let me describe this state a little bit for you. The first time I ever experienced this was when I was 13 years old. I woke in the morning, completely immobile, locked in sleep paralysis, with the literal, very much physical feeling that someone was jabbing me in the lower back with an electric cattle prod. This electrical current radiated from that point in my lower back throughout my upper body. I was terrified and struggling against this unseen force as hard as I could. As I finally broke free from this state of paralysis, the vibrations faded and I was genuinely scared to roll over and find out what was behind me that had just put me through this ordeal. When I did roll over, my room was empty. I was alone. Completely stunned by what I had just gone through. This experience was to remain unexplained for another 20 years.</div>
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January of 2014, two decades after that first encounter with what would soon become my obsession, I finally discovered what had happened to me all those years ago. As I made my first attempt to astral project I was hit once again in the lower back by what could have been a live power line. This was such an intense experience that as much as my curiosity urged me onward, anxious to see what would come next, there was a part of me that wondered just how long I could hang on in this current state. Just as I started to seriously consider breaking this state I had somehow achieved, a clearly audible male voice made it clear that it was now or never. This was the moment when I first left my body. The instant I was free, there were no more vibrations; no more sound. Just profound silence accompanied by the excitement of endless possibility.</div>
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To my knowledge, there is no scientific explanation for what causes these vibrations. Esoterically minded individuals might say that this is something like a Kundalini awakening; energy rising through the chakras (primary energy centers of the body). Robert Bruce's description of raising Kundalini actually matches my own experience with these vibrations almost perfectly; the energy building at the base of the spine and then erupting toward the crown of the head, resulting in a form of enlightenment.</div>
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At this point, I have no problem admitting that I don't know exactly what these vibrations are. Maybe they are the result of chemicals mixing together in the brain combined with a free-floating state of mind. Maybe they are the result of an unseen serpent coiling its way through my central channel. For now, all I know is what these vibrations are capable of and I have a moderately good idea of how to induce them, (assuming they are something that can be "induced"). There is a theory, again, more accepted by those who are esoterically minded, that these vibrations are always there. We are simply unaware of their existence during our day to day life. Imagine physical reality as a radio station. Now imagine that the next station over is the Astral. The vibrations would be the static between the two stations. All three states exist at any one point in time, but you only perceive the station your radio (consciousness) is tuned to. If we could, learn how to raise our energetic frequency, and change that station at will, holding onto that frequency somehow in the waking state, the vibrations or phase state could be experienced at any time. Imagine for a moment, if this were true, the possibilities would be truly endless. In my current state, this seems like an impossibly lofty goal, but if one day I uncover the truth behind any of this, you will be the first to know.</div>
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Since my first phase experience two years ago, I have encountered the vibrations dozens of times. Sometimes they are harsh and violent like I am holding onto the handle of a rattling chainsaw and other times they are like the pulsing vibration of a cell phone. Just as distinct, but higher in frequency and more comfortable to endure. Learning to not only accept these vibrations but anticipate and even enjoy them was quite a stumbling block for me. When I finally reached the point where I was no longer scared, my fear was replaced by excitement; an emotion equally detrimental to projecting. The trick is to learn to quietly, optimistically wait for them with sort of a detached desire. Say to yourself "I don't care if the vibrations find me tonight", while internally holding onto your intention to achieve the desired state. When the vibrations do arrive, notice them as if you were noticing something out of your peripheral vision. Say to yourself, "oh, that's nice", and then simply relax into them.</div>
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Robert Monroe, in his book Journey's out of the body, instructs the practitioner to control the vibrations; to consciously direct them to various parts of the body, then to oscillate them from head to toe. Developing this skill is high on my to-do list, but as of yet, I can't say I have the required level of control. After two years, all I can say is that I am finally to the point where I can remain calm while I passively enjoy the sensations. I simply let them do their work as I anticipate my next adventure.</div>
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I still have such a long way to go.</div>
Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-40171554119728807462016-03-02T09:42:00.002-08:002016-05-29T07:50:04.766-07:00Creating Your Ramp Timer<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/oFY8Zlt2GFA" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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For those that have read my previous posts and who are interested in braving the potential of insomnia, I thought I would share how I set up my ramp timer. This tutorial will be very Android-centric, but I imagine that you could do something similar with an iPhone or any other MP3 player that allows the creation of playlists.<br />
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Step 1: Download the ramp timer files from the Lucidology site. These will come in a variety of different MP3's all wrapped up in a zip file. While at first you may think, "What is this nonsense? You mean I have to create my own ramp timer using these files?", in the long run, I really love the way Nicholas has provided the files so that they can be customized easily to accommodate different periods of silence, different numbers of beeps, and so on. Nicholas provides us with 12 audio files and a readme.txt. As I mentioned above, this provides us with a great deal of flexibility when creating our timer setup. The audio files are grouped into three different categories. First, you have silence in one minute, two minute, four minute, and one-hour intervals. Second you have beeps. These are exactly what they appear to be. Audio files that beep one, three, or nine times. Finally, you have some pre-made ramp intervals for what Nicholas calls "Rhythm Napping". These work well if preceded by a block of silence so you have a chance to fall asleep before they start going off.<br />
<a href="https://www.blogger.com/goog_1232511688"><br /></a> <a href="http://www.lucidology.com/blog/91/lucid-dream-timer-method/">http://www.lucidology.com/blog/91/lucid-dream-timer-method/</a><br />
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Step 2: Decide what sort of setup you think will be most useful to you. Based on my own experience, backed up by the all-knowing internet, it is best to try this sort of thing in the wee hours of the morning. I personally have had most my successes between 2 and 4 AM. Personally, I have four different setups that I use depending on how long I expect to be able to sleep, and how often I feel like being woken up. I would say a good place to start would be, create a configuration that allows for 4 to 6 hours of silence, and then follow that with one of the pre-made Rhythm Napping timers. You can always tweak things as you go.<br />
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Step 3: Upload your files to the cloud of your choice. I am an Android user so for this example, I will be uploading my files to Google Play. If you don't have an iPhone or Android, any MP3 player that allows the creation of playlists should suffice.<br />
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Step 4: Build your playlist. Take the silence MP3s and repeat them a few times until you have the desired amount of silence preceding your beeps. Then add the desired beep files. The names of the Rhythm Napping files describe the intervals and length of the track. 2-minute-base-73-mins, for example, would be a 73-minute long audio track that uses two minutes as its base interval.<br />
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A note about Rhythm Napping. These files are randomized somewhat. A two-minute interval might beep at two minutes, then four minutes later, then 16 minutes later, then back to two minutes. The theory behind this is that your brain doesn't like to be jolted awake. Think about those days when you wake up with an alarm. I personally almost never sleep until the alarm goes off. My inner clock wakes me up 10 to 15 minutes before the alarm will go off because it doesn't appreciate being yanked out of sleep so abruptly. The same applies to Rhythm Napping. As your brain starts to anticipate these beeps, your mind will preemptively wake up and if you can remain still, your body might just stay asleep. This puts you in a prime position to experience the phase without hours of relaxation beforehand.<br />
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Here is an example of one of my playlists. This starts with six hours of silence and then moves into the 73 minute, three-minute base interval configuration.<br />
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Step 5: Don't give up. This can take some trial and error. I would recommend saving this endeavor for a night where you can sleep in the following morning since it is likely to seriously screw with the restfulness of your sleep.</div>
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Good luck dreamers! I would love to hear about any experiences you have.</div>
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<br />Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4516699391211631573.post-32518052363120306362016-03-01T08:01:00.002-08:002016-05-29T07:48:49.212-07:00Introduction to the Phase - Part 2<div style="text-align: right;">
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7PfcZD-APc" target="_blank">Phase Evolution on YouTube</a></div>
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After my last post, I decided it was a bit rude to give you a glimpse into the end state I was able to accidentally achieve while withholding all the details of how I actually got there. Fortunately, my friends, I care a great deal for manners so I will spend this post entirely on the "wheres", "whats", and "hows" of my first Phase experience.<br />
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I first came across the term Astral Projection while searching YouTube for videos on Lucid Dreaming. (also a great topic, but we will get to that another time). In January of 2014, if you were to type "Astral Projection" into the search box on YouTube, the top videos slots were home to a series produced by a man named Nicholas Newport. He calls his series "Lucidology". Watching his videos, he described a method that he deemed "the underachiever method". This method of achieving mystical experiences was meant for those who are not interested in putting forth a great deal of effort. Bingo! That was the technique for me! In a single night, I could quickly employ this technique, debunk Astral Projection and go back to my studies on Lucid Dreaming.<br />
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This method requires the use of what Nicholas calls a "ramp timer". A ramp timer is nothing more than a series of beeps that are set to play in your ear while you sleep at predefined intervals. The instructions were to sleep for 4 to 6 hours, at which point, the ramp timer should be set to beep, wake you up, and your only job is to go back to sleep. Easy enough right? I have always prided myself on my ability to sleep . Being the party animal that I am, I typically hit the sack about 9:00 PM. I set the ramp timer to go off at about 3:00 AM, laid down on my back, put my earbuds in, and quickly did what I do best, drifted off to sleep.<br />
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At 3:00 AM, as planned, the first interval of beeps went off in my ears. I woke up slightly annoyed, a little confused, very groggy, and then remembered my experiment. Sticking to the plan was a piece of cake at 3:00 AM. I simply laid back and went back to sleep. Here is where things began to get unexpectedly bizarre. I almost immediately entered a lucid dream. I was enjoying the wind in my face as I soared over the rooftops of my neighborhood when the next round of beeps went off in my ear. I sat up in bed, excited about what had just occurred. Sure, I didn't get out of body, but I did have a lucid dream, which you may recall, was my real goal to begin with anyhow. I walked to my dresser, picked up my dream journal and began to write. I looked up and noticed something out of place. My mattress was hanging half way off of my bed and onto the floor. "That's odd", I thought. How on earth did that happen? Noticing other irregularities in my room, it didn't take me long to realize I was not really awake. I had read about these, but never experienced one. This was a false awakening. No sooner did I get my bearings, then the next interval of beeps sounded in my ear.<br />
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I woke up, sat up in bed, thinking about my lucid dream followed by my false awakening. This had truly been an eventful night. I was on my way to write down my experiences in my dream journal when it occurred to me that I wasn't sure how long I had been listening to the ramp timer. It felt like morning, so I skipped the dream journal, saying to myself that I would write in it later and headed to the bathroom to shower and get ready for work. I walked into the bathroom, but when I walked through the door, I wasn't in the bathroom. I was outside standing on a grassy hill. Here we go again. This was another false awakening. Just as I realized I was still sleeping, the ramp timer began its next interval of beeps in my ears. I had six false awakenings in all. Over and over again I thought I was awake, started my day, only to wake up again. Near the end, I started immediately questioning my state of consciousness each time I awoke. It was the final beep that woke me finally back to reality and to an overwhelmingly intense flood of auditory hallucinations and uncontrollable electrical vibrations that were coursing through my body.<br />
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Oddly enough, I have only had a small handful of ramp timer induced successes. The saying "beginner's luck" definitely applies here. The challenges I have found with the ramp timer method are threefold. First, once I had experienced its potential, I had an incredibly hard time going back to sleep when it first sounded in my ear. My adrenaline would start pumping and I would be filled with excitement at the prospect of another astral adventure. This emotion never failed to ruin the state. Second, the morning after a night of experimentation, successful or otherwise is never an easy morning. You have just endured a night of disrupted sleep and will spend the following day catching yourself dozing off at the keyboard in your cubicle, and quite possibly, a bit cranky if your attempts lead to nothing fruitful. Finally, most the time it just doesn't work. Maybe the time of night is wrong, maybe I am not relaxed enough, maybe the volume is too loud or too soft, or maybe there is just a certain amount of luck when it comes to employing this method.<br />
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Despite the difficulties that this method presents, it did provide me with my first experience, and in that, it changed my life and I will never be the same.Phase Evolutionhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17022274233066396482noreply@blogger.com1