I've had a few deliberate 'almost' OBEs, and a few lucid dreams before as well.
Usually when I have been very sleepy and tired, but awake enough to be aware of myself.

I say almost because I've never dared to fully 'separate,' as I was always too frightened
(majorly because of the things I've read, like the possibility of meeting dark entities during the travel).
I joined an online group of projectors before, to try to learn more about it, but then left it quickly
upon realizing that most of the people there are only in it for the mere phenomenon of it,
whereas I want it more for spiritual reasons, like to possibly aid in my meditations, and gain insights.
So it was kinda frustrating. (I'll have to check these videos out.)

The vibrations came on so quick I felt as if every part of my being was being sucked through a keyhole and it was extremely dramatic.

Yes, it feels exactly like this. I also describe the 'vibrations' phase, as feeling like, being pure, blue electricity.
(Idk why blue exactly, as I haven't seen, it just felt like that.)


It's been a while now since I've experienced this though...
 
I've had a few deliberate 'almost' OBEs, and a few lucid dreams before as well.
Usually when I have been very sleepy and tired, but awake enough to be aware of myself.

I say almost because I've never dared to fully 'separate,' as I was always too frightened
(majorly because of the things I've read, like the possibility of meeting dark entities during the travel).
I joined an online group of projectors before, to try to learn more about it, but then left it quickly
upon realizing that most of the people there are only in it for the mere phenomenon of it,
whereas I want it more for spiritual reasons, like to possibly aid in my meditations, and gain insights.
So it was kinda frustrating. (I'll have to check these videos out.)



Yes, it feels exactly like this. I also describe the 'vibrations' phase, as feeling like, being pure, blue electricity.
(Idk why blue exactly, as I haven't seen, it just felt like that.)


It's been a while now since I've experienced this though...

When I think of electricity I think of “exploding head syndrome” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploding_head_syndrome, which is also something that I get from time to time…I think it could be possible that the two are connected as they could very well be triggered by reaching that cusp of lucid dreaming.
Most of mine have been quite accidental…I believe as a child that I went out of body a whole lot, but it was very frightening for me at the time.
I have lucid dreams mostly, but who is to say where those are taking place? In my mind or on some other plane of reality?
Whenever I meet someone I know in a dream I try to give them key-words to remember but very often I can tell that they are not “awake” in the dream…it’s like talking to someone who is really stoned or kind of drunk…they are interested in whatever scenario is playing out for them not in what you are saying.
I have met other people who were awake in the dream too…a shared dream experience…but I cannot verify (even though I was given a name once and I tried to find them) that they were a real person or just a dream character.
As far as meeting unpleasant things while having an OOBE…it is my belief that none of them can harm you unless you allow them to…and some of the most frightening things visually may not necessarily represent the essence of that character.
I believe I have had instruction from a very intimidating “guide” I guess you would say…I felt that this being could crush me easily at will, but I also felt safe…we had a telepathic connection in the dream and I could feel only goodness from him, but also the immense power.
He reached out with his mind to a chair in the room, and I could see his mind reaching out…and I was instructed to do so too…and I could feel my mind reaching out and touching the chair, but also touching his mind…and together we slid this chair across the floor.
The rest became a blur, but I feel that it was further instruction on psychic defense, that I ended up using later on (I’ll find you the post if you like, or maybe you read that part?)
From what I have read about astrally traveling, you really need not worry about something evil coming after you, you have more power than they do and they are not fully in that reality or ours from what I understand either.
 
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[MENTION=5667]Jacobi[/MENTION]​
 
Paul Liknaitzky - VIOLATING EXPECTATIONS IN DEPRESSION & THE ANTIDEPRESSANT MECHANISMS OF ALTERED STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS

[video=vimeo;136855679]https://vimeo.com/136855679[/video]

Filmed at the Psychological Theory symposium at Breaking Convention 2015.

[MENTION=834]Dragon[/MENTION]
Thought this may interest you specifically.
 



“And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom"

~ Anais Nin
 
When I think of electricity I think of “exploding head syndrome” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploding_head_syndrome, which is also something that I get from time to time…I think it could be possible that the two are connected as they could very well be triggered by reaching that cusp of lucid dreaming.
Most of mine have been quite accidental…I believe as a child that I went out of body a whole lot, but it was very frightening for me at the time.
I have lucid dreams mostly, but who is to say where those are taking place? In my mind or on some other plane of reality?
Whenever I meet someone I know in a dream I try to give them key-words to remember but very often I can tell that they are not “awake” in the dream…it’s like talking to someone who is really stoned or kind of drunk…they are interested in whatever scenario is playing out for them not in what you are saying.
I have met other people who were awake in the dream too…a shared dream experience…but I cannot verify (even though I was given a name once and I tried to find them) that they were a real person or just a dream character.
As far as meeting unpleasant things while having an OOBE…it is my belief that none of them can harm you unless you allow them to…and some of the most frightening things visually may not necessarily represent the essence of that character.
I believe I have had instruction from a very intimidating “guide” I guess you would say…I felt that this being could crush me easily at will, but I also felt safe…we had a telepathic connection in the dream and I could feel only goodness from him, but also the immense power.
He reached out with his mind to a chair in the room, and I could see his mind reaching out…and I was instructed to do so too…and I could feel my mind reaching out and touching the chair, but also touching his mind…and together we slid this chair across the floor.
The rest became a blur, but I feel that it was further instruction on psychic defense, that I ended up using later on (I’ll find you the post if you like, or maybe you read that part?)
From what I have read about astrally traveling, you really need not worry about something evil coming after you, you have more power than they do and they are not fully in that reality or ours from what I understand either.

Oh, this is my first time hearing about Exploding Head Syndrome. But reading its description, I do think that's what I've experienced.
I thought the loud noise was the sound of the vibration... Yes, they must be connected, cause there was this time when instead of
going for an OOBE, I instead opted to try wake-induced lucid dream, and it was quite successful after going through that EHS phase.

Shared dream experiences sound interesting. I wonder if that could be done in an agreement?
There's this one person from the group I mentioned, who claimed that she visited someone's house
(which she never visited before in real life), and upon waking, described features from inside the house
to the owner to verify it. She said the owner verified everything she described to be exact.
So the verification process was kind of like in the experiment you posted a few days ago...

Sure, I'd love to read about that post of you meeting with a guide. I don't think I've come across it yet.

Thank you for clearing it out, about these dark entities. I'll definitely keep those in mind,
if I do try it again. Right now, I'm just hoping I'd at least get regular sleep patterns again. :)
 
Oh, this is my first time hearing about Exploding Head Syndrome. But reading its description, I do think that's what I've experienced.
I thought the loud noise was the sound of the vibration... Yes, they must be connected, cause there was this time when instead of
going for an OOBE, I instead opted to try wake-induced lucid dream, and it was quite successful after going through that EHS phase.

Shared dream experiences sound interesting. I wonder if that could be done in an agreement?
There's this one person from the group I mentioned, who claimed that she visited someone's house
(which she never visited before in real life), and upon waking, described features from inside the house
to the owner to verify it. She said the owner verified everything she described to be exact.
So the verification process was kind of like in the experiment you posted a few days ago...

Sure, I'd love to read about that post of you meeting with a guide. I don't think I've come across it yet.

Thank you for clearing it out, about these dark entities. I'll definitely keep those in mind,
if I do try it again. Right now, I'm just hoping I'd at least get regular sleep patterns again. :)

Pretty crazy experiences!
Check out the article I’ll post directly following this one I think you may find it interesting.
When I get it…it’s like a powerful electric shock zaps my brain and I hear a loud buzzing/wind rushing noise and I am immediately awake.
I think it does have something to do with people that may be more susceptible or have had OOBEs in the past…whatever part of our brain that allows us to do that or to not do that (that perhaps isn’t working) may blur that line between shutting off the body and dreaming or going OOB.
I will try to find that post and link you to it as well….it may be in Kgal’s thread.
 
Mutual Dreaming:
Is Group Dreaming Possible?


LightSplitters.jpg


Mutual dreaming (also known as shared or group dreaming) is the paranormal claim that two or more people can share the same dream environment.
The concept was popularized in Inception, where lucid dreamers could link up via technology and roam around the unconscious of a single dreamer.

In reality, no such device exists.
But how might we go about proving the hypothetical existence of mutual dreams?

The best mechanism we have for initiating mutual dreams is through the act of lucid dreaming.
Though they can sometimes incubate specific dream themes, it is hard for non-lucid dreamers to plan their dreams in advance - and impossible, without becoming lucid, to alter the course of the dream in progress.

But lucid dreamers can make these influences and perform all kinds of in-dream experimentation.
That's why we are poised to prove the possible existence of mutual dreaming if the phenomenon exists.

I am a skeptic (one who seeks to know more by asking questions).
And as yet there is no scientific evidence for mutual dreams - although, arguably, it is a difficult concept to prove.

What we need is some solid, large-scale experimentation to fuel the debate.

Types of Group Dreaming

The most commonly reported mutual dreams are known as meshing dreams.
They happen when you share certain dream elements with someone else.

For instance, you and your partner may both watch Lost
ir
one night and then dream about being stranded on an island.
Understandably, your shared waking experience leads to similar dreams.

Even Freudian dream analysis offers an explanation for this kind of coincidence.

"If a man could pass through Paradise in a dream, and have a flower presented to him as a pledge that his soul had really been there, and if he found that flower in his hand when he awake - Aye, what then?"

~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge

The less likely experiences are called meeting dreams and this is really what we're trying to prove or disprove through lucid dream experiments.
A meeting dream is the true meaning of mutual dreaming, where two or more people meet up and communicate inside the dream world.

How would mutual dreaming work?
The definition implies one of at least two paranormal explanations: that we have the capacity for telepathy in dreams - or the dream world itself is an external construct, an alternate reality that could stem from an artificial simulation or other shared astral realm.

Mutual Dreaming Experiments

Dr Stephan LaBerge of The Lucidity Institute believes that mutual dreaming experiments in the lab can test the objective reality of shared dream worlds.
That means that group dreaming can be used to prove whether the dream world is a genuine alternate reality or not.

Numerous group dreaming experiments and anecdotes have been published over the years.
To learn about some of the more compelling cases in detail, check out Group Dreaming: Dreams to the Tenth Power by Jean Campbell. In this book, Campbell traces the history of group dreaming experiments and how harnessing the power of mutual dreams would change our world today.

You can now take part in Dr Rory Mac Sweeneys ongoing Mutual Dream Experiment, in which dreamers are asked to select a "dream password" and attempt to exchange it with another dreamer on a specific night.

Passwords are then matched online and dream content exchanged to further validate the match.

How to Mutual Dream

Let's look at some mutual dream methods which you can attempt in a non-lucid or lucid dream state.
Experiment #1 - Meshing Dreams

Find a meshing dream partner - ideally someone you are very close with.
Choose an activity to do together during the waking day.

Maybe go to a sports event, go hiking in the countryside, go to the zoo, or watch a movie (fantasy is probably the best genre for this purpose).
Before you go to sleep that night, discuss your memorable experience with your meshing dream partner.

Talk about elements that you found most interesting and set a clear intention to dream about your shared experience.
Hopefully, you will dream about your waking experience, or a closely related theme.

If you become lucid, all the better.
Seek out your meshing partner in the dream and have a lucid conversation with them.

When you wake up, write down all the details of the dream, including the time you think it happened.
Finally, compare notes with your partner and see how many dream symbols you can match.

Don't influence each other's dream reports or change your recollection to fit their story.
If you both report a dream conversation, pay particular attention to the details.

This would be a nice example of a pre-arranged meshing dream.
Just remember there is nothing paranormal about this experiment, it is essentially a form of shared dream incubation.

Experiment #2 - Meeting Dreams

Find a meeting dream partner.
If you have friends who lucid dream, invite them to try this experiment with you.

Or you can seek out out others at our lucid dreaming forum.
The goal is to have a lucid dream at the same time, on the same date, and both remember to enact the meet-up.

Select a location to meet up in.
If you both live locally, you might choose a familiar place, like a park or town center.

Otherwise choose a famous meeting spot, like Stone Henge or the Eiffel Tower.
Make sure you know your destination in detail so you both have the same location to meet in mind.

If you do both visit the same location in your lucid dream, it could simply be a meshing dream - a coincidence - so you need to go one step further by having an unpredicted conversation.

Perhaps you could share something with them you've never told them before, or make up a code-word on the spot.
By reporting the same unique conversation, you would generate solid anecdotal evidence for mutual dreaming that could warrant further investigation by the dreaming community.

Final Thoughts

When you're exploring a paranormal phenomenon such as mutual dreaming, remember to record as much data as you can and to be objective.
This means trying to rationalize events as much as you can before jumping to conclusions.

It's all too easy to trick ourselves into false beliefs, which may be much more exciting than writing off results as coincidence.
But that does not lead us to greater truth.

One of the brilliant things about lucid dreaming is that it enables us to explore the dreaming mind in a way no other research method can.
I urge all lucid dreamers to help science gain a greater understanding of the human mind, including the possible existence of mental phenomena like mutual dreaming.

 
We haven’t had one of these for a while.

Jacobi’s Inspirational Poster of the Week!

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[MENTION=5667]Jacobi[/MENTION]​
 
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Quite a skeptical article...


Parapsychology: The rise and fall of paranormal experimentationIn the 1800s, giants of science were open-minded towards scientific paranormal research.
What happened?


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If you visit the slightly dated-looking official website for the Society for Psychical Research, you’re greeted by a quote intended to give sceptics pause for thought:
“I shall not commit the fashionable stupidity of regarding everything I cannot explain as a fraud.”

The quote on its own might not register if it weren’t for the figure it’s attributed to: Carl Jung.
Yes, that Carl Jung.

In the early 1900s he was a proud member of the society, along with other titans of science and culture including William James, Sigmund Freud, Arthur Conan Doyle, WB Yeats, Lewis Carroll and Henry Sidgwick.

The organisation was set up in 1882 to study paranormal phenomena “without prejudice or prepossession of any kind, and in the same spirit of exact and unimpassioned inquiry which has enabled Science to solve so many problems, once not less obscure nor less hotly debated”.

Nowadays, that heat of the debate has distinctly cooled, and the study of telepathy, past lives, ghosts and ESP has been left a much weaker field.
Although it was never exactly mainstream, discourse on paranormal research rarely makes its way onto the scientific agenda.

The number of universities providing courses in parapsychology barely breaks into double figures, and when they make the news, even that bastion of impartiality the BBC can’t resist giving the report a slightly wacky tone (just look at the captions).


hall_freud_jung_in_front_of_clark_1909.jpg

Sigmund Freud (front row, left) and Carl Jung (front row, right) with contemporaries at Clark University in 1909.
Both were early members of the Society for Psychical Research.

When did the subject cease to be taken seriously?
Why is the study in decline?

Is it because the big names have gone?
Is there a lack of funding?

Or, as many cynics would state, is it because we’re living in a more enlightened age where the only people who believe in paranormal activity are gullible cranks?
The last view is certainly one that many in the scientific community share.

“Most mainstream scientists say, ‘why are you interested in all this? We all know it’s rubbish,’” says Christopher French, professor of psychology at Goldsmiths University. “Well I don’t think that’s a properly open-minded scientific attitude.”

French is a sceptic but he feels that anomalistic psychology – the study of human behaviour in relation to the paranormal – is worth persisting with because, even if the scientific community is closed-minded, many people do believe (as many as one in three Brits, according to a recent YouGov poll, believe in ghosts) and it’s important to find out what causes that belief.

“Sceptics like myself will often point out that there’s been systematic research in parapsychology for well over a century, and so far the wider scientific community is not convinced. But they [believers] would counter that if you look at the combined efforts of all this parapsychological research, it comes to the equivalent in terms of person hours of around two weeks – and that’s a valid point. It really is.”


parapsychological_experiment.jpg



One reason for this is funding.
While governments and institutions can see real, tangible benefits to pushing funding in medical and technology research, the same can’t be said for parapsychology.

French quickly lists a handful of funding sources, including the Society for Psychical Research and the Parapsychological Association, but the number can be counted on one hand.
One oddity in the list is The Bial Foundation – a Portuguese drug company that funds research into the unusual combination of parapsychology and psychophysiology.

French speculates that this makes the organisation a ‘bigger fish in a small pond’ rather than if it simply funded more ‘straight medical research’.

Dr Caroline Watt from the Edinburgh Koestler Parapsychology Unit is more upbeat.

She too mentions the Bial Foundation and the 30-plus doctorates that have come out of the unit, as well as a recent funded professorship at Lund University.

“I think the funding situation is relatively healthy in parapsychology. Just like any other field of research, parapsychologists have to apply and compete for funding,” she explains.

Still, it’s not a mainstream area, and the keyword here is ‘relatively’.
As French dryly points out: “The fact that I can more or less list the lot should demonstrate that funding is pretty thin.”



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A Ganzfeld telepathy experiment, via YouTube


As a result, a lot of research is either unfunded or self-funded – even PhDs. The PhDs shouldn’t be a problem in theory, but the enthusiastic amateurs certainly do nothing for the subject’s reputation: “The word ‘parapsychology’ can be used very loosely,” explains Watt.

“Anyone can call themselves a parapsychologist, and there are loads of amateur ‘ghost hunting’ groups that use the term.
It's difficult for the public to know whether they are dealing with a university-trained scientist or someone who is just out to make a bit of money and exploit the public’s natural curiosity about the paranormal.”


Ah yes, the charlatans.
It’s fair to say that in this respect the field’s reputation has been held back from several quarters – not just by trashy TV shows such as
Most Haunted (where the resident parapsychologist once managed
to trick medium Derek Acorah into channelling the spirit of one ‘Kreed Kafer’ – an anagram of Derek Fake) but also by a number of well-documented hoaxes.

The early big-name backers of psychical study must have been pleased to catch the ‘psychic’ Creery Sisters using signal codes in their experiments, but the same cannot be said for George Albert Smith and Douglas Blackburn, who the Society for Psychical Research believed to be genuine.

Blackburn later claimed that for nearly 30 years he had been playing the scientists. “The whole of those alleged experiments were bogus, and originated in the honest desire of two youths to show how easily men of scientific mind and training could be deceived when seeking for evidence in support of a theory they were wishful to establish,” he said.


A 1974 paper titled Security versus deception in parapsychology claimed to have uncovered 12 instances of fraud between the years 1940 to 1950, though ironically it refused to provide names to verify the claim.

Still, there was no shortage of cases that were obviously fraudulent, ranging from mediums with fake limbs to ‘ectoplasm’ made of muslin, none of which helped the discipline’s reputation.


With all this fraud and few solid results emerging, you may wonder why parapsychology hasn’t died out completely.
One explanation for the area’s tenacity is the sheer breadth of seemingly unconnected topics that come under its umbrella.

Even if a researcher were to prove beyond all doubt that ghosts don’t exist, for example, that wouldn’t discount the possibility of reincarnation, precognition, near-death experiences or telekinesis.



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Spirit medium Ethel Post-Parrish. The mysterious figure to the right turned out to be a cardboard cutout.

And that’s another reason why the discipline has refused to die.
While believers have found it difficult to prove their hunches, systematically disproving them is equally problematic.

A believer could plausibly argue, for example, that proving one medium to be a fraud doesn’t mean all of them are.

The subject’s persistence has led plenty of sceptics to argue that parapsychologists lack the discipline and objectivity to concede they’re wrong.
As renowned sceptic James Alcock concluded in
Give the Null Hypothesis a Chance: Reasons to Remain Doubtful about the Existence of Psi, I continue to believe that parapsychology is, at bottom, motivated by belief in search of data, rather than data in search of explanation.”

Selection bias is a common accusation made by those who are suspicious of paranormal researchers.

Dr Andreas Sommer, a historian of human sciences at the University of Cambridge, says the very visible instances of fraud often get caught up unfairly in respectable research, however.

In a paper for Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical sciences, Sommer writes, “the standard sceptical literature shows a remarkable lack of interest to distinguish between obvious self-immunisation strategies [of frauds] and observations by critical and experienced investigators with flawless scientific and clinical reputations and credentials.”

From his research into the subject, Sommer believes that apparitions, telepathy, mediums and children citing specific information about past lives post “massive challenges” to science, the last of which he covers in detail on his Forbidden Histories blog.



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He’s not alone here. Even the late Carl Sagan offered support for certain aspects of the discipline.
Writing in his sceptics’ bible, The Demon-Haunted World, he said that, “At the time of writing there are three claims in the ESP field which, in my opinion, deserve serious study:
(1) that by thought alone human can (barely) affect random number generators in computers:
(2) that people under mild sensory deprivation can receive thoughts or images "projected" at them; and
(3) that young children sometimes report the details of a previous life, which upon checking turn out to be accurate and which they could not have known about in any other way than reincarnation.”

That was in 1995, and a year before Sagan died, but the same can largely be said today, according to French – although he qualifies this by mentioning that he has his own reasons for doubting the research into all three.

Nonetheless, he argues, “It’s just wrong to say there is no evidence in favour of, say, telepathy. There is evidence, it’s just a question of the quality of the evidence and what the best explanation for it is.”

That’s a subtle difference but an important one.
Accepting the results of peer-reviewed parapsychological papers is not the same thing as accepting the conclusions that its researchers reach.

Over the years, many explanations for the paranormal have become better understood by science, from the demonic sightings associated with
sleep paralysis to infrasound sometimes creating a sense of presence and dread
in humans.



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Building B of Lawang Sewu – a former prison and the location of repeated ghost sightings.


There is undoubtedly a stigma attached to studying this – and even in appearing open-minded to paranormal explanations.
As Sommer writes in his paper, plenty of scientists “simply do not want to be associated with fields of research whose subject matter public opinion has equated with quackery, folly, intellectual vulgarity and mental illness”.

French agrees: “A lot of scientists would avoid getting involved, just because they'd see it as being damaging to their reputation.”

“Its given me a lot more respect for parapsychologists who have the courage to nail their colours to the mast and say ‘you know, I think there might be something in this,’” he explains. “They know they face ridicule and contempt from the wider scientific community, and sometimes that’s from those who have never bothered to look at the evidence at all – they just know in their own mind that these things are impossible, so they don’t need to look at it’.”



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Magician William Marriott exposes a levitation trick. Pearson's Magazine, June 1910.


While the noisy amateurs, historical hoaxes and shortage of funding are unhelpful, this lack of respect could be the biggest cause of the discipline's decline.
But for anyone who’s worried that their haunted house will never receive thorough scrutiny, French has some advice:

“As a kid, I was terrified of the dark, but these days I often find myself in pitch black filled with night cameras, and it’s about as exciting as watching paint dry.

If you think your house is haunted, you don’t need an exorcist, you just need a sceptic. Because I guarantee if I come along, nothing will happen.”
 
I watched a youtube video last night where a Remote Viewing company used two employees - who were originally trained and vetted via a US government Remote Viewing program - to see what they could "see" about two locations on the sea floor of the Atlantic Ocean. It was a Remote Viewing research project they started in 2011. They kept the two people apart so they could not share what they saw with each other...and didn't really tell them much. They asked three questions about each site. It was pretty fascinating how what the two viewers saw overlapped with each other. Apparently the two sites were occupied by large ancient cities and then there was a great cataclysm - they suspect a bomb of some kind - made the waters rise up and these cities were drowned.

Yet what I kept marvelling over was the fact the US government had trained and tested those two people in Remote Viewing techniques! As recently as the 2000's presumably since the research project didn't start till 2011. I am finding out soooooo much hidden stuff it's enough to make my head rocket off in to space. :shocked::eek:
 
I watched a youtube video last night where a Remote Viewing company used two employees - who were originally trained and vetted via a US government Remote Viewing program - to see what they could "see" about two locations on the sea floor of the Atlantic Ocean. It was a Remote Viewing research project they started in 2011. They kept the two people apart so they could not share what they saw with each other...and didn't really tell them much. They asked three questions about each site. It was pretty fascinating how what the two viewers saw overlapped with each other. Apparently the two sites were occupied by large ancient cities and then there was a great cataclysm - they suspect a bomb of some kind - made the waters rise up and these cities were drowned.

Yet what I kept marvelling over was the fact the US government had trained and tested those two people in Remote Viewing techniques! As recently as the 2000's presumably since the research project didn't start till 2011. I am finding out soooooo much hidden stuff it's enough to make my head rocket off in to space. :shocked::eek:

Oh, I’m sure that the government’s involvement into PSI and related paranormal fields did not end in the early 90’s like some claim.
You know, we never stop to think that perhaps we are being influenced - en mass, by our own government or others through some PSI-type means?
It’s not much of a stretch.
 
Oh, I’m sure that the government’s involvement into PSI and related paranormal fields did not end in the early 90’s like some claim.
You know, we never stop to think that perhaps we are being influenced - en mass, by our own government or others through some PSI-type means?
It’s not much of a stretch.

Nope...it's not.

I'm firmly convinced I am in an least one small way....and that is I'm afraid I won't survive in this world if I go out against the grain on my own. I mean I've done it before - but I always had help and the world was a bit nicer than it is now. Anyway - I touched that fear briefly this evening and mused that it was a deeply planted program still in activation within me. I was also reflecting on how I don't have much in the way of any other fears like I used to. I'm pretty clear of fear right now. Yet that one is still in there albeit less than what it used to be compared to last year.

If I look at it all like one big game written by Universal game masters - and I'm a human biocomputer (as Bruce Lipton calls us) - then as I enter the game I must have a protocol built in to me or I couldn't access the game code. Right?
Who knows how much they've tinkered with our protocol codes....
Hahahaha....Oh mannn..... I could have a field day with this topic. :tongue:
 
We haven’t had one of these for a while.

Jacobi’s Inspirational Poster of the Week!

11403433_1674091396158199_7245741017661290892_n.jpg


[MENTION=5667]Jacobi[/MENTION]​

That won't work. Just remember this rhyme to keep away female rapists "A crucifix near your seed, will banish a woman's yearning need."
 
Nope...it's not.

I'm firmly convinced I am in an least one small way....and that is I'm afraid I won't survive in this world if I go out against the grain on my own. I mean I've done it before - but I always had help and the world was a bit nicer than it is now. Anyway - I touched that fear briefly this evening and mused that it was a deeply planted program still in activation within me. I was also reflecting on how I don't have much in the way of any other fears like I used to. I'm pretty clear of fear right now. Yet that one is still in there albeit less than what it used to be compared to last year.

If I look at it all like one big game written by Universal game masters - and I'm a human biocomputer (as Bruce Lipton calls us) - then as I enter the game I must have a protocol built in to me or I couldn't access the game code. Right?
Who knows how much they've tinkered with our protocol codes....
Hahahaha....Oh mannn..... I could have a field day with this topic. :tongue:

Well, they have proven that our fears and anxieties can be passed down from parent to child, and for several generations…so just imagine, how many generations of fears we have coded within us somewhere…and not all are activated, but who knows what triggers one and sets it off…then that person is seen as “losing their shit”.
But, on the other hand, I also believe that a certain amount of innate knowledge or instinctual rationalizing is passed down and can be accessed through meditating and various other means you are familiar with.
I am fairly certain that I have been depressed my whole life because my Grandmother was dying while my Mom was pregnant with me, and then, died in the first year of my life which sent my Mom into a deep depression for a while.
I don’t blame anything on her or anyone…it’s just how it is, it helps to have a reason for illogical depressive thoughts.

I think if you set out on your own Kgal, people better get on board or get out of your way…I have a feeling those people who helped you last time will re-emerge, maybe not themselves, but someone will come to aid you…this I feel.
 
Well, they have proven that our fears and anxieties can be passed down from parent to child, and for several generations…so just imagine, how many generations of fears we have coded within us somewhere…and not all are activated, but who knows what triggers one and sets it off…then that person is seen as “losing their shit”.
But, on the other hand, I also believe that a certain amount of innate knowledge or instinctual rationalizing is passed down and can be accessed through meditating and various other means you are familiar with.
I am fairly certain that I have been depressed my whole life because my Grandmother was dying while my Mom was pregnant with me, and then, died in the first year of my life which sent my Mom into a deep depression for a while.
I don’t blame anything on her or anyone…it’s just how it is, it helps to have a reason for illogical depressive thoughts.

I think if you set out on your own Kgal, people better get on board or get out of your way…I have a feeling those people who helped you last time will re-emerge, maybe not themselves, but someone will come to aid you…this I feel.

Oh yes.... the state of mind of the Mother always affects the unborn child. If Mom has an overabundance of fear/sadness neuronal activity - then the child will be born with similar states. I attended a seminar in which they were demonstrating research showing how teratogens(unknown chemistry) affected the fetus as early as 7 weeks. Slowly but surely we are learning the whole connectedness of us all.

I know you're not blaming your mother. Yet it's nice to know it wasn't all your responsibility.Then you can move away from that burden of blaming self and move forward into healing.

Thank you for the encouragement. I truly appreciate it. As I read your last words I could hear the guides echo YES in the back of my mind.
:hug:
 
I follow an Anesthetist (?) Anesthesiologist (?) (I never know what to call any of the medical professionals anymore) on facebook who is on the Shift path and practices Reiki. She's really cool and very accessible.

She has put together all of her experiences - many with her patients - in one collection and I thought you might want to peruse a few. It's called "Messages From My Patients--The Entire Set"


http://reikidoc.blogspot.com/2014/09/messages-from-my-patients-entire-set.html

An example:
Chapter 2: while teaching a resident during organ procurement from a donor I 'sensed' the spirit of the deceased, but didn't want to engage in conversation at the time. He came back.

Chapter 59: I was driving home one night and passed the wreckage of a fatal accident. The driver's spirit came to me shortly after with this message.
 
I follow an Anesthetist (?) Anesthesiologist (?) (I never know what to call any of the medical professionals anymore) on facebook who is on the Shift path and practices Reiki. She's really cool and very accessible.

She has put together all of her experiences - many with her patients - in one collection and I thought you might want to peruse a few. It's called "Messages From My Patients--The Entire Set"


http://reikidoc.blogspot.com/2014/09/messages-from-my-patients-entire-set.html

An example:

Looks very cool…I will give it a read!
Thanks as always!
 
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