wow really nice info, taking a look at alsworldview right now, edgar cayce seems like a nice read.
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Lumaza on July 18, 2015, 18:49:00doing a more calm analysis i am thinking that i am not having lucid dreams, my experiences would fit more to this quote
Once I learned that I was in that "simulation" for a reason and started to just be an active participant in the current scenario instead of completely altering it or fighting it, I found that I could stay in the simulation for a quite a while. I could then explore the meaning of it. I could find the lessons that were hidden in it and I could also have some fun along the way.
Quote"Dream Awareness". Basically, I'm living the dream life as if I was awake and not realizing it's a dream. I am the actor not realizing he's in a play. This tends to give me the best chance to remember after I wake.maybe i need to appease my expectations a little bit and just keep on practice, eventually ¨success¨ in my NP enviroments will arrive i guess because i am decided to do so.
Quote from: Szaxx on July 18, 2015, 22:18:51
It's not difficult at all, go to sleep and desire an experience wholeheartedly, you always wake afterwards even when you don't want to leave the NP environment you are in.
Quote from: Szaxx on July 18, 2015, 09:45:14so, being passive on what we are experiencing and not overthinking or focusing in the strange noises/visions is the way?
Stay aware of yourself and try to have no thoughts of what you see. Focus on just being there and you'll find yourself somewhere non physical. This happens naturally if you stay calm.
QuoteThe inconsistency of your frame of mind with the one required for the simulation causes what seems like a forcible ejection. You may get a whiff of the Personal Trainer's frustration over having "lost you," contributing to the feeling that you did something wrong and got kicked out.
Meanwhile, you're thinking that it was a personal triumph to have become lucid. It's hard to reconcile that feeling of triumph with the sense of getting kicked out. Then it starts looking like you're being punished for trying to advance your development, leading to theories that some force or intelligence doesn't want you to become lucid.
You're partially right. The Personal Trainer (or the simulation) doesn't want you to become lucid in that particular way--by which I mean, having all sorts of bright ideas about what to do next.
The same thing often applies to OBEs when you get out, find yourself in your bedroom, come up with ideas about what to do next, and then unexpectedly wake up. If you're in an OBE simulation, you may be waking up because your laundry list of things to do doesn't gibe with the purpose of the simulation.
Ejected is a probably a better expression for the sense of having been kicked out of a simulation. There's nothing here to take personally. Lucidity or being out of body may have been one of the requirements of the simulation. But thinking about now being able to do anything you want may not be.
Quote from: Bluefirephoenix on July 15, 2015, 00:08:07
Tu ingles es mejor que mi Espanol. Bienvenido