So I was practicing phasing last night and I came across what Frank called an 'astral screen'. I was quite giddy as I hadn't had much progress lately. So then came the issue of trying to enter, or 'step in' to it. I tried willing myself into it with no success, I tried imagining myself in the scene, again no success. Then it slowly vanished, and I didn't see any more screens for the rest of the night.
So, basically I am asking how do I go about entering these scenes? It seems that me trying to enter these scenes causes them to vanish, as I had a similar experience a few weeks ago in which the same thing happened.
You don't really... well, what I mean is you don't actively do it. You *allow* it to happen.
You have to remove all "effort" from what you're doing. If that makes any sense? :)
Good job though! You're doing well. :)
Ah, so im supposed to keep doing what im doing?
The way I step into an astral screen is to focus on something inside the scene, preferably not 'in front', and let myself be sucked in. Imagine you're teetering on a precipice and the scene is it- you focus on something on the 'bottom' (back) and let 'gravity' do the work.
For example, once I phased into a room that had a staircase and a door in the back. I felt myself be pulled in and out of the screen. I wanted in, so I focused on the top part of the stairs (which is farther back than the landing, which was directly in front of me) and 'looked' into the doorframe, and I 'fell' upwards and into the screen.
Quote from: CFTraveler on April 29, 2011, 17:26:45
The way I step into an astral screen is to focus on something inside the scene, preferably not 'in front', and let myself be sucked in. Imagine you're teetering on a precipice and the scene is it- you focus on something on the 'bottom' (back) and let 'gravity' do the work.
For example, once I phased into a room that had a staircase and a door in the back. I felt myself be pulled in and out of the screen. I wanted in, so I focused on the top part of the stairs (which is farther back than the landing, which was directly in front of me) and 'looked' into the doorframe, and I 'fell' upwards and into the screen.
It's the same for me, when I look at the whole screen, I zoom in and out and sometimes lose the screen. But when I choose something to focus on, like a tree or a door of a house, then I get pulled in.
So you can try both methods and see which one works the best for you. :-)
Thanks for clearing this up :)
During my first successful phasing, I focused on getting the scene clearer and clearer. I did not attempt to step in. The scene eventually filled my field of vision and became 3D. At that time, I was sucked into it without effort.
Yes, flying into the screen doesn't work for me but picking out a detail and focusing on it does pulls me right in.
I've also found that while in the blank black world that it's the perfect time to create an experience so I start with something as easy as visualizing a flower or person and quite quickly it will appear in an outline form, than full color hi-def and then a scene will form around it and will pull me in. That way you have greater control over what the subject matter is.