DocM
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So I was in deep theta meditation yesterday, and my 4-year-old, Joshua decided I had been doing it long enough. I was in the mind awake/body asleep phase. He came in with a big grin on his face and started talking. I was amused because I would usually be stirred out of this trance/meditation by common chatter, but somehow, I maintained my connection to the deep relaxation, the all that is.
We began to have a conversation. He still can't understand what I'm doing. No, I'm not sleeping. Yes, I am listening to a CD. But I realized in a profound, all encompassing realization that there is no inherent superiority of the mystical states of astral travel or meditation and the waking state of encounters in our common existence. Had I contacted a deceased loved one, or flown with angels, it would have not been more important than my conversations and interactions with my son at that point in time.
For a few minutes I was like I imagine Edward Cayce had been (the sleeping prophet), speaking in a relaxed but clear way in a trance while straddling both locales. Eventually, Joshua's jumping up and down on me, forced the issue, and I was back.
We search for the answers, and feel that OOB experiences are important, meeting helpers, etc. The secret of life is that the here and now, in the physical plane is no less wonderful than anything to be found in the astral.
This is where universal love, appreciation and gratitude come in. Attributes which we all know about and hear about but which are hollow if imitated, and forced by convention (religions, or personal guilt). To appreciate all that spirituality has to offer, we have to find love and acceptance in the physical while we are alive. Otherwise, all the nonphysical experiences, however compelling, have much less meaning.
My two cents,
Matthew
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