Hey Vicky,
I am finally getting to answering your post!
Vicky wrote on Mar 27th, 2007 at 9:03pm:Are Interpreter Overlay "errors" more of a hindrance in nonphysical perception, or not necessarily so? I'm sure even in a lot of cases, some overlay doesn't actually even alter the experience by much, as the same benefit or learning opportunity results anyway.
The Overlay seems to serve to "channel" or focus the experience into the context of previous experience, beliefs, expectations, etc. So, I guess I'd say the Overlay doesn't alter the context in which learning takes place, it sort of forces the learning to be "only" within that context. Benefit is then only within the context of the pre-existing experience memories, beliefs, expectations, etc. of the experiencer. But that does leave a "downside." In order to gain benefit from the experience beyond the Overlay we have to, most often, resort to trying to interpret what we call the "symbology" of the experience. Gaining understanding beyond our Interpreter's Overlay then becomes close kin to dream interpretation.
We are limited to trying to decifer our Overlay's "symbols" to gain understanding beyond our present limited understanding. A sort of Catch-22. The hard part is that most of us don't even realize that what we are perceiving in any given moment are only symbols that represent what we are perceiving. So for example someone perceives a hideous dragon, breathing fire on a soul, and reducing that soul to mere ashes, and believes that is what they have actually encountered. Then the perceiver gets all twitterpated about dealing with the implications of encountering such a fire-breathing dragon that is "destroying souls" in the afterlife. (BTW: this dragon example is in Leland's book)
Whole religons could be then built up around the fear of souls being destroyed by fire-breathing dragon's after death. Millions of people throughout centuries of time could alter the course of their lives because some fool believed his or her encounter was with such a soul destroying, fire-breathing dragon. But, the dragon was only and Interpreter Overlay, a dream symbol if you will, for an afterdeath process Danion Brinkley calls the "panoramic life review." Just a process in which the deceased relives life experiences from the perspective of the people interacted with during their physical lifetime to gain understanding and release (or burn away) false understandings of those experiences.
Vicky wrote on Mar 27th, 2007 at 9:03pm:You've written about the need to play along into someone's reality during retrieval to gently bring that person up to speed on their current situation and once this happens, their perception raises. I have learned from my own OBEs that one person in the experience can be at an "advantage" over another by perceiving from a higher perspective (or higher vibration level). So, applying this "playing along" concept to OBEs, I've noticed that many times I will, at first, believe that the experience is physical reality. But another person in my OBE will play along, gently allowing me to realize the situation for what it really is. Once I get that "a-ha" moment and realize it is not the physical world, then my perception raises considerably. Once my perception raises, the scenery of the experience sort of just melts away, as it is no longer necessary information. I've discovered that all that scenery was was just a framework (created by belief, emotion, expectation, etc) necessary for the conduction of the experience. Once not needed, that framework dissolves, kind of like throwing away a security blanket when it's been outgrown.
It seems that perhaps there is another component to the nature of interpreter overlay...to provide a framework within which we can operate until the perception of that information is no longer necessary. As long as we take advantage of opportunities for clearer perception, we will continue to raise our awareness to new levels.
Yeah! Couldn't have put it better myself! Or said another way, once we realize, during the experience, that any "framework" is an overlay, that overlay can sort of dissolve and we might then get closer to more clearly perceiving beyond the Overlay.
Vicky wrote on Mar 27th, 2007 at 9:03pm:Is there ever an end to the layers of perception interpretation? At higher levels is there less room for interpreter overlay?
From my experience I'd say that there doesn't seem to be an end to overlays, but that as we perceive from a munch larger "perspective" the disuise that overlays impose upon perception become easier to "see beyond" and the meaning of our experiences becomes clearer and closer to the "Truth."
And, while there is a tendency to see overlays as "bad" if my (read that me as my Higher Self) mission/goal is to understand more about what it means to experience existence as a human being, knowledge of overlays and their effects are part of the "mission/goal." Like someone said, to make an omlet you have to break some eggs. If your mission is to make an omlet there is no sense complaining about all the empty egg shells cluttering up the landscape.
Love,
Bruce