Vicky
|
We are beings who are so accustomed and well-adapted to multitasking our attention on many things at the same time that we rarely notice how little attention it actually takes to do something. Whether it's driving, eating, watching TV, reading, working, walking, talking....you name it, and we can be doing it while also thinking about and doing other things. Remember what it's like to have a great conversation with someone where you're both looking into each other's eyes, so engaged in that person and what they are saying, feeling, and thinking? There's a strong connection that takes place when that happens. When you really focus your attention on something, it's a much more real experience and you get more out of it. I'm beginning to take notice of how focused I am just doing everyday things, so I can get a feeling of remembering what it actually feels like to be strongly focused in the moment. It's a whole different experience than when you're doing, thinking, or feeling other things at the same time. So imagine how difficult it is to focus that intensely while doing meditation, retrieval, and other nonphysical activity. That's why daily practice is good, and why hemi-sync is such a helpful tool. Learning to focus your attention and hold it there while balancing both sides of the brain are all it really takes to do the kind of intensity focus you're describing. The kinds of psychic perception talked about in this thread are indeed amazing and useful abilities to have, and ones we all really do have. But I've learned it's not necessary to first learn to have those abilities in order to then learn to have the types of intense-focus high-caliber experiences you're talking about. Bruce and I have recently been talking a lot about this kind of thing and one thing I recently asked him was, "What exactly IS my awareness anyway?" And he said that your awareness is everywhere, all at once, all the time. And that what we normally think of as being our awareness is really just our focus of attention at any given moment. True awareness is everywhere, and in order to experience anything we just focus our attention on it. The more we focus, the more we shift, or phase, to that area of consciousness. It starts with intention. Intention is all it takes to put you There, whether you are aware of being there or not. The more you phase there, the more real it becomes to your senses of perception. A very slight shift of phasing is what you're calling "imagination" type, and a more full shift of phasing is what you're calling OBE/AP type of experience. It's not so much a matter of ability, capability, or experience, but is rather just a matter of your ability to focus your attention enough to the point of shifting more and more of your attention there. The result is the effect of phasing your attention there so intently that it creates the OBE type of perception. Of course, it's much more pleasurable an experience to really feel like you're there, and to really see, hear, smell, etc. as if it is a real physical experience. However, even with little of that effect happening, you're still There and likely still perceiving some things, even if you are not completely aware that you are there perceiving nor aware of what you are perceiving. Practicing the tools and techniques of what you know will eventually give you the type of experience you're seeking, and of course the more experience and validation you get, the easier it will become. Another important thing I recently learned or should I say "re-learned" (as I tend to ask the same types of questions of Bruce more than once!) is when I told Bruce that I am having trouble nonphysically tuning in and perceiving anything when I set out on an intention. I try and try and try but I don't perceive anything. "Why is that and what do I do about it?" I asked. He said, "You're never actually NOT perceiving anything. You're always perceiving something, it's just a matter of what you're aware of perceiving. If you go into it with expectations of what you should be perceiving and what that should be like, then you will probably not be aware of what there is to perceive and you'll feel like you got nothing."
He said to remember to follow my intention, then to go along with whatever I perceive in my awareness after that. Just the act of making the intention has already placed me where I need to be in order to act on my intention. The rest is a matter of trusting the process. I used to think that the trust part meant "being willing" or something like that. But it's more of a letting go type of thing. Like if someone were to tell you to relax, and you already think you are relaxed. And they said, "No, really really relax." That shift is like going from holding on tight to just letting go. So the trust part is very much like that, and I think it does take practice and patience. There are still lots of times when I get frustrated and feel like I'm not getting anything, and then there are those rare occasions where I just "let go" and automatically shift (phase) to where my intention took me in my awareness, and in a matter of a single moment I can suddenly no longer be aware that I'm physically sitting in a chair. The effect of phasing can be so complete in so quick of a moment that you literally forget what you were doing just a moment ago. The experience can be that real, that easily. So I'm still working hard at learning that technique myself. All I know is that it works, though I'm not skilled at it yet. But I do understand and trust the dynamics of it and I hope that how I'm describing it to you helps you too.
Vicky
|