Quote:Walter Pahnke scientifically studied the question of whether the classical symptoms of mystical experience could be replicated by psychoactive drugs like psilocybin. So an experimental group of Harvard Divinity School students were given this drug in the chapel on Good Friday evening and a control group of students were given a placebo. Initially no one knew who received what. Those given the psilocybin generally experienced all the classical symptoms of authentic mystical experience. But their ecstasy, though very pleasant, did not produce the long-term transforming effect of a disciplined mystic's spiritual experiences.
Yes, it's understandable that the drug would not produce a long-term transformation. The drug would only act upon the body in biological ways, which can produce paranormal experience, but would disappear once the drug wore off. The drug wouldn't change a person's quality of being at their core. There's no free ride. A disciplined mystic on the other hand has earned his/her quality of being by getting rid of fear and ego. For the most part, paranormal experience occurs naturally as one releases fear and ego and spiritually matures, though one can't rule out the possibility that there are some who learn how to achieve paranormal activity in other ways. However, those that do have far less power than the ones with a loving quality of being.
Quote:I myself have experienced intense satisfying ecstasy through speaking in tongues, but was later able to doubt the paranormal authenticity of such experiences. But these episodes lacked the long-term impact of another experience (about which I have posted) which was light-years more paranormally powerful and transformative, whose genuineness was later impossible for me to doubt.
Seems like maybe your initial experiences may have changed you in biological ways to create ecstasy, rather than in paranormal ways. Sounds like you were very dramatically shown the difference between what we can create in terms of ecstasy and what can be given to us. Powerful stuff when expressed through our body!!
Quote:So PUL can generate great ecstasy, but not all ecstasy is PUL. But is PUL a proper phrase for the best caliber BL experiences? The Christian word for PUL (Greek: "agape") designates a way of being and thus the terms 'pure" and "unconditional" can be measured in comparison with impurities for motivation and conduct and strings attached to our love (implicit conditions). But in NDEs PUL is an experience, not necessarily a way of being. So what impurities and strings attached are the foil for contrasting the experience of NDE PUL? If "pure" and "unconditional" are appropriate terms for NDE love, the presumably other NDErs may experience lower levels of these qualities, depending on the spirit plane reached.
So when NDErs encounter a BL and don't comment on an overwhelming loving experience, I'm just suggesting that this difference MAY be spiritually significant. Is the NDEr's perception or spiritual development less advanced? Or is she just experiencing a lower spiritual plane? Or perhaps a quiet peace can be just as authentic manifestation of BL PUL? If we embrace the afterlife principle that like attracts like and the Monroe-Moen identification is hellish planes, does the course of one's NDE already hint at one's ultimate postmortem destination?
PUL has lots of different interpretations based on one's personal experience and their ability to describe their experience adequately. It is the BL's inner core being that is radiating forth. It is almost like a tangible substance that can be felt because feeling is fundamental. It doesn't generate the same feeling/sensations in a person as a physical experience would because there is no physical body to sense with. You're a point of consciousness reacting to information being put forth within your own consciousness. Those who describe ecstasy or a quiet peacefulness are likely doing the best they can with what they understand and relate to based on their experience and subjective interpretation/understanding of that experience. Everyone's unique even though we have shared cultural beliefs.
I've wondered if the principle of like attracts like actually applies to the non-physical. Truthfully, I'm not sure, but even if it is applicable I seriously doubt if a NDE experience is in anyway telling of one's destination. For one thing, a NDE seems to take place in a reality that receives the newly deceased where we are accommodated according to personal belief and personal comforts in order to help prevent fear from arising. We also are never truly separated from our soul, so what if we at some point simply become integrated back into the fullness of our soul? That may explain the oneness one feels with a BL some NDErs have expressed. If the BL is our soul, it sure would explain why I crave to be with it. lol And... What if hellish planes, etc. are symbolic representatives of fear/ego we're holding onto and not actual realities? I'm not saying they can't be. Thinking of Storm's experience. To me what he experienced was his own fears coming to life so to speak or what he saw was a metaphor that represented his fear.
Quote:The classical elements of the NDE (separation from the body, tunnel, BL, encounter with loved ones, arrival at a barrier or limit, past life review are archetypes, and as such, may or may not be experienced on the same spiritual plane. When some NDErs experienced these archetypes in a less intense form or skip over them altogether, it is worth contemplating what this might mean. People tend to make assumptions about such matters when they read about or hear NDE reports. I'm just trying to stimulate reflection on these seldom asked questions.
I'd say the classical elements you mention are beliefs or symbols used to describe experience. Jung would say inherited memory, but I'm not so sure about that. Could be, but I lean more to cultural belief. If you're having a sensation of being pulled through darkness, a symbol representing a tunnel seems understandable as a way to describe what you're feeling. Arriving at a barrier/limit can foster all kinds of beliefs, but I do think there are no limitations to where we can go once we know how to get there. Or if someone shows us. Someone arriving at a barrier likely doesn't know how to go further into unfamiliar territory. You can do a life review even while still alive in the physical, not necessarily only after transitioning. Perhaps whether or not one experiences these classical elements are dependent on the individual, their belief, spiritual maturity, etc.
Kathy