Forums → WEPR → Out of body experiences.
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I recently got a dream interpretation book and so i looked through and found this title i looked through that and wanted to know have you felt that before if you don't know what this is search it up on google or something.
Me personally i almost did i felt my "conciousness" rising and out of panic i was never going to return panicked and lost the feeling oh and by the way it was in the middle of school lol.
(I just made this thread for opinions on this matter and your own experiences of this)
Well, sleep paralysis usually causes hallucinations, and the feeling of being watched, so I hate to think what could go wrong with OBEs.
i guess it's fairly harmless compared to what we put our minds trough by choice sometimes. (drugs)
well your not dead, and i dont think a OBE can kill either.
for me it's just a rare experience that would be interesting to witness. =)
(drugs)
Hallucinations such as LSD merely block or accelerate dendrites and terminals in your neurons.
Two of my role models, Timothy Leary and Bill Hicks, often said that hallucinations are a vital key in developing one's mind. I can definitely agree with them; the power of some of those drugs can shift the world entirely.
And something I'm kind of curious about: do you believe being shot in the head (with a bullet) will generate a similar experience, albeit more powerful?
About Bill Hicks:
âToday a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as death, life is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves."
Just thought it was relevant.
I don't think hallucinations are... "vital" to one's personal development. They can in few cases make you see things differently, or contribute to a personality change; but drugs for example can just as well degrade your mind.
And something I'm kind of curious about: do you believe being shot in the head (with a bullet) will generate a similar experience, albeit more powerful?
"Haha, when I experience the paralysis, I'll feel a throbbing, unknown fear, that I know is induced by the paralysis, yet somehow it still overpowers you."
Interestingly I didn't experience a sense of fear with my sleep paralysis. Though the second time I was fully aware of what was happening so I felt no need to be afraid. I probably would have been more than a little freaked out with that second time if I hadn't known.
Haha I just scanned through the wiki page. Makes sense why I feel fear. I'm fully aware of my surroundings and the paralysis but at that moment it feels so normal and rational to be afraid that I jump up and run off when i can, only to ffeel silly later. Its akin to feeling that a nightmare is real upon waking, yet latrr on you laugh at yourself.
I think my longest one ran into the minutes.
Timothy Leary and Bill Hicks, often said that hallucinations are a vital key in developing one's mind.
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