• Astral Projection__Part I

    From Bruce Johnson@RICKSBBS to All on Sun Mar 16 07:19:54 2025
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    <___Astral Projection__Part I_>< Brought to you by:_________________>
    <___Preliminary Exercises_____><_______Arkham Asylum________________>
    <___By: The Joker_____________><_______(302)-629-5537_______________>
    <___& The Occult Crue_________><______65 Megz_24oo Baud_____________>
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    This information is taken directly from the book Journeys Out of
    the Body by Robert A. Monroe.

    Throughout this writing, I have made many references to
    one evident fact: the only possible way for an individual to
    appreciate the reality of this Second Body and existence within
    it is to experience it himself.
    Obviously, if this were an easy task, it would now be
    commonplace. I suspect that only an innate curiosity will enable
    people to overcome the obstacles in the path of this achievement.
    Although there are many cases of existence experienced apart from
    the physical body, they have for the most part - at least in the
    Western world - been of a spontaneous, one time nature, occurring
    during moments of stress or physical disability.
    We are speaking of something entirely different, which
    can be objectively investigated. The experimenter will want to
    proceed in a manner that will produce consistent results, perhaps
    not every time, but often enough to validate the evidence to his
    own satisfaction. I believe that anyone can experience existence
    in a Second Body if the desire is great enough. Whether or not
    anyone should is beyond the scope of my judgment.
    Evidence has led me to believe that most, if not all,
    human beings leave their physical bodies in varying degrees
    during sleep. Subsequent reading has proved that this idea is
    thousands of years old in man's history. If it is a valid
    premise, then the condition itself is not unnatural. On the
    other hand, conscious, willful practice of separation from the
    physical is contrary to the pattern, it would seem, in view of
    the limited data available.
    Harmful physical effects from such activity are
    undetermined. I have not detected (nor have any physicians) any
    physiological changes, good or bad, that can be attributed
    directly to the out-of-the-body experience.
    There have been many psychological changes that I
    recognize, and probably many more that I have not been aware of.
    However, even my friends in the psychiatric profession have not
    claimed that these have been detrimental. My gradual revision of
    basic concepts and believes is apparent in a number of ways
    throughout this writing. If these psychological and personality
    changes are truly harmful, there is not much that can be done
    about it now.
    A note of caution is in order here for those who are
    interested in experimenting, for once opened, the doorway to this
    experience cannot be closed. More exactly, it is a copy of "you
    can't live with it and you can't live without it." The activity
    and resultant awareness are quite incompatible with the science,
    religion, and mores of the society in which we live. History is
    strewn with martyrs whose only crime was non-conformity. If your
    interest and research become commonly known, you run the risk of
    being labeled a freak, phony, or worse, and of being ostracized.
    In spite of this, something extremely vital would be missing if
    you did not continue to explore and investigate. In the
    unaccountable "low" periods when you cannot produce this activity
    no matter how carefully you try, you realize this deeply. You
    have a strong sense of being left out of things, of the shutting
    out of a source of great meaning to living.
    Here, then, is the best written description I can give of
    the technique of developing the non-physical experience.


    THE FEAR BARRIER

    There is one great obstacle to the investigation of the
    Second Body and the environment in which it operates. Perhaps it
    is the only major barrier. It seems to be present in all
    people, without exception. It may be hidden by layers of
    inhibition and conditioning, but when these are stripped away,
    the obstacle remains. This is the barrier of blind, unreasoning
    fear. Given only small impetus, it turns to panic, and then to
    terror. If you consciously pass the fear barrier, you will have
    passed a milestone in your investigation.
    I am reasonably sure that this barrier is passed
    unconsciously by many of us each night. When that part of us
    beyond our consciousness takes over, it is not inhibited by fear,
    although it seems to be influenced by the thought and action of
    the conscious mind. It seems to be accustomed to operating
    beyond the fear barrier, and understands better the rules of
    existence in this other world. When the conscious mind shuts
    down for the night, this Super Mind (soul?) takes over.
    The investigative process relative to the Second Body and
    its environment appears to be a melding or blending of the
    conscious with this Super Mind. If this is accomplished, the
    fear barrier is overcome.
    The fear barrier is many-faceted. The most fearless of
    us think it does not exist, until, much to our own surprise, we
    encounter it within ourselves. First and foremost, there is the
    death fear. Because separation from the physical body is much
    like what is expected at death, early reactions to the experience
    are automatic. You think, "Get back in the physical, quickly!
    You are dying! Life is there, in the physical; get back in!"
    These reactions appear in spite of any intellectual or
    emotional training. Only after repeating the process eighteen to
    twenty times did I finally gather enough courage (and curiosity)
    to stay out more than a few seconds and observe objectively. The
    death fear was either sublimated or assuaged by familiarity.
    Others who have tried the technique have stopped after the first
    or second experience, unable to suppress this first aspect of the
    barrier.
    The second aspect of the fear barrier is also linked with
    the death fear: will I be able to return to the physical or to
    get back "in." With no guidelines or specific instructions, this
    remained a prime fear of mine for several years, until I found a
    simple answer that made it work every time. Mine was a matter of
    rationalization. I had been "out" several hundred times, and the
    evidence showed that I was able to return safely one way or
    another. Therefore, the probability was that I would return
    safely the next time also.
    The third basic fear was fear of the unknown. The rules
    and dangers of our physical environment can be determined to a
    reasonable degree. We have spent our lifetime building up
    reflexes to cope with them. Now, suddenly, here is another,
    completely different set of rules, another world of entirely
    different possibilities, populated by beings who seem to know all
    of them. You have no rule book, no road map, no book of
    etiquette, no applicable courses in physics and chemistry, no
    incontrovertible authority you can turn to for advice and
    answers. Many a missionary has been killed in a remote land
    under just such conditions!
    I must confess that this third fear still crops up, and
    with justification. The unknown is still to a great degree
    unknown. Such penetration as I have made has brought forth
    pitifully few unalterable and consistent rules. I can say only
    that, to date, I have survived these expeditions. There is so
    much that I do not comprehend or understand, and more that is
    beyond my ability to do so.
    Another fear is the consequent effects on the physical
    body as well as on the conscious mind of participation and
    experimentation in this form of activity. This too is very real,
    as our history, at least to my knowledge, does not seem to
    contain accurate reporting of this area. We have studies on
    paranoia, schizophrenia, phobias, epilepsy, alcoholism, sleeping
    sickness, acne, virus diseases, etc., but no assembled body of
    objective data on the pathology of the Second Body.
    I do not know how to circumvent the fear barrier, except
    by cautious initial steps that create familiarity bit by bit as
    you proceed. I hope this writing in its entirety will provide
    the psychological "step" over the barrier. It may help to
    recognize conditions and patterns that are familiar in that at
    least one person has had similar experiences and survived.
    The following are the necessary procedural developments.

    1. RELAXATION

    The ability to relax is the first prerequisite, perhaps
    even the first step itself. It is deliberately generated, and is
    both physical and metal. Included with the condition of
    relaxation must be the relief from any sense of time urgency.
    You cannot be in a hurry. No pending appointments or anticipated
    calls for your services or attention must clutter up your
    thoughts. Impatience of any sort can effectively stifle your
    prospects for success.
    There are many techniques available for obtaining this
    kind of relaxation, and a number of good books cover the subject.
    Simply select the method that works best for you. There are
    three general methods that seem to work, two of which are
    applicable in these exercises.
    Auto- or self-hypnosis. Most self-study books offer this
    method in different versions. Again, it is a matter of which is
    most effective for you individually. The most efficient and
    speediest way is to learn self-hypnosis through the training of
    an experienced hypnotist. He can set up posthypnotic suggestion
    that will bring immediate results. However, select a tutor with
    care. Responsible practitioners are rare, and neophytes
    numerous. Forms of meditation can be converted to effective
    relaxation.
    Borderland sleep state. This is perhaps the easiest and
    most natural method and usually ensures relaxation of both body
    and mind simultaneously. The difficulty here lies in the
    maintenance of that delicate "edge" between sleep and complete
    wakefulness. All too often, you simply fall asleep and that ends
    the experiment for the moment.
    By practice, conscious awareness can be taken up to this
    borderland state, into it, and through it, to your destination.
    There is no way to achieve it that I know of that than practice.
    The technique is as follows: lie down, preferably when you are
    tired and sleepy. As you become relaxed and start to drift off
    to sleep, hold your mental attention on something, anything, with
    your eyes closed. Once you can hold the borderland state
    indefinitely without falling asleep, you have passed the first
    stage. It is, however, a normal pattern to fall asleep many
    times in the process of this consciousness deepening. You will
    not be able to help yourself, but do not let this discourage you.
    It is not an overnight process. You will know you are
    successful when you become bored and expect something more to
    happen!
    If attempts to remain at the borderland state make you
    nervous, this too is a normal reaction. The conscious mind seems
    to resent sharing the authority it has during wakefulness. If
    this occurs, break the relaxation, get up and walk around,
    exercise, and lie down again. If this does not relieve the
    nervousness, go to sleep and try another time. You are just not
    in the mood.
    When your "fixative," the picture thought you have been
    holding, slips away and you find yourself thinking of something
    else, you are close to completion of condition A.
    Once you have achieved Condition A - the ability to hold
    calmly in the borderland state indefinitely with your mind on an
    exclusive thought - you are ready for the next step. Condition B
    is similar, but with the concentration eliminated. Do not think
    of anything, but remain poised between wakefulness and sleep.
    Simply look through your closed eyes at the blackness ahead of
    you. Do nothing more. After a number of these exercises, you
    may hallucinate "mind pictures," or light patterns. These seem
    to have no great significance, and may merely be forms of neural
    discharge. I can remember, for example, attempting to achieve
    this state after watching a football game on TV for several
    hours. All I saw were mind pictures of football players
    tackling, running, passing, etc. It took at least a half hour
    for the pattern to fade away. These mind pictures are apparently
    related to your visual concentration in the preceding eight or
    ten hours. The more intense the concentration, the longer it
    seems to take to eliminate the impressions.
    You have accomplished Condition B when you are able to
    lie indefinitely after the impressions have faded away, with no
    nervousness, and seeing nothing but blackness.
    Condition C is a systematic deepening of consciousness
    while in the B state. This is approached by carefully letting go
    of your rigid hold on the borderland sleep edge and drifting
    deeper little by little during each exercise. You will learn to
    establish degrees of this deepening of consciousness by "going
    down" to a given level and returning at will. You will recognize
    these degrees by the shutting down of various sensory mechanism
    inputs. The sense of touch apparently goes first. You seem to
    have no feeling in any part of your body. Smell and taste soon
    follow. The auditory signals are next, and the last to fade out
    is vision. (Sometimes the last two are reversed; I suspect that
    the reason for vision being last is that exercises calls for the
    use of the visual network, even in blackness.)
    Condition D is the achievement of C when one is fully
    rested and refreshed, rather than tired and sleepy, at the
    beginning of the exercise. This is quite important, and not
    nearly as easy to achieve as it is to write about. To enter the
    relaxation state full of energy and wakefulness is great
    insurance for maintaining conscious control. The best approach
    to take in the early attempts at the Condition D exercise is to
    start it immediately after you wake up from a nap or a night's
    sleep. Start the exercise before you move around in bed
    physically, while your body is still relaxed from sleep and your
    mind is fully alert. Don't take too many liquids before
    sleeping, and you won't have the immediate need to empty your
    bladder upon awakening.
    Induction by drugs. None of the relaxation-producing
    drugs that are readily available seem to help. Barbiturates
    
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