Sleep and Inducing a Projection
I have stated that one of several ways to induce a projection is
to "mimic sleep". However, this statement needs
clarification. It isn't just sleep that needs to be mimicked, but
the correct cycle of sleep.
Scientists divided non-REM sleep into four stages, accounting for
about 75 percent of total sleep. In each stage, brain waves become
progressively larger and slower, and sleep becomes deeper. After
reaching stage 4, the deepest period, the pattern reverses, and
sleep becomes progressively lighter until REM sleep, the most active
period, occurs. This cycle typically occurs about once every 90
minutes in humans. The time which most conscious projections occur
is during the REM cycle (or the hypnagogic/hypnopompic state). Rapid
eye movement (REM) sleep is an intense activity in the brain during
which dreaming occurs and with practice, astral projection. During
the REM sleep state, the brain functions in the alpha/theta brain
wave state which can also be achieved in meditation.
I've often said that it's not advisable to practice at night
because you're just too tired. Stages 1-4 indicate progressive
degrees of sleep with stage 1 being the lightest (alpha) and stage 4
being very deep sleep (delta). Usually after about 90 minutes we
have progressed through all 4 stages and then we enter REM sleep
(theta). This is the stage of sleep when most people dream. Stage
REM is usually very short early in the night but gradually increase
as the night goes on. By the time morning rolls around, we are in
REM almost all the time. 99% of my projections have been in the
morning bouncing in and out of REM sleep and also why multiple
published authors report projecting after "several sleep
cycles" because they have transitioned out of sleep stages 1-4
and are in REM. I think many dreams are indeed disguised astral
projections because people have shared the same unusual dream
content, received information not normally accessible to them and
visited people and were seen.
I also found references to companies on the net that use Rapid
Eye Technology to simulate the REM sleep state in order to perform
passive emotional healing. They do this by mimicking the REM state
via eye movements (moving side to side and gradually moving up). I
found this an interesting correlation because the astral utilizes
the "emotional body" and by duplicating REM sleep, (the
time we naturally project) to work on emotional wounds does make
sense. Even doctors that don't utilize Rapid Eye Technology state
that "dreams help people process emotional material".
In summary, the goal isn't to mimic sleep, but mimic REM sleep.
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