great ian wilson coc

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A Course on Consciousness LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICAT ION This covers techniques for everything I have discussed in Parts: One to Three. If you have not read these portions, I recommend you do as to gain some insights as to where this kind of experience can lead. TECHNIQUES hat !ou ill "eed: # $ %ournal to keep dreams and e xperiences in. # Optio nal: $ tape recorder if you are too &usy t o writ e' ty pe them down . # (rive, Intent a nd )otivation. A VERY IMPORTANT DICIPLINE *ecording your dreams will help assist you in dream recall, maintain an interest in developing dreaming techniques as well as aid in verification of precognitive experiences to yourself when the opportunity arises. I encourage recording or documenting as many experiences as you can remem&er from the dreamsta te until you have fully satisfied your a&ility to dream consciously etc. This should &e done daily. THE LUCID DREAM Pro&a&ly the easiest thing to do is have a lucid dream. It+s such a simple thing to achieve once you realie you can do it. -veryone dreams so all you are attempting to do is &ecome conscious for it. There are two very simple attri&utes to lucid dreaming: # )aintain $ aking/tate 0onsciousness. # 1avi ng 2ull 0onsci ous )emory of the (ream upon $wakening P hysically. That+s it, the filler is what you do when you dream. $ll these techniques are simple and easy. !ou have to simplify the techniques within your own self to maintain some consistency. 3ike your handwriting, it will &e come customied to your individual needs and a&ilities as you understand yourself more fully. UNCONSCIOUS BARRIERS hat we will look at are mechanisms, which prevent consciou sness in the dreamstate so you can start to disarm these. There are patterns, which we

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A Course on ConsciousnessLANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION

This covers techniques for everything I have discussed in Parts: One to

Three. If you have not read these portions, I recommend you do as to gainsome insights as to where this kind of experience can lead.

TECHNIQUES

hat !ou ill "eed:

# $ %ournal to keep dreams and experiences in.# Optional: $ tape recorder if you are too &usy to write'type them down.# (rive, Intent and )otivation.

A VERY IMPORTANT DICIPLINE

*ecording your dreams will help assist you in dream recall, maintain aninterest in developing dreaming techniques as well as aid in verification ofprecognitive experiences to yourself when the opportunity arises. Iencourage recording or documenting as many experiences as you canremem&er from the dreamstate until you have fully satisfied your a&ility todream consciously etc. This should &e done daily.

THE LUCID DREAM

Pro&a&ly the easiest thing to do is have a lucid dream. It+s such a simplething to achieve once you realie you can do it. -veryone dreams so allyou are attempting to do is &ecome conscious for it.

There are two very simple attri&utes to lucid dreaming:

# )aintain $ aking/tate 0onsciousness.# 1aving 2ull 0onscious )emory of the (ream upon $wakening Physically.

That+s it, the filler is what you do when you dream. $ll these techniques aresimple and easy. !ou have to simplify the techniques within your own selfto maintain some consistency. 3ike your handwriting, it will &e come

customied to your individual needs and a&ilities as you understandyourself more fully.

UNCONSCIOUS BARRIERS

hat we will look at are mechanisms, which prevent consciousness in thedreamstate so you can start to disarm these. There are patterns, which we

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have had since child&irth that induce sleep. hen you start to lucid dream,and'or go outof&ody you have to learn exactly what it is your mind isdoing to you as a 4consciousness5 to induce an 4unconscious5 sleep inthese su&conscious states. Once you map out the natural pattern of sleepyou have, you will start to have more control &ecause you are now used to

the methods your mind naturally uses to induce unconsciousness. ithtime and practice, you will learn to use them for your &enefit with outremoving or changing them.

If you are the kind of person who can sleep after waking up from a regularsleeping pattern, this will simplify this technique. This technique will workonly for people who find it easy to go &ack to sleep after they wake up for afew moments. Otherwise, we have to address a few steps for trou&ledsleepers. $nd that is up and coming.

EXAMPLE

# This is an example from myself where I have mapped out parts of thenatural patterns of my sleep which induce unconsciousness. $fter sleepingfor 6 hours, my alarm goes off and I wake up. It+s 7:88 in the morning, I amstill tired. I get up, go to the washroom to make sure there are no signalsfrom my &ody that will wake me &ack up, or make it uncomforta&le to fall&ack asleep. $fter a&out 98 minutes, I get a natural signal from my &odythat I am still physically tired. The feeling is like a sudden drop in energy.

This specific feel is something I look for when I attempt any lucid dreamingor outof&ody experiences.

# *eturning to &ed, I lie on my &ack and close my eyes. Immediately I feelmy &ody starting to return to its previous state of sleep. I induce notechnique, no ver&al commands, nothing to maintain consciousness otherthan my will ust to o&serve the sleeping cycle as to understand it &etter.

# The visual *-) screen in front of me starts to create some purple and pinkenergy patterns. I try not to focus on these, they are the &eginning ofhypnocogic imagery which I realied is starting to cause me to gounconscious. I let them go and relax reminding myself that I am conscious

and my physical &ody is falling asleep.# The patterns start to take on a definite recognia&le pattern like a mosaic

of triangles, which are yellow and &lack. They &ecome strong and definite&illowing through my mind. These patterns can again induceunconsciousness so I focus to the right of my mind, slightly out ofalignment with them.

# To mimic what I see, close your eyes and press soft, yet firm on your eyes,

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one, which is the first stage of sleep thus potentially ruining that night+schance at a lucid dream. !ou have to &e mentally prepared to deal withthem and let them continue without letting your psychological filters filterthem out.

TACTILE SENSATIONS:

This indicator usually happens when the &ody is asleep and you are still init. It can feel like you are paralyed and highvoltage painless electricity is

 olting through your &ody at amaing intensities. I view sleeper+s paralysisas this stage, and people who I talk to who have a lot of sleep paralysisfind it really easy to go outof&ody as a result. ith no technique otherthan they 4will5 themselves out when the sleep paralysis hits. If this is thecase, you are pretty much in the deeper states of sleep and ready to gooutof&ody. These also can &e internal, you suddenly see a &all fly from

the hypnogogic imagery and your reflexes cause you to catch it. $nd youdo and it feels like a real &all. If that is the case, you+re pro&a&ly more inthe dreamstate and seconds away from the full dream. One that scares afew people is an 4illusionary5 sense of not &reathing. That can cause somefear and panic, &ut actually it+s ust that your so deeply asleep physicallyyour outofphase and don+t notice that you are. $ relaxed calm approachwith knowledge of this helps guide you through old su&conscious patternsthat have gone partially unnoticed until you have consciously o&servedthem.

ABSTRACT THOUGHTS:

If you are getting into this stage your loosing the &attle. ake yourself upand start again. The hypnogogic imagery has done its trick< you start toloose logical faculties when this happens. The &est example is this, yourlying in &ed thinking a&out a friend and the hypnogogic imagery starts andyou see your friend+s face. !ou also worked a stressful day so you start toremem&er stocking the shelves at work. /oon you are thinking that you areputting cans of food on the shelves with pictures of your friend on them.

 $nd this all seems perfectly normal. 3ogically it+s not. >ut your logicalself.The part you need in order to &e conscious has &egun a naturally

su&missive state of dormancy towards unconscious sleep.

EAR BARRIER:

hat can you say a&out this, you+re scared shitless when somethinghappens you don+t understand. $nd you stop everything. It is the one thingthat prevents most people from approaching this field of experience. 2earcan work it+s way into all those tactile, hypnogogic fields and if you are

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generally a fearful person then time to get that courage faculty working andweed out your fears. I will &e teaching fear release techniques later on aswell.

SANITY BARRIER:

This is attri&uted to the fear &arrier only that it+s autonomic. It maintainsitself like a reflex. I view it as a part of our consciousness, which governsinformation a&out our physical reality. It keeps out anything that is notrelated to physical reality so we maintain a clear concise grasp of it whilephysically awake. 1owever, since it is &uilt in somewhat to ourconsciousness, it tends to trigger when we are falling asleep. In a placewhere it has no need or function. It+s like a part of you saying, 4I cannotaccept this is happening to me, shut it off.5 $nd it shuts off instantly. ell,letting it work in the dreamstate will only prevent you from dreaming. !ou

have to tell yourself that it is ok, that all these experience and sensationsare normal for the dream reality. $nd it usually accepts that and you moveon.

These six categories are all interrelated. The important thing to take noteof is this. hen you focus your physical sense on the physical world, thereare lots of factors, which keep you in sync with that information. hat youare doing now is taking these senses and turning them inwards. It is a verynatural inversion &ut usually an unconscious one. The only difference isnow you are conscious for the shift so you remem&er the shift.

1ypnogogic Imagery is your sense of sight. The 1ypnogogic /ounds isyour sense of hearing. $nd the tactile sensation is your sense of touch,which encompasses the whole &ody. "othing really fancy ust an inversionof the senses which aid in the manufacturing of your physical reality.

)y techniques all revolve around the already natural process of sleep thatwe have. The only difference is the addition of your consciousness. 1owsimpler can this &e?

/ome miscellaneous factors that might cause ina&ility to function in these

states. !ou+re trying too hard. $n over focused mind will ust keep youawake, ease of the steering wheel and go into cruise control.

rus!r"!ion:

!ou have wanted to experience this so &ad for so long overtime you tryyou get fed up and angry, that isn+t gonna work either. 3ack of sleep,stress, anxiety, depression, drugs and'or alcohol will all work against your

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STAGE ONE:

This stage occurs as soon as you close your eyes. !ou immediately startto change your thought patterns and start to go outofphase. This initialstage is where you start to program your intent: your will and desire.

The Intent is programma&le. It changes anytime you want to do something.-xpect to change it as we progress &ut for now this is an example.

INTENT:

>e very intent on having a lucid dream. *emind yourself that now you aresleeping for the soul purpose of having a fully conscious dream. That youwill &e as conscious as you are now, &ut your &ody will &e fully physicallyasleep. *emind yourself that you are ust letting your &ody sleep.

>e fully aware of any changes as they occur in the first few ourneys intothis state and when you wake up, write down the most important details.hat occurred in the first five minutes of sleep? hat did you experience?(id you remain conscious? hat caused unconsciousness?

The first few trips into this state should &e for you to learn and understandhow your natural sleeping patterns work. They are a good opportunity foryou to learn and study first hand the changes in consciousness that yourmind and &ody progress towards a natural sleep.

 $s you start to relax, ust start to fall asleep normally, let the &ody go andfocus your attention a little so you are not overpowering your mindkeeping yourself awake. Tell yourself exactly what you are doing. !ou areletting your &ody fall asleep, and you are remaining fully awake whileentering a dream. $nd now prepare yourself mentally for all thehypnogogic experiences that may start to &u&&le forward.

 $s soon as you start to get any visual phenomena, this is a good sign.)ake a note that it+s ok, and let it come forward. (on+t ever push it &ack.That pushes you right &ack into stage one. *elax, let it flow like waterthrough you. $s the imagery starts to strengthen, you may start toexperience sounds. The sounds can help guide you into a dream if theyare faint. %ust softly, slowly move towards them, or let them flow. If they getreally loud then great, if you can handle the stereo sound quality that itcreates, know that in seconds you will &e entering a lucid dream.

STAGE T%O:

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-ntering hypnogogic terrain. This is where you can do two things, controlthe imagery or let if ust go it+s natural course. 2or the first while, I want youto get used to having this kind of experience so ust let it flow. This is whereyou really have to let go of &eing physical, let the &ody fall away. %ust makesoft little remarks like, 4I am falling asleep. I am remaining fully conscious, I

will &e fully conscious in the dream, I will remem&er with full consciousclarity, I will &e as conscious as I am now5 $ few little mental affirmationshelp to keep you company along the way. If you ever start to get scaredfrom the imagery'sounds'sensations ust relax, know that nothing can hurtyou and reflect to the realiation that you have fallen asleep hundreds oftimes this time your ust staying conscious for the ride.

To help induce a dream, this is specifically for a dream and not an OO>-.(oing this will not give you an inrange OO>- where you are right outsideyour &ody since it moves you directly to the dreamstate. !ou can control

the hypnogogic imagery here.

 $nyway you like to do it< here are some examples that work for me.

hen the imagery starts, instead of getting lost in it, I start to create in it. Iwould start &y mentally throwing rocks at a door. I keep throwing rocks asa focus imagining fully that I am standing at a door and tossing rocks at it.Over time, I would hear the rocks audi&ly hit the door. $s soon as thesounds start, I know I am seconds away from dreaming and I start to openthe door, and I feel for the handle. If it all feels real, then I open it and walkthrough. *ight into a dreamworld.

I am sitting imagining I am in a car. I turn on the radio and start to listen tomusic. I play a song I enoy. $t first it is all faint in my head, and ustmemory &eing recalled. /oon, the music gets a little louder, and Iencourage it &y turning up the volume kno& on the car. Once the musicgets fully audi&le, I turn the key, start the car and drive right into a dream.

There is a ladder, and I am clim&ing it as I fall asleep. $t first, it+s ust meimagining a ladder< soon I start to imagine the feeling of each step on theladder. I feel my hands gra& the ladder and I start to walk. >efore too long,

I am walking on a ladder and I feel each step of it fully, clearly. I keepwalking upwards and soon I am standing on a perfect ladder in a dream.

These fun little controlled states are important and I encourage them asyou progress into these states comforta&ly. They will clearly guide you intoa dream anytime you desire it. The reason why it is important is &ecauseyou have taken random patterns of thought and turned them into veryclear, controlled environments of your design. It also teaches you good

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dream control techniques for later on when you are in a dream.

STAGE THREE:

The dream. Ok, so you made it this far. !ou are no longer in a physical

&ody, and there is nothing &ut a fully tactile dream in front of you. hat areyou going to do now? $&solutely nothing for the first few tries. *ight now,you are going to map out your consciousness and get a feel for howconscious you are. /ee if you can remem&er what your intent was and seeif you can fulfill that intent. The initial intent should &e to gauge howconscious you are, remem&er the math questions? hat were they? hatdid you remem&er a&out your life? hat time is it? hat is the (ate?3ookaround the dreamstate and make mental notes. (o not get involved withanything in the dream. If some guy named %oe comes walking over andstart to &ug you. Throw up a &ig shield, your &usy getting consciously

&alanced in a dream.

I am stressing the importance of the logical faculties in the dreamstate.This is so important &ecause it will help you map out every aspect ofyourself clearly. hile you are in a full dream, make sure it is a dreamworldand not /T$A- TO hypnogogic imagery. This should &e a full tactileenvironment where&y you can walk, run, fly freely and touch, taste, smell,see and hear clearly. There should &e no question that you are in a dreamreality.

The first few runs should &e for purely the logical part of you. It should &e

so clear to that part that it knows it has to function as it does in physical sothat you can &e here.!ou will thank me for insisting that you have logicala&ilities &ecause not only do they create your consciousness, they alsocreate the most splendid dreams you+d ever imagine. *emem&er all thoseimportant details in life such as the taste of chocolate, the feel of silk, thecurves of a circle, the shape of a letter? 1ow a&out all that clear space&efore you, the roads, the tree+s the sky? This logical part of you maps allthat out and separates it into the categories where they &elong. $nd in adream, it can pick at details and help you refine the quality of the dream&ecause it knows logically how things should act'think or feel. $nd how

a&out answering questions? ell, ask yourself in the dream how consciousyou are? Try and remem&er your name? *un a series of questions andanswer them all comforta&ly. These will all indicate how clear you are, howconscious you are. Once satisfied, cut loose and control that dream.

0hange the sky to what ever you desire, fly for a while, play freely in thedream, and gauge how conscious you are. /hould at any point you start to

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feel outof&alance gra& a hold of something in the dream and remindyourself you are dreaming, you create the dream, you are conscious. If youare loosing consciousness, hang in there as long as you can. !our &odymay &e waking up and soon you will &e awake. It should take a little whileto get used to this dream reality.

EEEE I)PO*T$"T "OT- EEEEEhen you are in a dream, interact withpeople as if they were people. If you are approached &y some person whoseems Eintelligent, asks you questions, talk to them and get to know them.(on+t treat dreams as purely su&ective material &ecause Ethere is moregoing on when you are lucid. >ut for now, get used to interacting withpeople making notes particularly of their E&ehavior towards you and howthey react to questions. This will all help with shared dreaming.EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

Once you can comforta&ly lucid dream, you have all the keys to all thedoors of which I speak. !our limits are you and your &eliefs. /kills you canuse to &uild that up are a&ound in your waking physical world. Try funexperiments as you fall asleep such as eating an apple or some fruit youenoy. $s you fall asleep, try to see how real you can get this in your mind.If you can mimic the actual physical event with clarity, that shows what kindof control you are creating for yourself. I fall asleep constantly to internalmusic. I start to play a song I enoy until my thoughts &ecome the vocals,the guitar rifts, the drums, the key&oard all effortlessly flowing from me intoan a&yss. /ince I have this freedom, it is so easy for me to lucid dream< it+ssecond nature now.

SHARED DREAMING

If you haven+t progressed in the lucid dream realities at all, don+t even&egin to try to consciously share dreams &ecause you need to &e lucidfirst. /haring dreams is totally easy and fun with other people who are alsolucid at the same time. !ou may never have known we share dreams &utthis helps you &y talking a&out its reality. 1owever, it+s a naturally occurringphenomena and easy to attain once lucid in a dream.

In stage one we focus on I"T-"T. The intent sets us up for recall once weare in a dream. !ou have to program this intent to share dreams with whoyou desire too, and then when you are in the dream, you have to recall thatintent and attempt to fulfill it.

STAGE ONE:

>e intent on having a fully lucid dream using the same intent to achieve the

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lucid dream. Include, 4I am allowing myself to participate in a shared dreamwith friend'familly. I am allowing myself to naturally tune into where theyare in the (reamstate and I will &e there with them fully conscious andclear as I am now.5

This is where some tricks are handy.

STAGE T%O:

Instead of trying to find the person, ust go to the person as you fall asleepin stage two. Imagine them and let the hypnogogic imagery fill out the restof the details.

If you enter the dream and they are not there< you can try a fewtechniques.

STAGE THREE:

Once fully in the dream, run through your consciousness stages to ensureyou are fully conscious. *ecall your intent and then either ust phase tothat person. Or if you find phasing hard, imagine a door, talk out loud inthat dream your desire to &e with this person and open the door to them.1opefully you were successful and the door opens to where they are. !oursu&conscious self located them and directed you to them. !ou can even

 ust yell and scream for them until they come. >ut I like a littleprofessionalism so going towards them &y intuitively guiding yourself there

is the most optimal choice and takes practice. I am still practicing this sinceit is a delicate skill.

Once you find them, then comes the even harder part. $re they conscious? $sk them a few questions? (o they answer clearly? (o they act in &iarreways to the question? If you are with another dreamer it is important tonote a few &ehavior patterns of an unconscious dreamer. They do not havelogical faculties intact so questions cannot &e easily answered for them, alot of the time this causes fear, confusion, repetitive answers, ram&ling,anger. %ust &e patient. !our friend if this is them pro&a&ly is there with you,

the chances of them remem&ering is next to null. >ut that potential is at ahigh if they are acting in what I call sleeper+s grog.

If they respond positively, then there is even &etter chance that they havesome logical attri&utes functioning and can remem&er. /o this is great,take time to ask a few questions like their name Feven if you know themGask where they are? FThis can really screw them up if they don+t know theyare dreaming, or they ust might give some reasona&le answerG, ask them

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if they know they are dreaming? F$gain this question drops a &om& so itcan trigger sleeper+s grog, if they answer yes continueGIf they say they aredreaming, ask them if they are fully conscious. $gain if they say yes and ifthey ask you questions there is a very high pro&a&ility that you are sharinga dream and &oth of you are lucid and will remem&er.

Take careful mental notes of the dream environment< point out details toyour friend. If you are good at creating in the dream, create an o&ect forthem to hold. Tell them to remem&er it. Aive them key phrases toremem&er such as key words, num&ers, ect. If you are &oth taking thiscourse then you should &oth know that it is important to keep a close log of these experiences for verification. If you are in a group of two or moredreamers, even &etter. It opens such doors for research and progression inthese states.

hen you wake up, write it all down, make note of every detail you canremem&er. -specially the key words, o&ects, phrases, setting and eventsof the dream. hen you meet your friend prefera&le soon and that day,FThe sooner the &etter=i.e. phone them minutes after waking like I doG $skthem if they dreamt. $sk them what they remem&er first. If it has nothing todo with your dream don+t worry. $sk them if they remem&er having a dreamwith you in it? That sometimes sparks a memory. If they say yes &ut can+tremem&er. $sk them if they remem&er an o&ect you gave them? If so,what was it? Tell them what it was if they fail to provide an answer, it stillmight trigger memory. The important thing is to let them tell you what youdreamt. Then you can tell them what they dreamt. It is to help verify for youthe reality of shared dreams. >e tactful and clinical when asking questionsas not to give them the answers to key points of that dream rather, guidethem to it if they are mainly unconscious of the dreams. If they are drawing&lanks, then at least tell them the dream, even if they have no consciousmemory of it, and you still shared it, it+s &etter to tell them, later on theymay remem&er which will only help them in the future for more shareddreams. The &est ones are when you &oth are lucid, and &oth have clearmemory and verify it with the written testimonies.

PERSONIICATION O THE DREAMSTATE

hy do we not usually share dreams? It is too simple really. It all comesdown to the H8th century logical mind. e think we cannot share dreams,we think dreams are su&ective, we &elieve dreams are purely of our ownwill and design. hen I have shared dreams, I noticed that sometimes wewould have 88J accuracy, &ut in areas where the person I was sharingthe dream with lost control, they entered sleeper+s grog and they end up

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having a different dream from the one I was o&serving.

Personification is like a huge mental filter< it acts like a hallucination in thedreamstate. The person is so a&solved in their emotional, mental statesthey literally proect their fantasy over top of you. -verything you say, do,

think towards them gets distorted through this defensive filter they put up.It is usually triggered &y fear. It is quite common. To disarm it, you have toliterally calm the person down, get their attention and talk them through thedistortions. $lways lock on to the target dreamer &y holding their armswhen like this. It helps to keep them with you, and they tend to respond tothat a little &etter. $nd I mean, hold their arms in a nice, friendly manner.

 $ny acts of hostility will only cause more of this filter to come forward.hat I do is hold their hand &ecause it helps keep me in the dreamstate asan anchor, and it anchors them to me. Then I ust ask simple questions, tellthem they are dreaming, and tell them I am a friend. Treat them as I would

here in physical. ith as much kindness, respect and friendship that Icould. If they are your friend then you kind of know their interests, createsome of them there for them. Personification goes hand in hand withsleeper+s grog. $nd again sleeper+s grog is a slang term my friend and Icame up with &ecause we share so many dreams we know the state all toowell. /leeper+s grog is ust the logical part of us in a dormant state during asleeping cycle.

Once you have shared enough dreams to verify it to yourself and friends, itis time to move on if you haven+t already. $nd I don+t expect you in the firstmonth to start having lucid dreams, &ut as soon as you do you can haveshared dreams and the other effects so I am not too worried. /ome of youwill have lucid dreams almost immediately depending on how motivated,inspired and excited you are a&out it. If you are uninterested, unmotivated,skeptical then you+re pro&a&ly wasting your time until you come around tothe possi&ilities that you have around you. (oesn+t mean you won+t havethese experiences, you ust may not want to.

If you have esta&lished the reality that you can lucid dream. $nd you haveesta&lished the reality that you can share dreams with enough personalexperience, personal evidence then you are ready to start progressing into

more areas.

LUCID PRECOGNITIVE DREAMS

This area is very new to me< I urge some caution when entering this state.It will change you forever and it is more likely that you will &e outof&ody toget here &ut quickly you will realie if you have shared dreams that &y now

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you are already outthere somewhere. This is a spectrum where yourdreams come true in the literal sense. /o going here consciously, andmapping this out consciously is only one step into the greater aspects ofwho you are. $ ourney here, even once is enough to change your lifeforever. I am cautioning you on it, it may ust scare the hell out of you as it

did me. >ut I love it and it+s so damn fun now that I can+t stop &eing 4there5

 $gain, we have to look at the I"T-"T in /T$A- O"-. !our I"T-"Tshould &e this: I am allowing myself to fully consciously have a 3@0I(P*-0OA"ITIK- (*-$). I am allowing myself to enter that field ofconsciousness where P*-0OA"ITIK- (*-$)/ come from. I will &e fullyconscious and know clearly that this is my intent and desire.

@se /T$A- TO to get you through all the hypnogogic imagery and into/T$A- T1*--.

In /T$A- T1*-- after testing out your level of consciousness, I want youto focus only on that intent. )ake it clear. $nd shut your eyes, shut downall signals from the dreamstate and let go, move into that field &y intuitivelydriving yourself with the desire to &e there. %ust let go and move towardsthat source. 3et everything pass you &y, let time go, let space go, let it allgo. It is a &ig melt down for a second. hen you arrive, ust allow yourselfto experience it for a while with no alterations. Then as you progress, makevery su&tle changes and progress slowly. The only truth of you &eing4there5 is when it occurs 4here5 physically some time later. /o have yournotes ready and go &ack to them and mark down when you were 4there5 in

that precognitive field. )ap it out and master it. $ few ourneys+ theresuccessfully should &e enough to start you on that growth towards sharingin the 0reative Process I have talked a&out.

!ou can share 3@0I( P*-0OA"ITIK- (*-$)/ so keep an eye out forthat possi&ility as well. I am still researching this field so all I can do is tellyou it is there and that you have to focus on it while 3ucid. The rest is youtaking yourself there. >ut understand we all go there unconsciously like wedo our other dreams. This time your conscious, that is all. Aood luck.

OUT&O&BODY ROM A LUCID DREAM

ell, if you haven+t already realied that 3ucid (reams are 4second &ody5outof&odies then I have tipped you off that you are outof&ody whenlucid. The only thing here is you are in the dreaming spheres and not nearthe physical reality where your &ody is. !ou can shift downwards to your&ody, &ut I don+t recommend it, you are on a little &it of a higher level at thismoment and I always say move upwards not &ackwards.

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 $ll you have to do is realie that not only are you dreaming in /T$A-T1*--, you+re outof&ody as well when you are lucid. That should usthelp you tune into that reality enough.

OUT&O&BODY EXPERIENCE

To achieve the outof&ody, you should at least have mastered luciddreaming somewhat. The OO>- triggers clearly when your &ody starts tohave vi&rations, or some tactile signal. !ou will not shift into a dream,however you will feel like you are in &ed and when you move, it feels realexcept that you are not physical.

2ollow the same technique for lucid dreams, &ut don+t use the hypnogogicimagery to guide you into a controlled dream, rather, ust let it all washthrough you and relax.

STAGE ONE:

The intent is instead of a 3@0I( (*-$), replace it with O@TO2>O(!. Itshould go something like this:

INTENT:

I am allowing myself to have a fully conscious OutOf>ody -xperience, Iwill &e fully conscious as I am now. I will remem&er clearly and in fullconscious detail my experience while in the experience and when I awake

physically.

STAGE T%O:

3et the hypnogogic imagery pass through you. 3et the &ody fall naturallyasleep, maintain focus and remind yourself you are going outof&ody. 3etgo and let the &ody fall to sleep.

Once the &ody drops into sleep and you feel the vi&rations you are prettymuch there. $ny physical tactile sensation indicates the &ody is sleeping.%ust relax and gently )ove to the left or right. *oll softly and slowly.

STAGE THREE:

hen you are out, stand up and investigate &y looking at your &ody. /tudyyour surroundings. *un the test for consciousness. $nd run your intent.

CONTROLLING PHYSICAL MATTER

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This is done &oth while you are 4there5 in the precognitive field and here inthe physical manifestation of that field. This is where all layers &ecomeone. If you are interested in mindovermatter then you have to accept youcan &y sheer use of applied thought change'form'control it. "o skepticismneed apply. !ou have to ust 4(o5 it. There is not try. There is no fail. !ou

will either do it or you wont.)y we& page onhttp:''www.personal.img.net'iwilson has an evidence page where I amshowing a small potential of mindovermatter. I am not doing it &ecause I&elieve I can, I am doing it from controlling the precognitive &and &efore Icome here to experience the end result. 0heck the evidence page for it+sprogressive photos and testimonies of this. I am doing this so you candraw the connection. )ake that connection &ecause I cannot &e you anddo it for you. !ou have to take that step.

NATURAL BIOLOGICAL ENERGY IELDS

The &ody has a natural field of electromagnetic energy we call the &iomagnetic field. "ew $ger+s call it the $ura. It is a naturally occurring coil ofelectromagnetic fields that surround the &ody. Our &ody is electrical, andall the molecular vi&rations, chemical reactions, and changes the &ody hasradiates outwards in this &iomagnetic field. e can sense this field ofenergy. It is visual once you train your eyes to see it. The easiest way tosee it and feel it is this:Aet a &lack &ackground. (im the lights so that thereis minimal illumination. Take &oth your hands and hold two fingers out, therest closed in a fist. 1ave the fingers exactly one and B inches apart. (onot look at the fingers, &ut focus at the middle of the fingers. 1ave yourhands a&out one and B feet away from your face and at the &lack&ackground. )ove the fingers slowly up and down, away from each other,closer to each other. The field is magnetic so the rays and lines moveaccordingly to that motion. If you stick out two fingers on one hand, andone finger on the other L B inch apart then it forms a triangle of rays.Aet used to seeing this. (o it with a group of people so that you all can seeit.ith one hand, look at all four finger tips and move them 65 from yourface up and down looking three inches from the tip Fleft or rightG not&ackwards or forwards so that you are on the same horion plane as therays. )ove the hand &y tilting the wrist up and down and watch the rays.

"ow take your hands and move them slowly together and apart. 2eel thechanges in the magnetic fields as they move. The sensations I amexplaining feel magnetic it+s the only la&el that I can ascri&e to them. Takeone hand, form a 4claw5 shape and drag the claws up one arm slowlya&out H5 away. >e aware of the sensations. "ow take one hand, make afist and send a flowing energy into that hand. 2orm a &all of this energy.

 $mplify it. 2ocus on that precognitive field and draw it from 4there5. (raw if

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from that source. $nd make it heavy, thick, full of density. Place in afriend+s hand. 3et them tell you what they feel.Take your hand< place it on aslant facing downward at a 7Cdegree angle in the shape of a knife hand.1ave your friend place his'her palm upward underneath your hand. 2ocuson that precognitive field. (raw that energy from that source. 3et it flow,

make it cold like ice, make it feel like the coldest of waters. )ake itnum&ing, make it icy, make it freeing. /end that into your friend+s hand.

 $mplify it &y drawing it in from that precognitive field. (o this for no longerthan two minutes and let your friend descri&e the effects.Try hot, warm,electrical, change it all around from that precognitive field. Try and formshapes in their hands &y visualiing the desired shape and let those raysyou are emitting etch them in.That is all I am doing. 1opefully you will havesome success as you progress in this area.

THOUGHT MANIESTATION

This is all done while you are awake, and relaxed. Ao outside, and enoythe day. Aet in a really happy, free, spirited mood. 3et go of all stress,anxiety and dou&ts. alk for a &it, make sure you are clear on what youwant. This is very simple, &ut complex in the same. It is easy for a clearmind that opens that channel from here to that precognitive source. It can&e achieved &y a simple focused awareness. The only thing is it takes timefor it to manifest so the amount of time it takes is how much timelessnessyou applied to the thought./tart on simple things< &egin to master thecoincidences in your life. (on+t rush any of this. It+s not a )c(onalds selfserve, you+ll find that rushing it can &e too overpowering. Pace yourselfout.Take a desired experience, and state it as such. I want to experiencethis: 4/imple desire5./ame energy we are charging with people this time,make it vi&rant, pure, clear, and outside of time and space. /urround thatthought with that energy and have the intent of the thought to manifesthere in this physical layer, in this 4now5. $nd let it go.3etting go is soimportant that is why we use very simple things at first. Things you don+tusually think much a&out &ecause they slip past the filters that &lock thisfrom occurring. Our psychological selfdefeating filters I like to call them.

The formula is simple

MThought N -motionFenergyG ' 3etting Ao (esired -xperience.

/tart with very simple things that would seem coincidental at first.

2ind a lost item.)eet an old friend.1ave a funny experience.2ind Q8.88.*eceive some funny gift.

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 $s you get used to it.!our (esired 0areer.!our (esired -ducation.!our(esired 3ifestyle.

Reep getting used to thoughts creating reality as a form of communication.(o it while in physical and while in the nonphysical. It is all a progressive

 ourney and it takes time. $ll we have is time. /o enoy it. !ou will &eforever< I ust want you to come to that realiation on your own accord.Aood 3uck, I will &e refining and adding too these techniques as this is aprogressive course which means as we have even more clearer, focusedways of achieving desired experiences, we work together to achieve them.

 $ 0ourse on 0onsciousness Part 2ive Is up and 0oming.It entails: 1igher0onsciousness, 3ove, (rugs, (ealing with 2ear, (epression, $nger,

 $ddiction, 0learing and an assortment of misclanious items. These can all&e done through dreaming and OO>-+s.

Con'scious'ness. The state or condition of &eing conscious.H. $ sense of oneSs personal or collective identity, especially the complex of attitudes,&eliefs, and sensitivities held &y or considered characteristic of anindividual or a group.9a. /pecial awareness or sensitivity.9&. $lertness toor concern for a particular issue or situation.7. In psychoanalysis, theconscious.

0onsciousness is who we are. ith the systematic &eliefs we attain in our

human experience, the fundamental to all of this is our consciousness andthe perceptions we have while consciously aware. ithin this course, weare going to discuss a series of conscious experiences and techniques inwhich to attain a level of waking consciousness that we attri&ute to oursense of whom we are as consciousness. $nd then apply this normalwaking consciousness in states where most of our consciousness residesin unconscious states. This will &e a&out thought, and I will simply &e hereto share and express ideas relating to thought. The &enefits? It all comesdown to refining your a&ility to communicate... nothing more. In thepretense of this statement it may seem odd that I would say

communication &ut understand this will &e heavily covered in this course.0ommunication is the key for sharing our thoughts and ideas with otherconsciousness. 0urrently the most dominant intelligence system wecommunicate with is other humans. Others we usually do not associate ashaving intelligence, are things such as, the family pet or even plants. $ndcommunication with these apparently lesser &eings tend to &e look uponas silly or nonsensical, however communication with them occurs none

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theless. e can start this course focusing on what matters most: oura&ility to perceive, analye, understand and compute information in whatever form it comes in, while we are consciously aware of that information.It would &e my honor to introduce you too, or reintroduce you to yourselfas a consciousness system. $nd to further my view of you, you are a

system of consciousness that is also a reality. !ou are definitely more than ust a human. 41uman5 has to do with the physical representation of you.That part of you which governs this physical reality you exist in. I assureyou if you haven+t realied it all ready, that human part of you is exactlythat, a part of a much larger personality, a superconsciousness. In thisapproach to consciousness, I would like to start &y focussing on somemaor aspects of our existence that needs attention, the 0onscious@niverse, and our a&ility to communicate within it. !ou will find that you arein a constant dialog with much hidden unknowns, which I will attempt tohelp you realie if you haven+t already.

THE CONSCIOUS UNIVERSE

Take a look around you. 3ook at the room you are in, the computer whereyou sit while you read this. >reath the air and feel all the particles fill yourlungs. !ou are &reathing< air rushes into your lungs to fill your &ody with aconstant supply of lifegiving gaseous nourishment. >ecome aware ofemotions you feel now. If you have some food, take a &ite and savor thesensations that your mouth tastes. It+s all very physical is it not? The touchof your fingers to the mouse or key&oard, the itch you might have on theexterior of your skin. 3ook around and feel and know how muchinformation is in your current location. Think a&out how many &illion rays of light it takes to travel to your eye ust to make one key on your key&oard.Think a&out all the millions of cells it takes to tell your finger what that keyfeels like. 0ountless and countless num&ers of data is &eing filtered in &yyour five physical senses. $nd all of it, &eing effortlessly processed, andpieced together instantly &y your mind. %ust think for that one millisecondof data you ust perceived that it all came from nothing more than largegestalts of physical matter. $nd in this glo&, you somehow managed tomentally draw forth a sense of what you deem physical matter reality. Tomathematically calculate all those minute signals that your mind is &eing

inputted with &y your physical senses, then on top of that to calculate allyour emotions, thoughts and feelings a&out that data. I speculate, and thisgoes in to a &ig estimate, it would take a computer approximately H days

 ust to achieve in a millisecond what most take for granted in what theirmind can perceive in one instant. That the computer must calculate thedata, recreate in &inary form all the tiny sensory pieces of information andidentifies with every o&ect, every sensation in a clear, &alanced manner.

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 $nd H days I feel is a nice estimate. $ computer could never achieve whatthe human mind has naturally occurring with today+s current technology.)y goal is to continue to impress upon you the power of your mind.ithout question, your mind knows how to process all this data that yoursenses tell you and how it effortlessly generates a holographic replication

&ased on your perception. !our mind then computes the data received andproects around you, a mirror image of the physical universe you exist in.!our very reality that you function in is totally dependent on your a&ility toperceive it, and recreate it within your own consciousness. $ very simpleinput from your senses, and output from your mind. Reep this creativeprocess as simple as that. e can+t even &egin to imagine the fact that ontop of interpreting this information, you have the a&ility to generate anemotional response to that data. The emotional response can &e an arrayof sensations such as understanding, confusion, fear, happiness and thislist goes on. "ot to mention, while reading this, your mind can &e thinking

in several directions at once, analying, hypothesiing, agreeing with, andarguing a&out many aspects of this document. $nd still you stand perfectly&alanced in this mae of information knowing that something is occurringoutside your physical self. 3et+s take a good look at this thing we callphysical matter. 0urrent scientific knowns and theory tells us that all thephysical matter we exist in is nothing more than countless num&ers ofminute particles adhering together &y some simple laws of attraction.Aravity, magnetism, energy all &onds together when a particle seeks unionwith another particle. If we take the molecules that form matter and &reakthem in half, we release nuclear energy. /tored energy that has somehow

changed in frequency, density to form the matter it exists in. That energy mass times the speed of light squared. I+ll pick on -instein for his theory ofrelativity in relation to the physical universe.)atter equates that it hassomehow &ecome matter &ecause energy has transformed in such a waythat it has &ecome dense and this density create a pattern &y which thatparticle of matter acts. It+s pro&a&ly a little more than ust density since theparticle is vi&rating generating a resonate wave of frequency. e have twomaor elements working within the particle, it+s resonating a wave Fmuchlike a molecular soundG, and it+s radiating energy that is released when theparticle is in decay. I will treat the radiation as a form of light energy on thelarge &andwidth of energy that particles of light exist on.If we release thisparticle from it+s field of density and return it to a singularity. The particle&ecomes pure energy. $nd if all particles return to a singularity, they&alance out into the same energy. $ll a particle is, is energy functioning ina pattern of frequencies and densities where &y those vi&rational levelsdictates how that particle should act according to physics and science."onetheless, it is still ust energy in a multitude of possi&le arrays thatmake up the &uilding &locks of physical matter. It is my hypothesis is that

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all physical matter came from a standing field of energy where if they wereto return to that vi&rational state, they all meld into one solid frequencywave of pure energy.2or a more metaphorical view of this analogy ofenergy, take a drop of water returning to the ocean. The volume of waterthat the small droplet adds simply a&sor&s the likewise energy into a

massive ocean of energy. If all a particle is, is energy that has somehowdropped from this standing wave, it+s descent into the heavier areas ofdensity, gravity and mass simply implies that the energy that the particlehas come from is what ultimately the particle will return to. /o no matterwhat state of mass and density the energy has entered, it will inevita&lydecay giving off it+s stored energy until it has moved &ack to a universalsingularity. This does not mean that the particle ceased to exist, it merelymeans it returned to its original state as singular energy. -nergy simplymoves from one state to another in an unending infinite system of &alanceand form. I like to call this movement, 4Transformational Patterns of

-nergy5.If we have energy transforming into one pattern to the next, we&egin to see immediately an intelligence system. I say this &ecause assoon as a pattern develops in the apparently chaotic mixture of universalforces, the pattern is universal therefor repetitious. Take hydrogen forexample. 1ydrogen is a particle of energy that when it reaches a certainmass, vi&ration and density=that energy &ecomes hydrogen. 1ydrogen isa&undant and found throughout the universe. It is a &eautiful particle thatcan only exist when energy has entered the conditions where &y 1ydrogenexists. It is a pattern of energy that the energy &ecomes, and it willultimately &e the pattern that the energy will leave. -nergy moves on from

particle to particle, ion to ion, antimatter to matter. $ccelerate the time ittakes to create the particle and watch it decay you will see that theessence of that particle is unending and eternal, forever moving seekingthe next pattern &y which it moves.e are all part of this same energy.1owever when energy collects and enters into the laws of cause andeffect. e see how it &egins to take on some new amaing quality. Inmuch larger, more complex patterns of energy, consciousness emerges.Taking the entire human &ody as nothing more than a complex pattern ofenergy, the result is a pattern of energy that is selfaware. This selfawareness is the moment where we &egin.It is us, it is you who reads this,and I who wrote it. e are nothing more than the sum of &illions and&illions of particles all governed &y laws of attraction and repulsion causeand effect, working together to create us. 1ere is the gem< is energy at themolecular level some how aware that is exists? (oes a particle like1ydrogen, which is a complex pattern of energy at a molecular level, knowthat it exists? $t the heart of the molecule lies it+s nucleus. $nd in a cell, thenucleus represents some sort of &iological computer. !ou can even call thenucleus of a cell a cellular &rain. )y question then is, does it have a sense

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of it+s self? (oes a molecule a&ide &y the same pattern that a morecomplex pattern of energy does and &egins to have selfawareness at amolecular level? (oes it communicate? Is there a molecular language? eknow that cells communicate and share information. Our working &rain is aperfect example of cells doing the thinking for us ingroups. /omewhere in

these fields of energy lies consciousness. Is it the result of energygathering mass, contri&uting to a group consciousness, which &ecomesthe overall consciousness for the sum of all those parts? (oes everystage of matter create a new state of consciousness for that energy? (oesa cat have a cat consciousness? 1umans have a human consciousness?0onsciousness &eing one+s awareness of one+s self.If you say no, thenthink a&out this argument. !ou very sense of yourself is nothing more thanthe sum total of all your millions of parts. !ou are nothing more than &illionsof cells that creates a group consciousness. That group consciousnesscreates you. !ou are wholly dependent on these particles of energy to

work in a pattern that creates the human form, which gives you a humanconsciousness. $nd there must &e a mathematical equation to calculatehow much of a consciousness you are &ased on your molecular mass if allwe are is the sum of all these microscopic parts.0onsciousness works ontwo parts, individualistic and group. $n individual cell should therefor havean individual consciousness. $nd should this cell split to form a complexorganism, then the two cell organism should have a two cell groupconsciousness. Two individual cells grouping together, sharing their totalityto create a two celled organism. The more cells added to the organism, themore the organism will attain a larger group consciousness. $nd &ecause

all of this is ust energy, functioning, as a collective pattern we call a cell,then the energy itself must have individual characteristics that give theformation of consciousness to the organism that it &ecomes."o matter howwe start to equate anything when we view consciousness, we have to startto see that consciousness is the result of energy functioning at veryspecific patterns of mass. That energy somehow has consciousness,which is visi&le, when it forms a human mind. The pro&lem with that1uman mind is it tends to &e selfengrossed in it+s own a&ility to think,perceive and view the exterior universe it exists in, that on the most part,all other possi&ilities of anything else &ut human having consciousnessseems nonsensical. >ut all living organisms have a consciousness. It maynot &e a human consciousness, &ut the energy pattern that is a cat, is stilla cat. 1uman consciousness gives &irth to human thought and humanideas. >ut the human form is still a comparatively small amount of energycompared to that of the entire universe.3et+s hypothesis this then< if energyhas consciousness irrelevant of whatever pattern it is in, then the energyhas some sense of itself as energy. $nd if energy enters a state where&y it&ecomes a complex particle, then that particle has a consciousness of

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itself &eing that particle. $nd if consciousness is grouped &y mass, thenthe more mass you have, the more of a group consciousness is formed &ythe larger amounts of energy forming that larger mass. To cut the equationshort, energy is selfaware.)olecular consciousness, cellularconsciousness, plant, animal, human consciousness, social

consciousness, glo&al consciousness, the list goes on until we reach auniversal consciousness. The universal consciousness &eing the sum of allit+s parts. 0onsciousness is the result of complex patterns of energy, orenergy as consciousness. "ow that I &ored you with physical matter realityand how all matter in whatever form is energy and energy somehowcreates or has consciousness. e can now start to look at a maorfundamental characteristic that we all share. e exist as a consciousness.That comes from our &ody &eing human, and that human form is nothingmore than an organied intelligence system created on part somehow &yenergy functioning in a multitude of ways. 3et+s get &ack to our a&ility to

perceive reality.Imagine your senses interacting with an o&ect. !our eyesreceive information from a group of particles in the form of radiating lightenergy that is &ouncing &ack from the particle+s collective mass. !our earsreceive sound in the form of sound energy assuming a sound is made fromthe o&ect. !our sense of smell and taste responding to a chemical reactionwith the particles given off from the o&ect. $nd your sense of touchtranslating the contact with the o&ect revealing its texture. hen all is saidand done, the five physical senses have all &ut interpreted a glo& of denseenergy in five specific areas. $ll five senses act as nothing more thanenergy filters. !our senses filter in what essential energy the o&ect gives

off so that you have some sense of this o&ect as a human consciousness.as that ust a form of molecular communication? (id that o&ect literallyspeak to you in taste, touch, color, scent and sound that it was indeed theo&ect you perceive? Is the sum of all those parts required to make theapple you might eat in a day, radiating to you as energy it+s existence as anapple? (id you ust take in a part of that appleSs consciousness at amolecular level when you ate it? $nd now it &ecame a part of you to sharein your collective consciousness? There is a relationship here. $relationship &etween two organiations of patterned energy. One human,the other apple. >oth are having an effect on each other+s reality. !ou getto eat something tasty, and the apple gets to &ecome a part of your mass.To a human o&server, did you express to them in a nonver&al way thatyou ate an apple? If they saw you, they would not even question thisunnoticed language of form, &ut they would understand fully what you ate.>eing human and assuming you &oth speak the same language you couldtell them, 41ey I ust ate this apple;5 >y o&servation, without even needinga ver&al communication they would know. The universal language ofenergy and form already told that to the o&server. Taking a few steps &ack,

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and understanding how we communicate. The physical senses literally4talk5 to the environment in which it interacts. The language? Threedimensional timespace realities screaming its current state of form,vi&ration, frequency and patterns. One small pattern added to anotherpattern to form a more complex pattern that forms the reality you exist in.

 $ll these patterns which work through a series of change thus creating thesense of time. 0ould the universe literally &e talking &ack to you in waysthat go unnoticed &ecause it+s so right in front of us we never realied thesimple language of existence that carries us forward in time.-nergy atsome level or pattern must have consciousness. e are definitely a part of that consciousness. e as an o&server of this collective pattern of energywe call our reality must understand that no matter what we think or &elieve,we still are a su&ective o&server interacting in some field of patternedenergy. That this earth and the universe that &irthed it is nothing more thanan energy system.The mental universe as I see it, is not the physical

universe we are accustomed to existing in. *ather, it is what your mind isdoing naturally right now. 0ollecting data, processing it and the output isyour personal reality &ased on your a&ility to perceive. hat you get is onlywhat you can perceive. /o all the other frequencies of light that your eyescan+t see do not exist for you, &ut let me tell you this much. There is somuch more that you don+t physically see &ecause you have no physicalsenses to perceive it. Physical perception functions on a &andwidth offrequency. There is a limited range of sensory perception that we have asa human consciousness in order to gather ust enough information fromthis massive data house we call the universe. Information then is limited to

ours minds &eing su&ective and locked in a &ody that can only tell ourmind what it perceives. It is no wonder why we haven+t &een a&le to get tofar past our limited perception to see past our physical senses. e are atthe mercy of our conscious perception. To further complicate this, theuniverse you call your reality is nothing more than your own mentallygenerated creation &ased on sensory data, and processed &y this supercomputer we call the human &rain. $nd most of us take all this for grantedthat we have a&ility like this at all.If you think for one second that you havenothing to do with the reality you exist in, think again. If you somehowcould not properly communicate with the externalied universe, you+dpro&a&ly end up dead, or in some mental institution. $ &reakdown ofcognitive faculties governing perception could cause distorted information,a loss of your a&ility to interpretation and communicate with fellow human+sthe disarray of your mismanaged mind should you ever have a mental&reakdown. ant more proof that it is your mind that creates your reality?Take a massive amount of psychedelic drugs such as mescaline, 3/( ormagic mushrooms to the point that you have tactile hallucinations. Or talkto a person who has a mental disorder causing hallucination. Of course I

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don+t recommend taking drugs to prove this point, &ut it is truly said thatwhat your mind creates is reality for you.If you ever hear the murmuring ofsome of the newage thinking that might crop up once and a while incasual conversation, the common &elief is, 4e create our own reality.5ell, stepping away from a system of faith into a system of science we

have no choice &ut to create our reality. The mental picture you have ofreality, in the splendid threedimensional way you perceive it comesthrough a filtration system called you physical senses and the outcome ofthat information is your conscious a&ility to proect and externalie yourmental interpretation of reality. Therefor the reality you exist in is exclusiveto you. $nd as individual as your handwriting, we all can read what youwrite, Fwell, hopefully at leastG, &ut your handwriting hints at yourindividuality. !ou are your own reality. That is a fundamental law of one+sown existence. *eality cannot exist for you if you yourself do not exist.-very aspect of your life is a reflection of your individuality and how you as

a reality system interact with other systems of reality. e in fact have apersonalied reality, which is the sum of our perceptions taken over aperiod of time and within our personal development carrying us forwardtowards a much larger whole.If we did not have personal reality, we wouldnot &e a person and who knows what we would &e. >ut were human andthe human experience is a su&ective one where &y you gather informationand create from it. Thinking a&out this, understanding that you arenaturally generating a reality &ased on sensory perception=let+s take alook into another reality that has not ties to this physical one.

PERSONAL REALITY

Take some time to visualie an apple. 0lose your eyes and imagine thisapple as clearly as you can, have it move and &ounce in your imagination.>ite the apple in your mind and taste the apple. Imagine eating it andfeeling the soft fruit in your mouth, as it+s sweet flavor pours over yourtongue. Then let go, and go wild with your imagination, live a fantasyperhaps magical and free. )ay&e there is something you daydream a&outon a daily &asis, a good stress relieving fantasy=explore it, feel it. Rnowon top of ust processing data from a physical universe, you are constantlycreating with your imagination. )ore so, when you dream at night.If you

are fairly good at visualiation, even &etter, at tactile visualiation then agood descriptive paragraph should trigger some very positive signals fromyour mind. $nd if you relax and em&race your imagination you will find thatyou can partially or wholly replicate what you experience in normaleveryday physical reality. The human mind comes accompanied with thisimagination. This creative part of us that directs our minds in areas that thisworld fails to offer us.(reams are generally composed of thoughts and

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emotions &eing expressed. There is little that I have read on dreams thatgive them the kind of credit they deserve &ut dreams are a good way for usto &reak down the fact that a mental process has an a&ility to produce aenvironment in which it expresses itself. )ore importantly, yourenvironment where you express you. $nd this again is an effortless

expression for human consciousness.(reams do not compose anyphysical matter, &ut if you have tactile dreams then you can relate to this. $fully sensory tactile dream shares the same common characteristics of ournormal physical reality. That is, o&ects have shape, form and color. Theycan even have taste, smell and texture. The environment can have heat,cold, wind, etc. !ou can interact with the environment. If lucid, change theenvironment. !et no physical matter is involved in that environment. "olaws, which govern us here, need apply. It is a construction of your su&conscious self and your conscious self. Primarily, it is a form of thinkingthat we seem to over look in today+s society. Perhaps to random or chaotic

for most to give credit to. >ut dreams nonetheless can &e as real and asconcrete as physical reality. That all depends on the dreamer who has thedream.e are going to cover a lot a&out dreaming in this course. (reamswill not &e ignored and they will &e given a new level of credit that thedream deserves and not the mindlessness that most seem to treat them ashaving. (reams are multifacetted. !ou can have an array of different typesof dreams< the most common &eing a fantasy &ased dream, or an anxietydream.e need to look at two types of dreams, the su&ective dream thatyou think is su&ective and exclusive to you. $nd the o&ective dream whichvery few on this planet know a&out and where I am a&out to loose most of

you who have never shared in this type of dream &efore. >ut please,forgive the possi&le shock to your &eliefs a&out dreams when I discussshared dreaming. )ost advanced dreamers I know a&out this. )ost of the&eginners are happy ust to even have a dream let alone share one.Theapparent su&ective dream usually entails your mind working out yourfantasies, fears, anxieties and stress. )ay&e you dream part of what youdid that day in some illogical chaotic manner. Perhaps there was a girl or aguy you wanted to &e with and your dream contained some fantasy wherethat wish was granted. On the most part, you wake up and hopefullyremem&er. If you do not, read the up coming section where we discussdream recall, and dreaming techniques.The o&ective dream which I amintroducing early &ecause I want to start to open your minds with thepossi&ilities should you not have had this type of dream &efore is what wecan only la&el, 4/hared (reams5. /hared dreams are pretty muchexclusive to people who tend to dream a lot with some level of lucidity andsome good level of recall. 2rom personal experience with shareddreaming, since I have shared dreams with people over the last 8 yearsgives me a&out this to say on it= >y experience, if one person Fusually it

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was meG was fully conscious F3ucidG in the dream. M3ucid dreaming iswhere your normal waking consciousness, the part that you are right now,is fully awake and aware except you are in a dream, not your normalwaking physical reality. !ou can &e analytical, creative, change and controlthe dream or ust o&serve. !ou wake with full memory and clarity knowing

you were fully conscious in a dream environment $nd the other participantwas semilucid and somehow managed to retain some memory of thedream environment. 2or &oth individuals, the normal standards foro&servation apply. >oth had a point in the dream setting where theyo&served the dream, and &oth had a&ility to clearly filter in the dream+senvironment so that upon waking each individual involved wouldremem&er key elements of that dream environment as if it was a physicalone where &oth parties had ust gone."o matter what the case,consciousness was the key to shared dreaming. /o to share a dreameffectively, a lucid state is the most optimum potential we have when

desiring to explore this naturally occurring a&ility. The only thing is< untilnow, most of you have never shared a dream, let alone knew it waspossi&le. I don+t want you to automatically &elieve that people sharedreams until you yourself gather enough personal evidence to prove it toyourself. 2or now, keep an open mind for the possi&ilities of what othersare experiencing. If you are a person who has shared dreams then youstand like a lot of us who have knowing fully the reality of this experienceand can look forward to more positive growth towards a &etterunderstanding of these states. )y hopes is you gain enough courage,knowledge and understanding a&out dreams in this course that you can

comforta&ly move into these layers of dreams where we can meet. I+d surelike to meet some of you in these states. I will cover the maority of this inup coming chapters.The point of this is to also show you that your mindhas a natural a&ility to create reality in areas of imagination and dream. Itis a&solutely imperative that you accept that your mind has an a&ility tocreate reality. e won+t get far if you discredit yourself as not having thisnormal, natural a&ility. To think that you do not dream, or lack imaginationis false. @nless you are a total vegeta&le or stump, you have someimagination. Imagination is pure power. $nd this course will change yourattitudes towards what imagination truly is. In conclusion of this chapter,we covered a few dynamic laws of physics as quickly and simply as wecould to meld them into a station where we identify physical reality as moreof an energy system thus giving a little more room to flexi&ility for the upcoming chapters. If you can comforta&ly sit in the chair, as you read this Iwant to urge you to start seeing yourself as consciousness rather than ahuman &ody. This is important again since the &ody is ust that, a &ody.0onsciousness is who you are, and it is not entirely limited, as it wouldseem. 2or a fun affirmation, ust say in your mind, 4I am more than a

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physical &ody, I am consciousness, I am reality, I am.5 @nderstanding thatyou are reality is important. e tend to externalie our opinion of realitythus o&ectifying it &eyond the levels we can sustain it at. hat I mean &ythat is, as a social animal, we tend to &e dogmatic in our ideals with static&eliefs. (espite how much you exist in a world, it+s still your own

interpretation. !ou only get what you see and sometimes even that is notall that it appears to &e. This desire to &elieve in a reality outside ourselveswhere &y we have no influence, say, or part of is selfdefeating of somevery natural gifts we do have. $nd I will cover this in the course so for nowuntil I ela&orate, you are an energy system, an organied intelligence anda developing consciousness that inha&its a physical &ody. The truth is<reality is you, it is I, and it is we. *eality is a shared collective experiencethat goes far &eyond ust a human earth energy system. e share acollective consciousness that we call reality. 3et+s put some moreemphasis on the 4sharing5 part for some of you who forget what that

means. <G

LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION

This is a thoroughgoing examination of communication and language &othver&al and nonver&al. The most important part of our personal and socialexistence is the a&ility to communicate and convey a language &ased onthoughts and ideas. 3anguage on earth has &een limited to a very linearway of speaking. Our thoughts are articulated through a series of ver&al

commands which sometimes loose themselves in semantics andideologies of other humans. -ven the &est linguist would have pro&lemsconveying a thought to people where language causes the &reak up ofcommunication.hen exploring consciousness, it is important to seecertain factors of communication which is present in every day life. Themost maor level of communication is nonver&al in the form of reality itself."onver&al communication is a very advanced way of thinking. It entailsthoughts and ideas, which are generated in a manner so that to convey itwould mean to experience it similar to how we experience our physicalexistence.In the previous chapter, we discussed energy as having

consciousness. $nd the physical senses as tools that we use tocommunicate with our external physical matter reality. The reason why Ihave taken this angle is &ecause I want you to entertain the possi&ility thateverything you are experiencing now is a complete form of communication&oth physical and nonphysical levels.@niversal consciousness if it doesexist would &e the sum of all our ideas, the ideas and thoughts of otherintelligence+s, and the ideas and thoughts of intelligence systems that go

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far &eyond a human intelligence. @niversal consciousness is where weo&ectify truth. It is the realm of the a&solute and concrete. The mostfounding level of that truth is the fact that a universe exists at all. Topersonalie the truth we can admonish our own existence andacknowledge the fact we exist as having a fundamental truth to that

personalied statement. 0ommunication with a collective universalconsciousness would mean that the language &y which this o&ectiveuniverse speaks is how our experiences as su&ective consciousnessperceive this communication. /elfrealiation and selfexploration ofourselves as a part of a collective whole &egins when we start to o&ectifytruth. Truth is an a&solute that we cannot argue or &icker over withourselves. It+s like trying to argue that you do not exist at all with yourselfwhen &y that argument, you have proven that you do exist, at least, youhave proven this to yourself. )y fundamental &asis for truth is the fact Iexist and that something Fleft undefined for the argumentG exists around

me. $ll I have is myself as truth, and this is shared as a relationship withwhat I perceive as our externalied reality. $nd this externalied reality hasothers like myself who share in thoughts and ideas where communicationplays a vital role in the conveying of these ideas. hat a&out dreams?hat are they? $re they ust a thought pattern that our mind creates? (odreams have a reality to them? hy is it that &illions of life forms dream? If dreams are not important to physical reality, then why does ourconsciousness require them during sleep? (o dreams have the potential to&e o&ective? Think a&out the possi&ility for now that some people sharedreams. If you have not experience a shared dream &efore. Imagine

similar tools of perception perceiving another spectrum of energy, which ismore directly related to our thoughts and consciousness.If people sharedreams, then telepathy is a naturally occurring at some su&consciouslevel. If two or more consciousness can share the same dream then theenergy system that &oth share are the products of conscious thoughtpatterning. In my studies, I have spoken with several people who haveshared dreams. )yself &eing one of those people know that dreams can&e shared. This is not a &elief, or a desired fantasy, rather a personallyexplored part of my reality.(reams are as much a language as the spokenword. $ powerful lucid dreamer with full control of the dream where&yhe'she is sharing this dream with other consciousness has an a&ility toconvey ideas in words, more so this consciousness can convey ideaswhere his thoughts &ecome the dream. The recipient then experiences thedream &ased on this communication. It is natural for that su&consciouspart of ourselves to share a dream reality as it is for our physical wakingconsciousness to see and understand it+s physical environment.Thedifficulty with shared dreams is the current human ideas and &eliefs a&outdreams. )ost think that dreams have no o&ective value and are purely the

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results of some unknown su&conscious need to dream. The good news ispeople are starting to have experiences in the dreamstate that defy logicalreason. The effects of this are profound enough to cause the person tothink and analye their views on dreams and what they mean.(reams atdeeper levels of our su&conscious &egin to connect to a collective

unconscious. $t even deeper levels, dreams start to transcend the spacetime limitations of a physical &elief system and precognitive elements&egin to surface within a dreamers waking consciousness. -ven deeperstates where the waking consciousness is present enough to remem&er,dreams &egin to unlock the very foundation where manufacturing of realitytakes place. This creative process comes down to one fundamental,communication. Thoughts and ideas are &eing exchanged on a creativeuniversal scale.

PRECOGNITIVE DREAMS

If one should wake up and remem&er a visit to this precognitive state andremem&er some of the details. One+s physical matter &eliefs would start tochange into something more profound. Imagine a dream where thecontents convey a normal physical event. !ou wake up and clearlyremem&er the dream. The dream is unique and you remem&er specificdetails. Then months go &y and you forget the dream. One day, you decideto travel to a town that you have never &een to &efore. $nd you go to apark to admire the waters. The people playing, the song&irds singing andevery movement and physical expression starts to trigger some faintmemory dU vu. !ou start pondering the dU vu when a realiationcomes forward a&out your dream. It+s the contents of that forgotten dreamyou had where the same people, the same park, and the same town wasconveyed. !ou sit there feeling and seeing in perfect timing everythingfrom the same perspective you had in the dream. -very detail of yourdream matches the physical event.!ou may have had a dream come true&efore. It may have happen once, or twice. Perhaps you are the kind ofperson where this occurs on regular intervals, or perhaps you never hadone. The fact is people are having precognitive dreams. !ou could &ehaving one right now for all I know and if so, please tell me a&out it as I aminterested in knowing if this article you are reading is triggering some

sense of familiarity that you attri&ute to a dream you once had. !ou wouldknow &ecause it triggers such a powerful dU vu like awareness where theconnection to the dream very strong.hat are precognitive dreams? $rethese future events? hy are people having them? 1ave you had them? If you haven+t had a precognitive dream take some time to investigate them&y asking friends, family, strangers, ust a&out anyone you please to ask ifthey have experienced a dream, where months or years go &y and this

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dream came true. If so, what is this phenomenon?)y personal experiencewith dreams coming true is for myself epic. hen I was C, the first dreamI had where I started to realie my dreams did somehow mimic physicalreality was taken only as a surprisingly accurate coincidence. The eventwas a fight I was in where five people had umped me. The distractions in

the fight was my awareness that I had dreamt this fight and clearlyremem&er going over the details of that dream months ago. The samepeople, the same area, the same results. I was amaed at how close adream could &e to an actual physical event. >ut I discarded it as &eingpurely coincidental &ecause dreams have no relative meaning in physicalmatter reality.(uring the same period, I had a friend who told me ofexperiences that came true after I told him a&out a dream where he was inthat dream. I laughed at him and told him it was impossi&le, ust a &igcoincidence. I completely ignored the early hints of this phenomenon. Thatdidn+t last to long. The early precognitive dreams were tempered warning

signs of the storm that was a&out to hit my consciousness. hen thatstorm hit, it hit with a force it changed me forever.The first metaphoricallightning&olt to strike me seemed planned out. The timing of the nextseries of precognitive dreams was too overwhelming. (ays after the fight, Ithought a&out how my dream was so close to the physical event, and itwas kind of distur&ing. 1ow could strangers of whom I never met &efore &efamiliar to me? (id I see them around town and su&consciously stored thatinformation in some unknown reservoir where my dreams have access? Idon+t remem&er ever seeing them &efore. -ven the clothes they wore, the&eer they were drinking, my friends who were present during the fight, the

location, the placement of the cars, the punches and kicks thrown, theresolution of the fight, all completely accurate in the finest detail to thephysical event. "ot one trace of inconstancy. It was too weird &ut the nextfew days &ecame even weirder.(ownstairs in my house I was watching amovie, 4-vil (ead5 with my sister and her friend. I had seen evil dead&efore and this event set me up for a maor realiation. The dream I hadwas similar. I was downstairs watching -vil (ead with my sister and thesame friend was there as well, except here was the inconsistency: mysister+s friend was not sitting with my sister, instead she was sitting with meand we had a &lanket over top of us. /he started to play with my feet,tickling them with her toes. Thinking to myself I laughed, 4!eah, dreamscan &e close to physical events &ut they are nowhere accurate.5 )y clearmemory of the dream proved the inconsistency theory I was thinkinga&out, it also set me up for the fall, which came next. I had seen -vil (ead&efore so at least that was familiar. >ut my sister+s friend had not, and shewas getting scared. /eeking refuge from her fears she walked over to thecouch where I was sitting and sat &eside. /he said she felt safer sittingwith me. /he &rought over a &lanket from the other couch and threw it over 

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top of me while covering herself. I started to get anxious. The familiaritylevel ust took a tenfold increase not to mention a sensation of dU vu thatwas amplified &y the precognitive dream I was realiing. $ll what I hadremem&ered so clearly, and so accurately moments &efore happened.-very detail was now a match to the dream. -vil (ead was not as

frightening to me as the fear that this precognitive realiation &rought tome. I was so frightened that something horri&le was happening. /omethingno one could explain. It was relentless, the next day more and more eventswere coming out of the woodwork. -very corner I turned, every person Imet, every thought I had soon &ecame repetitive. There was nothing Ididn+t know wouldn+t happen. The peak intensity of the next year was sostrong that nothing could stop the surge of precognition I faced. I sufferedas a result of it. I had no one to turn too, no place to go. I proved it to myclosest friends, my mom. It was complicated &y the start of lucid dreamsand outof&odies and shared dreams. In one year, my entire perspective

of reality changed forever.$t age sixteen, I made a leap in consciousnessthat I never even considered a possi&ility. I never asked for it, I neverwanted it. It ust happened. The results were to clear, to concise for me toignore. I suddenly didn+t trust anyone. I &ecame quite paranoid of otherpeople, school, governments and science. )y grades dropped, I wasextremely depressed. I felt like some freak of nature, an alien in afa&ricated world that could &e nothing more than ust my imaginationexternalied. I was in a &lack hole of familiarity and it scared me. I knew Iwasn+t cray &ut this sort of thing wasn+t supposed to happen. >ut it did,and I knew it. )y feelings at that time can &est &e descri&ed like this< I felt

like it was going through a loop. hat I dreamt would soon &e and all thethoughts, the emotions, and feelings I had could not stop nor change this.2or whatever reasons, this intense level of precognition served its purpose.I could no longer deny the truth that dreams could convey a future event ata personal level in a hundredpercentlike fashion. (espite what otherswould argue to me against this truth I was realiing, their arguments weresometimes met with a demonstration of this precognition. This was rareand few &ut occurred nonetheless.I started to notice answers to why noteveryone has precognitive dreams. $nd this was &rought &y thedeterioration of this level of experience. 2or what ever reasons, it started todeteriorate and soon the familiar patterns were replaced with a distortedsym&olic representation of physical events. The memory was altered whenpassing through some unknown distorting layer in my consciousness. >utsince it was sym&olic, I could see where the sym&olism did represent thefuture event &ut it was masked within a distorted field of my perception.2orthe most part, I feared that my psyche was destined for an eternity of livingin some endless loop. )y salvation came from my desire to figure out howall this was possi&le, and the answers came in ways that overpowered my

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a&ility to ignore them.

THE CREATIVE PROCESS

 $s you are pro&a&ly aware, I am reducing the concepts of physical matter

reality from &eing ust a physical mass, to an energy pattern. It gets &etteror for worse. )any of you who lack the experience of what I have &eenand will &e discussing may want to stop reading this manuscript in the lightthat it goes so totally against your &eliefs a&out physical matter reality.Please &ear in mind, they are still &eliefs and I encourage you to stick thiscourse through. e must clearly see why precognition exists. hyconsciousness exists and why we exist. There is a truth in all of this. Thefact we exist a fundamental for truth. It &ecomes a fundamental when werealie that 4truth5 is who we are. Truth is our awareness a&out ourselvescom&ined with our awareness of the universe. )y &elief is we can no

more understand the workings of this externalied world if we do notunderstand the workings of our internal one. hat if physical matter realitywas nothing more than a pattern of thought that we share? hat if we cancommunicate with other intelligent systems? hat if there is a universalconsciousness in which we are all parts? e are a part of this reality. eare made of the same particles and energy that makes up this universe.e all have some sense of our own existence in this physical universe.hat if a creative intelligence was vital in the creation of physical matterreality? hat if you are a part of that creative intelligence? hat if all thepatterns of energy that we sense around us are nothing more than themanifestations of patterned thought? 1ow could physical matter realityexist purely as thought?Thoughts are created. /omething thinks and theend result is the thought. (reams are a su&conscious form of thought.Precognitive dreams on the other hand are not to far from this creativeprocess. To understand precognitive dreams, we must enter this level ofdreamed of experience in a way where we can consciously explore it.aking consciousness is who we are. In order to learn anything, we must&e a&le to consciously perceive it. 3ucid dreaming is one way to tap intothis source. $nother way, which relates to lucid dreams, is the outof&odyexperience./ince this section has &een on communication and dreams, wewill look at a new form of lucid dreaming we can call, 43ucid Precognitive

(reams5. These dreams are pro&a&ly the most profound experience onecan have. It strips away everything you may &elieve you are and replacesit with something more than ust a &elief. The results can &e fantastic, aweinspiring and forever changing. It is a good way for you to realie that youhave the potential to consciously share in this creative spectrum ofexperiential existence.3ucid dreams have &een researched over time. Theaverage person who investigated dreaming usually can accept the

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possi&ility that they can achieve a state of lucidity in a dreamstate andhave total control of that dream. aking conscious is vital for exploringdreams. 3ucid dreams are important for a more conscious view ofourselves. e will &e looking at some very simple steps for achieving alucid state in the dream. The most important thing to recognie is that you

as a conscious participant in your dreamlife hold every key to unlockthese doors. Time, practice and determination should yield results and wewill look at potential &lockages that may arise due to fears, dis&elief andpoor sleeping patterns.3ucid Precognitive (reams are the next step indream exploration. The science that will evolve from people activelyentering this state will &e very interesting to say the least. It makes themost impro&a&le possi&ility seem more pro&a&le. $nd the effort it takes toget there is relatively simple. %ust not yet fully understood. Over the nextcouple of weeks, I will &e addressing this thing called the creative process.The focus of our lucid dreams and outof&odies will &e to uncover and

unlock some of the hidden secrets of this creative field. )y exploration ofthis state has illustrated to me that we are su&consciously already there.Rnowing that will make it easier for su&conscious information in that layerto slowly surface into our normal waking consciousness. The key hasalways and will always &e what we can consciously &e aware of. Thiscourse is designed to make the su&conscious more conscious.

In the first two sessions, we covered how physical matter reality wascomprised as more of an energy system since all the aspects of thematerial world come from energy in different states of vi&ration frequencyand density. hen patterns are formed in energy, I remarked on how weimmediately start to see the potential for intelligence. Part two we &reakdown physical matter even more into a possi&ility that it really is ust anadvanced form of language from a collective universe of which we are allparticipants in. That dreams have a precognitive nature, and we have ana&ility to work within this precognitive field to make changes that ultimatelyeffect the out come of that dream once it manifests into our wakingphysical lives.e have one more stage of human consciousness we mustaddress that falls into the category where much of our lucid dreams come.

THE OUT&O&BODY EXPERIENCE

If you have ever read these &ooks, 4%ourney+s Outofthe>ody5, 42ar%ourney+s5, and 4@ltimate %ourneys5 &y *o&ert $. )onroe. Then you haveread what I feel are three &ooks which show the evolutionary cycle of theoutof&ody state. *o&ert $. )onroe started his exploration into this field of

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research when he was struck with a series of spontaneities outof&odyexperiences that started his whole quest for knowledge on this topic.*o&ert $. )onroe founded the )onroe Institute in 2a&er Kirginia and the)onroe Institute to this day is researching this phenomenon and they arealso teaching courses on the su&ect. Their we& sight is www.monroe

inst.com I highly recommend checking them out if you have not already.Their research is quite extensive and offers a good start for anyone whowants to get verification that this phenomena exists and is &eing takenseriously enough to scientifically understand.hen you read some of theseexperiences, I want you to ust a&sor& them and give them some thought.If these have nothing at all to do with anything, then take note that theeffects of these experiences are such that the world once entered, even if itis a purely mental state were completely tactile and offered things thatphysical reality could never offer. Reep in mind the age I was at as well.hen I had my first outof&ody experience, I was 6 years old and I did

not know that we really could leave our &odies. One night changed all thatfor me. aking up, I felt strange and something was not quite right. Iwasn+t sure what it was so I sat on the edge of my &ed and tried to shakeof the co&we&s in my head. ith the kind of tiredness you get when youfirst wake up, I stood up and walked over to the lightswitch.-verything wasnormal, the room was dark and I could see ust enough of my room fromthe moonlight shining in my room. hen I went to hit the switch, the lightdid not go on. 0onfused that I might not of actually touched the switch, Imade another pass at the switch this time a little more careful thinking Iwas tired and not paying enough attention. $gain, the light did not go on,

nor did the lightswitch move. >ut I felt it, and I touched it. $gain, I hit theswitch and it didn+t move, several more attempts were made and I watchedeach time my fingers pass through the switch.3ooking at my hand, Inoticed that it was clear and translucent with a light &lue outline around theparameter of my hand and arm. $ fear took over and I froe. 4hat the hellis this?5 I thought. Alancing over at my &ed I saw my physical &ody lyingthere. 2ear exploded in my mind, 4as I dead?5 %ust &efore I screamed, Ishot &ack into my &ody as if someone had me at the end of a sling shotand had ust let go. )y physical eyes woke up and I gasped for air./haking, I got up and turned on the light. -verything was normal and fine.It was 7:98 in the morning< I couldn+t go &ack to sleep.This experience wastoo real to ignore. $ll day I thought a&out it at school and finally told myclose friend a&out it. 1e reaffirmed to me that it was an outof&odyexperience. 1e also told me a&out *o&ert $. )onroe+s &ook, 42ar%ourneys5. hich he read from our local li&rary. That day, I went there totake it out &ut it was not in. It wasn+t for a few more weeks that I wentwithout the &ook. hen I finally read it, the &ook inspired me unlikeanything I had ever read. It stopped nearly all the fear and concerns I had,

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gave me courage to continue to explore the state and I was not afraid totell people a&out my experiences from that point on.The next day, lying in&ed like usual=loud music starts to play in my room. I wake up angrythinking that my &rother had come in and turned on my small stereosystem. 3ooking up at the stereo, I see the equalier lights moving up and

down as the music played. $ closer look at the stereo showed me that itwas unplugged. Instantly the o&vious fact that an unplugged stereo can+tplay music caused a tremendous wave of fear to consume me. I froe and&ecame more aware that my physical &ody was actually ust underneathme and I was lying on top of it.I looked forward and something whispered,4)ove through this tunnel.5 $nd a tunnel appeared in front of me.Overcoming the fear, I dove in. I felt myself dissolve into ust awareness.Then as the end of the tunnel was reached, I felt like a sphere condensinginto one spot. *ays of me shone from every direction into the condensingpoint where a human like &ody was formed. I was in a parking lot in town

helping a lady with her groceries. In the &ack of my mind I knew somethingwas different &ut the dream continued as I helped her. hen finished, Iwas then catapulted &ack into my &ody and I awoke.The connection at thetime with the dream and the lady was confusing to me. hy did I help herwith her groceries? Three years later I would &e working at the same mall,in the same lot doing the same o& since I started to work at a grocerystore. It+s &een quite a few years since then, at least seven and I have hadso many dreams come true I don+t think I actually ever met the lady fromthe dream.The following night something wakes me. I am lying in &ed and Ifeel a head resting on my chest. The head then starts to move into my

chest and it startles me to full attention. 3ooking up I see a small three footelf like humanoid that is startled as much as I am when I awake. It takes off and runs through my wall. I am in hot pursuit after it."ot even questioning if I could run through the wall, I ust did. 3ucid dreams, and the other twoOO>-+s had given me enough sense of the experience that I was awarethat I was somehow not in my physical &ody. )atter felt like millions andmillions of small particles melding with my form. The effect was distortingand I ended up in some location that was familiar to me. )ore in a luciddream like environment, &ut the connection to &eing OO>- and in a 3uciddream seemed to parallel each other, I started to investigate for the firsttime what exactly was going on.The location was an old house we lived infrom when I was within the ages of V to H. I recognied the entrance wayto the house and the stairs going up to the top level. The elf like child wasnot there &ut two other really strange looking things were. They stooda&out two feet tall and looked more like )uppets from the )uppet showwith &ig eyes and gapping mouths. 3aughing, I gra&&ed one and asked itwhat it was. The thing ust froe as if in fear. It definitely wasn+t a humanconsciousness. /ensing its fear I let it go and it ran away instantly.I was

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confused, what kind of state was I in. It felt like a really &ad $lice inwonderland story. 2ully alert and conscious I could not tell if I wasdreaming, or if I was outof&ody or what exactly I was. >ut the factremained o&vious to me, I was myself in another state where I recogniedand could interact with an environment that was slightly different from the

physical one I was accustomed to. I conceded the possi&ility of anotherreality that I was exploring was present./till confused and looking for anyclue, I walked up the stairs remem&ering all the times in the past I run upand down these stairs. I stopped at the top of the stairs and the door &elowopened. )y &rother entered with a few of his friends< they were all drinkingand acting in a drunken manner. They seemed o&livious to me as theywalked up the stairs< it wasn+t until they reached the top that one of themnoticed me. They were moving kind of slower than usual. Their wordssounded like a slowed down tape was playing. >eing who I am andcompletely curious, I laid a full frontal forward snap kick into the chest of

the person coming up the stairs. This knocked him &ack tum&ling all theway to the &ottom. I gra&&ed the hand held ghetto &laster another wascarrying, and I smashed it into pieces on the floor. I was ust testing thestate I was in. $nd energy surged into me, as I started to take control of theenvironment.3ike a nuclear &om& going off, I stood at the edge of the stairsand shattered everything in my visual sight. The entire world around mecollapsed and I felt totally clear and free. >illowing waves of energy as faras the eye could see formed red and pink clouds and patterns. I treatedthe whole relationship with this state as one of persecution and deception.I screamed out as energy shot through my hands and I felt like some

dreaming god. 4I $);5 I yelled. "othing I can explain felt like this. It+sdefinitely attri&ute to the age I was. >eing 6 years old at the time, and allthe pressures of family, high school and everything else in my life, it wasno wonder I took such delight in this new power I was tripping on.Then,after yelling my declaration of my self, the funniest thing happened a voice&oomed out of the ethers, 4!eah, I am too. /o shut the hell up;5 $t the time,it was so funny it made me laugh. I flew into the a&yss of energy to find thiscocky &astard and started to rocket through a seemingly endless stream of formless clouds of unknowns. Personally, I didn+t know if I was dreaming,OO>- or hallucinating. $nd I didn+t care, it was too much fun to stop. Thefocus on the other voice was lost in the laughter and oy I was feeling inthis freedom. >efore I knew it, I was &ack in my physical &ody again.Therewas such an excitement level now with the whole experience. 3uciddreams, outof&ody experiences and worlds on top of worlds to play in.These experiences did not stop, I had not developed conscious control ofthem yet, &ut they were so spontaneous and frequent that it didn+t matter.The next few weeks were exploding with fantastic ourneys within a part ofmy consciousness I wondered why I ever ignored. It seemed so irrational

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that people were missing out on this freedom of expression.$fter reading*o&ert $. )onroe+s &ook, 42ar %ourneys5. I had a new direction to explore.The possi&ilities of other intelligence+s that were much more advancedthan human intelligence. It gave me a new respect when I was outof&odyand my direction then was to understand everything I could a&out this

state. The following OO>-+s were then not as free and fun since I took ona more investigative study of the experience within myself. *eleasing frommy physical &ody, instead of going on some wild adventure into someunknown, I stood at the edge of my &ed and looked at my physical form.Time passed as I ust stood staring at my physical &ody. I wanted a reallygood look at what I saw. I wanted to &e very clear that what I saw was thevehicle I operated and also, I wanted to know completely that I was not this&ody rather I was what stood outside the &ody at this very moment.0almly,I touched my physical &ody on the face. I felt the warmth of it+s &reathingon my nonphysical hand. I touched the warm skin and felt how soft it felt

even when I was this other thing I that had &ecome. I moved downwardover to my chest and placed my hand into the chest area. $ warm electricalpulsating hum was felt. Taking as much time necessary, I ust examinedthe physical &ody that I associated as myself. >ut it was not I. It wassomething that was only a part of me. ho I was, was &eyond ust aphysical form.The &ody that I was in now was a mirror match for myphysical one. This &ody when I felt clear like I did was very tactile. It couldtouch and see with clarity. I found hearing to &e faint &ut existed if Ifocused on hearing. Taste and smell were even less present &ut theyexisted if I really focused on smell and taste. That same night, I ust walked

around my room. I placed my hand into the wall to feel what it felt like topass through the wall. I would stick my face partly into the wall and thefeelings were the same.It was completely quite< there were no other&eings, nothing else &ut myself and the room I was exploring on a wholenew level of experience. Touching my nonphysical arm, I examined this&ody closely. It felt cold to the touch, and was translucent, &ut if I focused itwould look flesh covered and normal. I walked ust slightly out of my roominto the hall where there was a mirror. I saw myself in this &ody< the mirrorreflected something &ack to me.I was surprised to see a reflection. Itcaught me off guard. I waved my hand and in perfect synchronicity themirror reflected this &ack to me. I could still see myself and I looked like anexact copy of my physical &ody. )aking a few faces at my self in themirror, I decided to change my form. 2ocusing on the &ody, I stretched outmy mouth and &ugged out my eyes. 0oncentrating on my teeth I madethem grow &ig and large. >y the time I was done, I looked like a total freak.It was funny. I laughed so hard.anting to &e a total goof, I walked outsideand acted like some ogre that had no clue of what was o&serving him atthat time. This was not as &ad as the time I walked around school while

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OO>- going, 43ook at me I+m a ghost;5 and trying to get the attention offriends who where studying so hard while I was skipping my physicalschool to attend my nonphysical one.In the early stages of theseexperiences, I was a&le to verify at least to myself that it related to physicalmatter reality only if I was in this very limited second form. The second

&ody acted in synch still with physics so gravity still pulled on it, andmirrors reflected the image at some level of frequency.)y theory on thiswas that I moved from the first &and of light that we have on a visi&lespectrum to a much lighter frequency of light on a more nonvisi&lespectrum to our current human consciousness that was apparent toourselves as nonphysical patterns in this spectrum of light.The verificationcame from o&serving people with certain clothes, the placement ofvehicles on the street outside. *ooms in places I had not yet gone. %ust alot of exploration of this state to prove at that early stage that I was indeedoutof&ody and not hallucinating that I was. >ut the OO>- opens a

doorway to several other layers of experience, which I soon &egan towander into.3ate one night, I am relaxing and focusing into my awarenessinto the &lackness that was in front of my closed eyes. )y &reathingslowed, and my &ody started to fall asleep. /oon, without notice a femalevoice &ooms in my head, 4/o, you want to know how reality is created?5$little surprised &ut somewhat expectant of this, I replied, 4/ure, I would loveto.5 4Areat, we will illustrate this in a threedimensional form since youfunction with a threedimensional consciousness.5 $ window appeared inmy visual spectrum. It was a two dimensional image of a street and sometrees with a house at the end of the street. The image was very simple and

then the lady spoke again, 42irst, we+ll create an image of this very &asicstreet and house. Then we must give it the depth in which a threedimensional reality exist in.5The image then dropped into a very crude,almost computer animated threedimensional space. I proected into thewindow and was on the street looking around at the simple cartoon likeimages of the trees, the house and the road. 4Then we must start toconsider the cause and effects of things. /uch as, how do the needles ofthe tree feel when against your skin? The effects of air &lowing againstyou? $ll these factors must &e layered upon each other to give the realityits dimensional qualities.5The tree then &ecame very real, and windsstarted to &low and rustle the pine needles. It was much like a fur tree andI touched the &ranch and it all felt very real. 4!our reality is constructed inthe same manner that this reality is generated. $ series of ideas andimages construed together with the laws of cause and effect layered downto the finest detail.5It was all very impressive to say the least. )oments agoI was lying in my &ed with a veiled of darkness over my eyes. "ow, I amstanding in a manufactured reality where some unknown female isteaching me how to construct reality with very convincing and clear

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examples of thought in action./tanding in awe at the clarity of thisexperience, I wondered what it was significant of. The female to whom Icould not see seemed familiar to me. $fter creating this reality, she thenguided me up to an area where a lot of my thoughts and idea expressthemselves freely in a tactile threedimensional way. The movement was

swift and the new terrain again casting some familiar pattern. I flew arounda personal playground of some of my greatest fantasies and imaginations&rought to life. hen finally exhausted I awoke.This experience was astepping stone to the next stage of my growth. The patterns of which myexperiences were forming seemed to me, to &e very intelligently laid outand planned. The next experience that followed which patterned this oneleft me &eyond any explanation or reason.*eleasing from my physical&ody, I felt a gently push upwards. I floated slowly into a very dark void,which only traces of anything visual were &lue wisps of energy stretchingout like gas clouds as far as my vision could see. I was fully conscious and

aware that I was outofmy&ody. 4hat would you like to experience?5 avoice asked.It was in perfect -nglish, and the area seemed really familiarto me. 0urious as to what he meant, I felt he deserved a reply. Ponderingthe possi&ilities, I replied favora&ly. 4I would like to experience a group ofpeople setting aside their religious, social and political &eliefs to enoy thecompany of each other.5 4Kery well.5 *esponded the voice.$ flat twodimensional window appeared &efore me. It had a recognia&le image ofthe &eachfront at Okanagan 3ake in Penticton >0. The &eing that I couldnot see guided me into the window, and I entered a lucid dream. I stood onthe &each, the realiation that I was fully awake and dreaming was clear.

This was a dream, and I was dreaming I thought. I noticed I was here withsome friends from school. There was a fire, and we had marshmallows andhotdogs to roast.$ group of people soon oined us and hung out &y thefire. /oon, a man and his wife appeared carrying a guitar and they oined.The man &rought out his guitar and started to play songs. The maority ofthe people were all strangers to me except a few recognia&le friends.Thedream progressed quite smoothly, I walked amongst some of the peopletalking to them and getting to know them. The first group was from a)ormon 0hurch and was in town to do a play for some school children.They asked if I wanted to see their play, and I replied, 4!es, that would &egreat.5They preformed their play of which I really enoyed. It was cool thatthey ust let loose and did that. The man was also playing some really goodsongs and we oined in singing to some of them. One song in particularwas Pink 2loyd, 4ish you were here.5 which was'is one of my favoritesongs. I enoyed singing to this one as well. The dream passed and soon Ireturned to the entry level to that dream and the &eing was still intuitivelypresent. 4Thankyou for sharing with me that dream.5 I replied. The dreamconsisted of many of the values that I hold close to my heart and I even

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remarked how I wish life was more like that to this &eing. /atisfied with thedream we created, I moved &ack towards my &ody an awoke.I never gavethe significance of that dream much thought. I ust knew I met some veryinteresting intelligence that enoyed sharing dreams at some level and wecolla&orated on a dream of which we shared. Other than that, it was ust an

ordinary OO>- that turned into a dream experience later on.This was noordinary dream. This was the dream that was going to rip me in half threemonths later when it came true in every detail that was manufactured inthat initial state. It would &e the dream that sent me &ackward insidescreaming from the realiation of everything that I knew &ut never&elieved.hen the dream came true, the only difference that I could tracewas a new overlay of my thoughts on top of the initial thoughts I had whilein the dream. The moment I realied that this physical even was also thatinitial dream event, I literally was standing physical in my &ody having alucid dream that was a physical dream. It was my first 3ucid Precognitive

(ream that I had to date. The other factor was a new layer of fear thatlingered in the &ack of my logical mind.hen I had the initial experience, Iknew that it was somehow shared with something. The people that werepresent, the setting and the events all were also partially influenced &ywhat I desired to experience. I could not ignore the creative slice to thisdream that my hand yields. 1ow could I create my own reality? as it ustmy reality? ere these people, these events, these settings all figments ofmy imagination? as I really ever alive in the first place? 1ow was thispossi&le?The force of this dream sent me into a very dark &lack hole offear, anxiety and worry that somehow everything I experienced was a

result of this and it started to neutralie a sense of others for the moment. Ifelt isolated and alone, empty in a universe that played to my consciousdelights. )y reaction was not at all healthy. There was nothing I could sayto anyone to convince him or her of this truth I experienced. )any times Iwould experience a feeling of total isolation as a singular universe devoidof others.1ard to imagine, even harder to experience. I felt trapped, &ut the&enefit of this was it clearly illustrated to myself in a manner that gave noother explanation the reasons why we have dreams that come true in thefirst place. That they were not in fact a future event rather, a constructedevent that would later manifest as time'space moved to allow theexperience to unfold.The outof&ody experience provided me with moreanswers than I needed< it also presented newer, more profound questionsto answer. To cover the many, many experiences I have had while goingOO>- would constitute too many pages of experiences to write. Theimportant thing though is where we sit as creative intelligence in thisuniverse.

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