One question, sorry. Can you visualize things in a space in front of you or only in the minds eye? My uncle can do the former, but when I asked him how he said his father taught him and it cant’t be learned as an adult. I think I’m brain damaged from growing up with computer screens and video games.
1. When I was little, I had a fear that if I visualise too much, I will expend the "mana" and break my brain. Were the Lemurians/insectoids messing with me? (xd)
2. I have checked, and the statistics on aphantasia say - 3% of the population. How is it the case that you claimed a much higher percentage? Or did you mean something else?
3. I do remember that I did make a Hakenkreuz appear in my eyelids when I was bored and little.
4. Are these visualisation techniques related to lucid dreaming, or other dream states such as hypnopompic? I never really bothered, but whenever I chanced to get into it, it was super conducive to imagination ("finishing the dream" when half-awake). The Russian cult Goy Gaya is super into dreams - and Castaneda.
2) i've never heard sucha low number ive seen multiple studies that put poor visualization at 80%. i used to be friends with one guy like that but he wasnt dumb. 140 IQ. but he was unable to even read fiction because he couldn't visualize the story in his head. couldnt read a map either.
3) the next step is to hallucinate with open eyes
4) yes they are related, it is simply a question of depth and of the exact wavelength that you are on. castenada calls these states "assemblage points". i use the terms alpha theta beta. lol tell me more about these goys or just give a link
I'm obsessed with maps, and whenever I think or loiter (or dream), my mind easily drifts to the familiar contours of the places in my life - be it my hometown, or schools, or the Battlefield 1942 maps from 2003, or that one Nokia game I played in 2010 (jumping over lava), or the Lumia Island from Eternal Return: Black Survival.
Maps are definitely the shapes I can visualise with utmost ease and pleasure.
"Assemblage points"... So that's where Goy Gaya have translated it from! I wondered what the English term is! Should add Castaneda to my reading list.
Are you from an eastern catholic family, rurik?
No I’m from a Soviet family
One question, sorry. Can you visualize things in a space in front of you or only in the minds eye? My uncle can do the former, but when I asked him how he said his father taught him and it cant’t be learned as an adult. I think I’m brain damaged from growing up with computer screens and video games.
These are different levels. At first it is just minds eye but then you learn to move it to the backs of your eyelids. This is advanced
Curious. A few points.
1. When I was little, I had a fear that if I visualise too much, I will expend the "mana" and break my brain. Were the Lemurians/insectoids messing with me? (xd)
2. I have checked, and the statistics on aphantasia say - 3% of the population. How is it the case that you claimed a much higher percentage? Or did you mean something else?
3. I do remember that I did make a Hakenkreuz appear in my eyelids when I was bored and little.
4. Are these visualisation techniques related to lucid dreaming, or other dream states such as hypnopompic? I never really bothered, but whenever I chanced to get into it, it was super conducive to imagination ("finishing the dream" when half-awake). The Russian cult Goy Gaya is super into dreams - and Castaneda.
1) the visuals can be scary so maybe fear
2) i've never heard sucha low number ive seen multiple studies that put poor visualization at 80%. i used to be friends with one guy like that but he wasnt dumb. 140 IQ. but he was unable to even read fiction because he couldn't visualize the story in his head. couldnt read a map either.
3) the next step is to hallucinate with open eyes
4) yes they are related, it is simply a question of depth and of the exact wavelength that you are on. castenada calls these states "assemblage points". i use the terms alpha theta beta. lol tell me more about these goys or just give a link
I'm obsessed with maps, and whenever I think or loiter (or dream), my mind easily drifts to the familiar contours of the places in my life - be it my hometown, or schools, or the Battlefield 1942 maps from 2003, or that one Nokia game I played in 2010 (jumping over lava), or the Lumia Island from Eternal Return: Black Survival.
Maps are definitely the shapes I can visualise with utmost ease and pleasure.
"Assemblage points"... So that's where Goy Gaya have translated it from! I wondered what the English term is! Should add Castaneda to my reading list.
Their links:
https://dooch.ru/?cat=23
https://www.youtube.com/@goy_gaya/streams
https://www.youtube.com/@doochdoble/videos
https://www.youtube.com/@moptuk/videos