Managed luminous dreaming is now been properly studied and it is
still early days, but it appears to becoming possible to answer a
range of age old questions regarding this phenomena and to develop
fresh hypothesis. It is in fact been systematically studied and it
will become increasingly possible to design testable ideas and
provide solid statistical results.
It has long been conjectured that an independent soul exists. We
will now be able to separate the illusion from physical reality by
using remote sign recognition. This has already been done at an
anecdotal level and deserves to be done in a manner that is bullet
proof.
This state has been explored through meditation and we have
established methods of entering the several levels of consciousness.
My problem with all that, it has been assumed that that is the whole
goal. As I have conjectured a physical GOD exists and provides us
the soul. This began around 40,000 years ago at least. We will
achieve the same result inside the next two generations. Thus GOD
participates in our lives through this soul in the way the internet
participates in our lives through our cell phones.
What we have failed to understand is that GOD exists to serve mankind
and Terran life in general. Our failure is to fail to properly ask
questions. If we can ask the right questions it is my conjecture
that GOD is able to show us a proper answer. It may take time
because GOD must allow the biological connections to be made.
.
The trick to learn is to be able to access the state of luminous
dreaming and to actually access information. My own one experience
provided me new information and new insight both uncalled for and
unexpected. This confirmed for me the reality of the experience and
ample insight into what failure implies for the soul.
5 Mind-Bending
Facts About Dreams
Jeanna Bryner,
LiveScience Managing Editor
Date: 27 April 2012
Time: 03:48 PM ET
When your head hits
the pillow, for many it's lights out for the conscious part of you.
But the cells firing in your brain are very much awake, sparking
enough energy to produce the sometimes vivid and sometimes downright
haunted dreams that take place during the rapid-eye-movement stage of
your sleep.
Why do some people
have nightmares while others really spend their nights in bliss? Like
sleep, dreams are mysterious phenomena. But as scientists
are able to probe deeper into our minds, they are finding some of
those answers.
Here's some of what we
know about what goes on in dreamland.
1. Violent dreams can
be a warning sign
As if nightmares
weren't bad enough, a rare sleep disorder — called REM
sleep behavior disorder — causes people to act out their dreams,
sometimes with violent thrashes, kicks and screams. Such violent
dreams may be an early sign of brain disorders down the line,
including Parkinson's disease and dementia, according to research
published online July 28, 2010, in the journal Neurology. The results
suggest the incipient stages of these neurodegenerative
disorders might begin decades before a person, or doctor, knows
it.
2. Night owls have
more nightmares
Staying up late has
its perks, but whimsical dreaming is not one of them. Research
published in 2011 in the journal Sleep and Biological Rhythms,
revealed that night owls are more likely than their
early-bird counterparts to experience nightmares.
In the study 264
university students rated how often they experienced nightmares on a
scale from 0 to 4, never to always, respectively. The stay-up-late
types scored, on average, a 2.10, compared with the morning types who
averaged a 1.23. The researchers said the difference was a
significant one, however, they aren’t sure what's causing a link
between sleep habits and nightmares. Among their ideas is the stress
hormone cortisol, which peaks in the morning right before we wake up,
a time when people are more prone to be in REM, or dream, sleep. If
you’re still sleeping at that time, the cortisol rise could trigger
vivid dreams or nightmares, the researchers speculate. [Top 10 Spooky
Sleep Disorders]
3. Men dream about sex
As in their wake
hours, men also dream about sex more than women do. And
comparing notes in the morning may not be a turn-on for either guys
or gals, as women are more likely to have experienced nightmares,
suggests doctoral research reported in 2009 by psychologist Jennie
Parker of the University of the West of England.
She found women's
dreams/nightmares could be grouped into three categories: fearful
dreams (being chased or having their life threatened); dreams
involving the loss of a loved one; or confused dreams.
4. You can control
your dreams
If you're interested
in lucid dreaming, you may want to take up video gaming. The link?
Both represent alternate realities, said Jayne Gackenbach, a
psychologist at Grant MacEwan University in Canada.
"If you're
spending hours a day in a virtual reality, if nothing else it's
practice," Gackenbach told LiveScience in 2010. "Gamers are
used to controlling their game environments, so that can translate
into dreams." Her past research has shown that people who
frequently play video games are more likely than non-gamers to
have lucid dreams where they view themselves from outside their
bodies; they were also better able to influence their dream worlds,
as if controlling a video-game character.
That level of control
may also help gamers turn a bloodcurdling nightmare into a carefree
dream, she found in a 2008 study. This ability could help war
veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD),
Gackenbach reasoned.
5. Why we dream
Scientists have long
wondered why we dream, with answers ranging from Sigmund Freud's
idea that dreams fulfill our wishes to the speculation that these
wistful journeys are just a side effect of rapid-eye-movement (REM)
sleep. Turns out, at least part of the reason may be critical
thinking, suggests Harvard psychologist Deirdre Barrett who presented
her theory in 2010 at the Association for Psychological Science
meeting in Boston.
Her research revealed
that our slumbering hours may help us solve puzzles that have plagued
us during daylight hours. The visual and often illogical aspects of
dreams make them perfect for the out-of-the-box thinking that is
necessary to solve some problems, she speculates.
So while dreams may
have originally evolved for another purpose, they have likely been
refined over time for multiple tasks, including helping the brain
reboot and helping us solve problems, she said.
1 comment:
total horseshit
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