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| | #61 (permalink) (top) | |
| Molten Ash Posts: 89 | Quote:
Once you feel comfortable in the hypnagogic and sleep paralysis state, you can explore it. There are a lot of claims that the "mind awake, body asleep" state makes it easier to step into a lucid dream and/or out-of-body experience. | |
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| | #62 (permalink) (top) | |||||||||
![]() Amused Location: Mid Atlantic Posts: 1,016 | [quote] I don't know why you are confused? Quote:
Why would it matter if it was a homosexual relationship? Quote:
Stop back peddling. I didn't ask for your credentials nor do I care. Your snarky comments on this thread and the other scream attitude. You keep dissing people for being atheists like it's the only reason they won't take your word for things. If you want to try to impress people, offer up some kind of proof. Any fool can take someone elses opinions and turn it into their own. What I'm offering is a different perspective. My own. I'm not asking you to agree with me. Quote:
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![]() I agree with davedes. You do not have to be religious to be spiritual. I go to the grave site. I know he's not there. For some odd reason it's comforting to sit next to him. I'm having a garage built with the inheritence from his parent's recent death. It's what he always dreamed of and he's going to get it. Silly and irrational of me to think that way I know...Most of all, I try to be more like him in my every day life. His legacy isn't in physical things, it's in the ways he enriched our lives. Quote:
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Losing a parent isn't like losing a spouse. There's an intimacy shared that is beyond compare. I'll always be connected to him even if it's in my minds eye. I know all I need to know. I'm happy with my conclusions as well. Now that you know all you need to know about me, can we leave the personal's out of debate? That you may retain your self-respect, it is better to displease the people by doing what you know is right, than to temporarily please them by doing what you know is wrong. W. J. H. Boetcker | |||||||||
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| | #63 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Still Unusual Posts: 33 | Davedes, I hadn't thought about that. You can be an atheist and still be spiritual. So, you can be an atheist and still accept there is an afterlife. Interesting... but would the majority of atheists agree with you? :o) Atheism: Definitions of atheism What happens if you play ‘The Blues’ backwards? You sober up, your wife returns home, and the dog comes back to life. |
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| | #64 (permalink) (top) | |
| Molten Ash Posts: 89 | Quote:
Entire religions have revolved around the idea of spiritual atheism -- take, for example, Theradava Buddhism. I personally do not see God as a necessary item of spirituality. Many atheists would not agree with me, though. There are many individuals who believe spirituality can only exist with the notion of god(s). I feel that the separation of these notions is crucial before exploring them (in the same way that you separate religion and the afterlife). | |
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| | #65 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Still Unusual Posts: 33 | Maryjane, I appear to have hit a nerve with you. "It says right in my profile that the photograph is that of my late husband." I didn't see this profile comment otherwise I wouldn't have asked. So, my second assumption was correct. "Why would it matter if it was a homosexual relationship?" I agree, why would it have mattered? If you are hinting that I may be homophobic, I am not. "Stop back peddling. I didn't ask for your credentials nor do I care. Your snarky comments on this thread and the other scream attitude." Are you looking at yourself in a mirror? :o) "Careful, there you go with the atheist thing again." Are you suggesting that the word atheist shouldn't be used? Is there another word that you suggest? One which wouldn't make you feel uncomfortable? "at one point in our "conversation" he smiled at me like he always did when he knew I could handle things." I sense that a part of you, the spiritual part, wants to accept that the conversations with your deceased husband actually occur and are real. I use the word "accept" and not "believe" as often they are intuitive feelings BUT the cold, clinical intellectual part of you; the part that screams for evidence; the 'don't be so silly' critical woman part of you, who thinks you are being weak and woosy for even considering such nonsense... Therefore, the conflict between your intuitive more spiritual side - the side that 'knows" rather than "believes" - is being suppressed by the clinical and highly critical 'I need evidence, evidence, evidence' intellectual side. There is a major difference between 'knowing' and 'believing', in my view. One is emotional, the other intellectual. Feelings are real if you genuinely feel them. The intellect is not. The only thing that is real, in my view, are your feelings and intuition. Makes me wonder if they find another love is their deceased spouse watching them in the bedroom too? Interesting point. I have read stories where deceased peeping toms stalk bedrooms but most people are too busy in their next life to even bother. I'll always be connected to him even if it's in my minds eye. So, why not put your critical intellectual part away and explore your intuitive side. What have you got to lose? You have a strong connection with your deceased husband so why not explore this further? For example, quite a number of people visit the Monroe Institute with the specific desire to contact deceased loved ones. They want to know and learn the techniques required to achieve this. They wish to create and then be in control of their OOBES. Already, you have experienced lucid dreams. Why not attempt the next step? Perhaps, your husband is even gently pushing you towards that next adventure? What happens if you play ‘The Blues’ backwards? You sober up, your wife returns home, and the dog comes back to life. |
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| | #66 (permalink) (top) | ||||||||||||
![]() Amused Location: Mid Atlantic Posts: 1,016 | Quote:
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That you may retain your self-respect, it is better to displease the people by doing what you know is right, than to temporarily please them by doing what you know is wrong. W. J. H. Boetcker | ||||||||||||
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| | #67 (permalink) (top) | |
| formerly Isherwood Location: San Diego, CA Posts: 12,274 | Quote:
The Forum Rules Radical Atheist A man who does not think for himself does not think at all...Oscar Wilde | |
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| | #69 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() Igneous Magma Posts: 278 | Quote:
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| | #71 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Still Unusual Posts: 33 | Jack, "Nor do I see in the premise of atheism any reason why an atheist couldn't accept the idea of an afterlife.... the definition of atheism says nothing about it requiring a dependency on science." I am a little confused by your comment. It appears that we are coming from the same page, so why the previous disagreements? The evidence I have uncovered suggests, while an afterlife exists, there is no such God, deity, spiritual beings involved that religion states. It is simply another dimension in time and space. In some ways similar to Earth - in other ways quite different. There is a fascinating book called Voyages into the Unknown written by Bruce Moen, an OOBE traveller, who explains that this next dimension is divided into different territories of belief systems, rather like Earth is broken up by different continents and countries. One area is known as the religious belief system territory. This is where those who worship a particular God end up. So, the delicious irony is Christians, for example, who believe in Jesus, will have these beliefs mirrored back to them, thus confirming their religious creed all along. And further along there will be the territory for Muslims, Buddhists and so on. Matter in this next dimension immediately creates and then mirror's back each person's belief systems at the time of their physical death. And why some atheists (oops, there's that word again) have difficulty initially embracing this new world, as their ego stops them from accepting it is real. What happens if you play ‘The Blues’ backwards? You sober up, your wife returns home, and the dog comes back to life. Last edited by Radarlove; May 6, 2008 at 09:25 am. |
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| | #72 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Molten Ash Posts: 69 | I've had many "paranormal" experiences most of which are completely explainable such as the sleep paraylsis and out of body experiences. The ones that are the least explainable are the ones I have experienced during meditation. I have experienced multiple hulacinations most regurlarly audio hulacinations where it sounds as though some one is whispering in your ear. It sounds very realistic but once I put my attention to it during a deep meditation it disapears. I have a feeling these hallucinations have some thing to do with my subconcious running rampant whilst my focus is else where. Maybe its always there but our minds are always to murky to hear it? The sensations I experience in my body is also a very unusual one. Pressure coming down on my stomach most common. It feels not quite like some one is pushing on it, more like my muscles are in constant state of flexing, but they aren't. My stomach will literally cave inward yet my body is completely relaxed. I have more sensations but this is the most unusual. I believe most of them have to do with the fact my body may be falling asleep and I am just awake for the ride. |
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| | #73 (permalink) (top) | ||
![]() Amused Location: Mid Atlantic Posts: 1,016 | Quote:
Brue Moen... from Wiki Quote:
I have little "faith" in those that profit from people in mourning. It's bad enough the funeral business and the government does it. Seems everyone wants a piece of the pie. That you may retain your self-respect, it is better to displease the people by doing what you know is right, than to temporarily please them by doing what you know is wrong. W. J. H. Boetcker | ||
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| | #74 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Still Unusual Posts: 33 | Maryjane, I thought you said you were withdrawing from this debate? Anyway, welcome back. I agree with you, I never feel comfortable when so-called "human potential experts" charge large amounts of money for workshops and study programmes - particularly when the people attracted to them are often vulnerable and in crisis. But people, in the West at least, can do what they want with their money... surely? Out of curiosity, I wondered what the super-rich did with theirs. Here are some examples. A man recently paid $502,400 to have lunch, yes lunch, with the world's leading investor and billionaire businessman Warren Buffet. All the money went to charity. In 2005, an art collector paid $104m for Picasso's 1905 painting Boy with a Pipe. In the same year the Bugatti Veyron, the world's fastest legal on-road sports car, went on sale for $1.7m. The most expensive yacht is owned by Oracle founder Larry Ellison - cost $68m. A toy collector recently paid $60,000 for a pre-war Dinky box of 6 type 1 vans. So, $2,000 for a week long seminar. The obvious question, what do you get for this money. : The opportunity of overcoming your fear of death. : The opportunity of learning how to meet and converse with deceased loved ones. : The opportunity of dramatically expanding one's knowledge and awareness of life. : The opportunity of learning how to travel in the many different dimensions of time and space away from the physical. Therefore, I would suggest this is good value for money when compared to the cost of expensive material objects. You have a choice. Follow the creeds ignorance is bliss and shallow is good, or, choose the more challenging but far more gratifying exploration of other worlds and your inner self. What happens if you play ‘The Blues’ backwards? You sober up, your wife returns home, and the dog comes back to life. |
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| | #75 (permalink) (top) | ||||||
| Hot Lava Posts: 1,571 | Quote:
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The last bit is straight out of a cheap advertising block in some woman's magazine. There is nothing gratifying in been conned out of money by charlatans . | ||||||
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| | #76 (permalink) (top) | |
| Altruism Assassin Location: Massachusetts Posts: 3,892 | Quote:
“What is the use of straining after an amiable view of things, when a cynical view is most likely to be the true one?” -George Bernard Shaw Your friendly neighborhood Mercenary | |
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| | #77 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Still Unusual Posts: 33 | Ah, the Dawkin's rottweilers are now hunting in packs. :o) Soylent Green, "I would rather spend my money on material goods than waste it on imaginary goods" Thanks for telling us that your are a superficial, shallow, closed and narrow minded, materialistic, naive, deceived and manipulated consumer. So, you would rather spend $2,000 on some meaningless commodity like a pair of crocodile made shoes than a week long seminar that could actually challenge, change and perhaps even give some substance to your shallow materialistic life? :o) God's Mercenary, "so many rich saps to rip off, so little time." I couldn't agree more. Welcome to your life. :o) What happens if you play ‘The Blues’ backwards? You sober up, your wife returns home, and the dog comes back to life. |
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| | #78 (permalink) (top) | ||||||
![]() Amused Location: Mid Atlantic Posts: 1,016 | Quote:
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I didn't see how the Monroe Institute's programs are any different than PTL, the 700 Club, or any other religious programing that flash their "promises" in exchange for "donations." Quote:
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I'm concerned with the people and organizations waiting in the wings to capitaize on a person's emotional vunnerability. The only thing the institute offers is a memory. Amusing the literature states that if you are a $10,000 member you get 4 books "free." Ahem...that's not free. Maybe they don't understand that receiving a death benefit is often one of the most painful moments for a survivor. It's tangible evidence that your loved one is no longer alive. You get the same feeling in the pit of your stomach when they hand you a death certificate. Quote:
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So after the week long seminar, those that still don't believe are ignorant and shallow thinkers? Or did the institute fail to deliver? It's quite cocernining that people have to follow anyone's thinking other than their own. Dealing with grief is very personal. One size does not fit all. I do have one question...Are you affiliated with the institute or it's members in any way? That you may retain your self-respect, it is better to displease the people by doing what you know is right, than to temporarily please them by doing what you know is wrong. W. J. H. Boetcker | ||||||
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| | #79 (permalink) (top) | |
| Altruism Assassin Location: Massachusetts Posts: 3,892 | Quote:
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