I once
made the acquaintance of a student of anthropology, Mrs. E.S. of Belleville, N.
J. More than once she experienced being out of her body, she told me, for
instance, during her second childbirth. Mrs. S. didn't claim much control starting
her out-of-body flights. But once they had begun, she had control over where
she went.
I
casually suggested that she try "visiting" me in her out-of-body
state. Nothing more was said of the matter. I certainly didn't expect anything to happen. I was wrong.
Within
an hour, I received a telephone call from Mrs. S. Without my mentioning the
music stand, she recounted the following. The night before—it was around midnight—she
found herself out of her body and decided to try to "visit" me. She did
this merely by concentrating her attention; suddenly she found herself
observing me reading in the kitchen. (I was, in fact, reading in the kitchen at
that time.) My out-of-body guest hovered nearby but was unable to make any
impression on me.
She
wondered how she could leave her mark.
After straying through the house, feeling a bit frustrated, she came
upon the music stand and took hold of it with her out-of-body “hands,"
appearing to herself to succeed in moving it to the center of the living room. She
then returned to her vacated body in Belleville.
Here
we have at least a remarkable chain of coincidences. On that morning, a skeptic
could say, I unwittingly moved my music stand. Mrs. S. hallucinated paying me a
visit, coincidentally noting just what I was doing at the time, and
coincidentally imagining she moved the music stand I unwittingly moved.
The
alternative to coincidence is to say that somehow she actually did
"leave" her body and was able to displace a physical object in my
room. The story is one of many reported out-of-body flights; I cite it because
I was an eyewitness to a displaced metal music stand weighing (with music
sheets) over two pounds. What to make of it? Did Mrs. S.—and can people—really "leave" the
body? And while out roam around in space and move physical objects?
Stan Grof had a similar experience he relates in his book 'The Cosmic Game'. Just as he was about to take a physical object from his parents house thousands of miles away while out of body, he got an overwhelming feeling of existential terror, like he was not ready for the full implications of being able to mess with 'reality' in this way- he abandoned the experiment. Me, I would be into the federal gold reserves..
ReplyDeleteStanislav Grof recounts a similar experience in his book 'The Cosmic Game', p 194.
ReplyDeleteAstral projected to his parents house thousands of miles away, he went to take a picture off the wall to verify the reality of the experience. He was suddenly hit by an overwhelming wave of existential terror, a terrible intuition that he was not ready for the full implications/ strange new world of being able to manipulate 'reality' in this way. He abandoned the experiment. Robert Monroe, Sylvan Muldoon etc. etc, unless they were lying through their teeth, have all documented the reality of some sort of subtle energetic body, the 'inner self' that survives death..
In agreement with the previous comment. As I am aware of others who have done something to the same effect of manipulating a physical element while in an out of body state, I suspect there are more who are able to accomplish this but society is not ready to accept/validate/encourage the ability openly and, given that position, few cases are brought to public awareness.
ReplyDelete