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Message Subject Mad World
Poster Handle Seer777
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holy war or ai peace
 Quoting: aether


To successfully transition; you must be unaware of it.

Acceptance at root level.

This requires many roads to cleave the intellect while leading the heart.

Reassemblage past the thin veil.

The ettiquette of transmission.
 Quoting: Dionysian Fullaflattus


Pense on leaping out of ones skin when affrighted.


Constriction of symmetry.
 Quoting: Dionysian Fullaflattus




Thread: Divine Colors Conclusion: Echoes of the Past (Page 237)

Wanted to share since it goes back to X thread days..I found someone else with the same phenomena I have been mentioning over the last 5 years.

She too was looking for people that had experienced it.




Thread: X Marks the Spot (Page 1464)
Just thought I would share.

Earlier I had a bit of a meditative nap. After 10 hrs of sleep last night, seems I drifted off for another hour at least.

Anyway, just before I had an interesting experience I thought I would share.



Essentially, I was listening to music when my attention was pulled in a specific direction. Just then a tone came through and I saw what can only be described as a small ping pong ball of white and rainbow light shoot from the right side of my frontal lobe to the other. At the same instant, as if I was standing say on the corpus collosum, a second ping pong ball of light shot behind or in the occipital lobe from the left to to the right. I could 'see' both at once although seemingly pointed forward in the 'dark'. If that makes sense.


It was completely jarring and lasted for but a split second. The 'light' was created by both the tone and the instant type 'startle response' from myself.


I was under the impression that the brain is in complete darkness within the casing of the skull.

I had asked some months earlier having noted something similar when I sprained my ankle many years ago, with a flash of light which accompanied the pain.


I was wondering if anyone else had noticed light response within the brain with any type of 'startle' response while meditating?


Eyes closed of course.



I hope this makes sense.

hmm
 Quoting: Seer777



Thread: Duat do what (Page 383)
I saw the light phenomena as a kind of synesthesia. I would notice them, often bright fuchsia or blue in color, sometimes occurring simultaneous to sudden sound or as feedback to thoughts.

It does happen still but I have only recently noticed it, when I am about to go to sleep and a loud sound will startle me and a flash of light will be very visible behind my closed eyelids.

Knowing now about 'star in a jar', creating light from sound is not far fetched at all.

Especially in the closed system inside my head.
 Quoting: Seer777


Anyone else get the flash of light with sound?


[link to www.youtube.com (secure)]
 Quoting: Seer777



I've been given a diagnosis of Complex PTSD. One of my symptoms is an exaggerated startle response - it can be someone chapping the door, the telephone, a bus going by, my name, someone quietly approaching out the corner of my eye, etc, etc. But the one I would like to talk about is when falling asleep.

When falling asleep, if there is a noise and I start, even though my eyes are closed a light flashes quickly in my vision. There is no light actually on when I open my eyes, this seems to happen in response to the noise - my eyes are closed when I see the flash of light.

So it goes like this:

Eyes closed--->Falling asleep--->*Noise+startle+light flash*--->Eyes open---> Awake.


Has anyone else experienced this combination of the startle+light flash when there is no actual light alongside the noise stimulus?

I cannot seem to find any thing about this on searching.

[link to forums.psychcentral.com (secure)]

sunbulb
 Quoting: Seer777


Your fear reaction is lightning quick

“I am studying how quickly you react to something that is frightening, and it turns out that it takes just a tenth of a second between the time you are exposed to something that you fear until you react," says Ole Åsli, a postdoc in the Department of Psychology at the University of Tromsø.

"Our reaction to fear is almost as quick as a reflex.”

[link to sciencenordic.com]
 Quoting: Seer777
 
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