 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
I have tried some of the exercises casually so far and the experiences have been entertaining, and interesting. For example, while reading about the "ascent to the masters" and the "exploring of the inner temple" I engaged casually with some weak visualisations and found my dog with me again ( having first appeared here, a few days ago) and this time whenever I encountered any of the character archetypes in a manner like what was described in the book, my dog would attack them. I felt content with this, I guess because it's an expression of both repressed aggression but also defiance.
To me this has felt important, because I found myself not particularly enjoying the "Paleopsych" chapter, although in retrospect it did have some interesting ideas. I might get into why I didn't like it so much at some point...
In any case, the main importance for me was that it prompted some non-conscious imagery to express some of my disagreement with some ideas, not only ideas mentioned by the book, but ideas I've considered myself. In a way, it's a relief because it suggests that my non-conscious mind doesn't have sabotaging intents towards the more "conscious" parts, something I've had some doubts about in the past and given some thought to. In the last year or two I've had my sub-conscious really try to motivate my conscious willpower forward.
You know, I have really wanted to finish reading this and still haven't. I thought I was going to be so turned off from reading after that chapter, but the chapters that followed have actually been interesting to read and I'm almost at exactly halfway into the book now and I'm actually quite enjoying this part, which I will probably be re-reading sooner rather than later.
I wanted to comment more but it's been a long day and I just wanted to report some progress on my reading so far. 
Right, the paleopsych section was probably more problematic because it focused less on subjective experience. Instead it tried to explain the metaphysics of the world, somewhat like the fictional author of Sageous' Simply Pay Attention.
There are two things I found interesting about the paleopsych section still.
1. The idea that the body is within consciousness instead of consciousness being located inside the body. In my own worldview (so not, in the real world, but instead how I imagine the world to be, for what that's worth), consciousness is not an emergent result of the physical world. I imagine consciousness is a fundamental entity that's timeless and spaceless. Always present, everywhere. I really sort of mostly believe there is only one. And that we experience our consciousness as separate not because it is separate but because our bodies are separate and consciousness experiences the subjective experience of all bodies simultaneously and so it therefore experiences this separateness. So, Moss' first principle of astral projection that consciousness can move out of the body simply because it is not in the body to begin with but merely happens to be focused on the body generally aligns with my own worldview. However, I can't reconcile that in my worldview, the conclusion is not the same. While I also believe consciousness is not inside the body but that it's attention is on my body... I also believe it's simultaneously and infinitely already focused elsewhere. I just can't experience it from the perspective of my body here... But consciousness is experiencing all of this in all the other bodies. I don't know what it would mean to me if consciousness were to astral project... Because it's always the case already... But it's not from my body's perspective so it's not accessible. For Consciousness' attention to experiences outside of my body to be continuous with my experience inside this body... how could that be done?
I've been thinking a bit more about Sageous' ideas of the soul as an aggregation of experiences that we build up over life (also described in Simply Pay Attention). This idea of the soul as a creation instead of an innate unchanging permanent entity. And I feel like this could reconcile my and Moss' view. While I struggle to imagine consciousness as an emergent quality of the physical world, I can more easily agree to "souls" as an emergent quality of consciousness. What if consciousness is the omnipresent subjective entity, but that through it's different bodies experiences, something more is created. The soul aggregate that Sageous suggested. And whatever this creation is, perhaps, it can account for continuous experience out of the body and back. Well, I'm not sure how exactly, but it seems like a fun idea.
2. Moss discusses something that I've seen in other worldviews. This idea that there is a difference between the mind, the soul, and the spirit. I really don't get it, but it's interesting to me, that our self is divided in all these categories. Again, it's making me think back to how I reconciled my worldview with Moss' using Sageous' : the mind refers to our subjective experience in the body, the soul refers to some continuous, creation that is less strictly defined by one body, the spirit refers to the divine consciousness that is omnipresent and the source of all soul, that experiences all bodies.
Anyway, that was the extent of my playful metaphysics session while reading the paleopsych.
___________
Clearly, I've made it past the Twilight exercises of the book and I'm now in the Astral exercises. This means, my active daydreaming activities won't cut it. As I progress through the book, I really ought to make it to the Astral. Literally if it is a place or figuratively, otherwise. While dreams are set in subjective dreamscapes, these dreamscapes are still structured by our psyches, and I want to go to that place that my mind identifies as the astral. To help me in that quest, I will alternate by viewing this quest from these two different perspectives: 1. with little thought, simply focused on the idea of going to the astral without thinking much about what it means to me. 2. Interpreting astral projection as a continuous experience with my created aggregate of thought form energy that is not so strictly attached to my body, the metaphysical theory from above. It doesn't matter whether it's true or not. I want to see how this worldview will affect my experience.
I feel like I have quite a lot of dream goals right now, but I'm prioritizing completing the superhero tasks and going to the Astral, in particular, I will go to that clocktower place.
I want to add that that I find it interesting that while there is a lot of talk about the astral (on Dreamviews, in the wider dreamer community, in my life), it's not something I would have come up with myself. While I pay close attention to the patterns in my dreams, I haven't found that any of the astral dream patterns often discussed are very present in my own dreams.
For example, I was watching this movie "Long Day's Journey into Night" by Bi gan. It's a long slow movie but I really liked it. It is about a man looking for a long lost lover. Kind of a mystery, detective story, where there's some flashbacks and he investigates to find her. But most of the movie (the beginning and the second half) is a dream. And he begins the movie by saying that this lover is a dream sign and he knows he's dreaming when he sees her. And such a dream is called an out-of-body experience (OBE). So, in the first sentence he pretty much says OBE = Lucid dreaming. And it made me think, there are so many people for whom the OBE experience is an iconic lucid dreaming experience. It's just not for me. I've had tons of lucid dreams but I've never particularly felt the OBE. I did sometimes... Like once, I died, and it felt like an OBE, as I thought I was experiencing life after the death of my body. But well, that's what it was. A dream about dying and not being dead.
I'm thinking maybe it's very common for other people to experience feeling that they're leaving their body and seeing their body in bed... And that's why they talk about OBE a lot. Like, authority and dream police is a pattern a lot of people talk about and that I experience as well. But we're not all the same and I guess OBE is not an experience I have. Astral dreams might be the same. I've definitely had a few dreams that felt like interactions with the astral. I've posted one in my dream journal here where I felt like the guardians of the astral told me they were keeping me out of the astral lest I cause destruction because of my lack of control and lack of a clear mind. And that once my mind was clearer and my power was controlled, I could be allowed in. So sure, I've had some of those dreams. But I've also had dreams where people talk to me with such apparent wisdom. In those lucid dreams, I've felt perhaps those DC could be entities of their own. But upon waking up, I realize it's all nonsense. So I know my mind can simulate this feeling of interacting with external entities. So who knows. But watching Bi Gan's movie made me realize maybe OBEs and Astral dreams are just other people dreams that don't really resonate with me for some reason. Who knows.
Anyway, I've been writing a lot. For this astral quest to be continuous with my previous dreams, I guess I'll also have to reflect on how I can show my mind is now clear enough and my power controlled enough for me to find admittance into the astral, or into the clocktower at least.
Oh, and to add some other thoughts about Bi Gan's movie. In the end, as the dream concludes, it's a dream. So there is not an objective resolution of finding the lover. But instead, there is a resolution of a dream reaching a cathartic end that resonates with the past experiences. I think there's something meaningful in there about dream quests.
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