 Originally Posted by Sageous
^^ I don't know if your post was directed toward me, but just in case:
I never said that feeling your presence in a Void is comparable to having a dream body. Quite the contrary.
Yes, if you are lucid, you clearly must feel your own presence. But what you feel is just that: the presence, in a pure and non-corporeal manner, of You. This presence is the greater whole of the mental/spiritual aspects that define You: your thoughts, your emotions, your memories; your sense of Self. That presence is felt without the assistance, or need, of a dream body; and it sort of has to be this way, because a dream body cannot exist in a true NREM/Delta Void:
In a dream, You are not your dream body. Your dream body is merely another projection generated by your unconscious/dreaming mind to complete the imagery of the dream. Your dream body is no different in that sense than any other object in a dream, and its creation (i.e., your noticing it in the void) may indeed indicate that your dreaming mind is once again producing imagery, and you may be emerging from the void. So, in short, if you have a dream body, then dream imagery is being created, so it follows that you have likely begun receiving input from your dreaming mind.
That said, I've found there may be an exception to this: With effort, you can visualize your body -- or at least parts of it -- without necessarily firing up your dreaming mind and REM. What you would do is feel a need to use, say, your hands, and in a few moments you might see what looks like your hands passing before you. Your visualized body parts (and whatever other things you might try to visualize, for that matter) will remain for as long as you stay focused on them, but will disappear immediately when you cease focusing, indicating to me that your dreaming mind is not creating the imagery for you, as it would in a "normal" dream. This sort of visualization can be helpful if you get nervous (or bored) in your void by offering a small sense of physical orientation, and I think it is sourced more in your natural instincts to have hands than it does in your dreaming mind creating dream imagery.
In fact, one of the very interesting things, to me, about the void is that it is a great place for learning to do without a dream body. These days I rarely, if ever, have a dream body during higher-end LD's (unless of course I feel a need for one), and it proves to be very beneficial to things like control or creation (i.e. flying is a snap if you have no "physical" body to lift into the air), and as a constant confirmation that the entire dreamworld is Me: it is much easier to hold that non-dual point of view without a "physical" dream body tacitly convincing you that you are somehow separate from the dreamworld.
tl;dr: Since your dream body is, like everything else in a dream, just a projection of your unconscious/dreaming mind, it will not be present if your dreaming mind is not producing imagery -- so logically then, if you have a dream body in the Void, you may very well have begun dreaming again. Also, I for one never said that thought cannot be present in the Void; that simply does not make sense, since thoughts are a vital aspect of the presence of You in the dream. If that was me, I'm sorry I was confusing.
On that same note:
Yes, Letaali, you can certainly remember thoughts; I did not mean to imply otherwise. I was talking about your memory's need to have something sensorially tangible on which to grasp in order to file memories about, say, where you actually were during time in the Void. It needs to record what you saw, heard, or physically felt in order to create a context for the memory, and if no such imagery exists, then it might just do a little editing to create a "file-able" context. But thoughts are as intangible as a Void, by most measures, so your memory already has a process for recording them.
: ) Yeah, I did read your post and those were my thoughts from it. But yeah...I think some things you mentioned in your other post confused me.
What do you mean by a NREM Delta Void?I already knew that in a dream our body's are just projections but it seems we might be talking about different voids or not. I'm still not sure.
That said, I've found there may be an exception to this: With effort, you can visualize your body -- or at least parts of it -- without necessarily firing up your dreaming mind and REM. What you would do is feel a need to use, say, your hands, and in a few moments you might see what looks like your hands passing before you. Your visualized body parts (and whatever other things you might try to visualize, for that matter) will remain for as long as you stay focused on them, but will disappear immediately when you cease focusing, indicating to me that your dreaming mind is not creating the imagery for you, as it would in a "normal" dream.This sort of visualization can be helpful if you get nervous (or bored) in your void by offering a small sense of physical orientation, and I think it is sourced more in your natural instincts to have hands than it does in your dreaming mind creating dream imagery.
I have experienced that before. That's why I still think it makes it the void. But yeah...I think when you said
My experience with the void, as we're discussing it here, is one of existing in a place that is not a place at all, but nothing, period: the void represents for me a moment of zero context, zero sensory input, where you see nothing, hear nothing, feel nothing.
I may have gotten confused.
In fact, one of the very interesting things, to me, about the void is that it is a great place for learning to do without a dream body. These days I rarely, if ever, have a dream body during higher-end LD's (unless of course I feel a need for one), and it proves to be very beneficial to things like control or creation (i.e. flying is a snap if you have no "physical" body to lift into the air), and as a constant confirmation that the entire dreamworld is Me: it is much easier to hold that non-dual point of view without a "physical" dream body tacitly convincing you that you are somehow separate from the dreamworld.
I can see how that would work. Although I prefer a dreaming body I agree there are times when you have to let go of it just to achieve what you want to do.
l;dr: Since your dream body is, like everything else in a dream, just a projection of your unconscious/dreaming mind, it will not be present if your dreaming mind is not producing imagery -- so logically then, if you have a dream body in the Void, you may very well have begun dreaming again. Also, I for one never said that thought cannot be present in the Void; that simply does not make sense, since thoughts are a vital aspect of the presence of You in the dream. If that was me, I'm sorry I was confusing.
When you say"begun dreaming again" that part kind of confuses me. Aren't you dreaming already when in the void? How else would you be able to be in the void if you weren't asleep? Is NREM a word for being in the dream when your mind isn't producing images anymore?
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