 Originally Posted by moonshine
Yeah, but really any and all dreams are essentially Out of Body aren't they. Seems to me that it makes the term somewhat redundant.
If I had to pick I'd say that all dreams are IN body, but it's only out of body if your experience of it is that you are out of your body. If I have a dream that I'm walking down the street, that's not an OBE, because I believe I'm in my body, my experience is that I am in a body, walking. Usually for me, even if I'm lucid I still think I'm in 'a' body because I'm usually inhabiting a dream body. I rarely have third person dreams, though I do have dreams that I'm in another person's body- I would consider that an OBE as well, since I'm not in my own. So even though if lucid, I realize the body I'm in is not actually dream since it's a dream body, my perception is still that I am inhabiting a body. If I had a dream where I was floating around, or floated above my own body in bed, that would be an out of body experience, because my perception would be that I was outside of my body. If I were lucid, and knew that really I was in my head, I would still be perceiving the hallucination itself as my consciousness, without body, floating over a dream body that I'm "supposed" to be inhabiting, so it would be an OBE.
 Originally Posted by moonshine
I get the finer differences. But how many times have you seen a thread appear saying "was this an OBE?" and the first question is "do you mean dreaming or really leaving your body (Cough beyond dreaming cough)". Given your interpretation, its a hot skip and a jump to saying that the traditional supernatural OBE may need a more specific name or some kind of disclaimer, as OBE is far too general a term.
I'm not really sure what you mean with this. But, OBEs simply refer to any and all experiences that your consciousness is residing out of your body. It can happen in car accidents, it can happen on drug trips, it can happen in dreams, it can happen in operating rooms, and according to some it can happen when you float your soul/spirit/whatever, the thing embodying/containing your consciousness or essence of self, leaves your body. If a person says, "Oh my god I had an OBE" I'd respond, "Oh? In an accident? Were you using drugs? Did you just mean a dream? (All matters of perception) Or do you mean, you actually think you actually left your body to float around?" It's still a perception but I'd be inquiring as to what they believe was the CAUSE of their OBE. That's why I use "AP" instead of the general "OBE", because most people who talk about OBEs in that paranormal type aspect usually think they're floating around in some alternate dimension or whatever, as a soul or spot of light or whatever else, so it's easier to keep it straight that way. To me, an OBE is the perceptual experience of being out of your own body. Then, you can specify and guess why/how it happened, what caused it.
 Originally Posted by moonshine
Yes and no. I thought false awakenings are false awakenings whether your realise you're still dreaming or not.
Yeah, false awakening just means you dreamt of waking up from sleep. You might realize during it that it's a dream, or you might not until you've woken up. Just having a false awakening, though, doesn't mean you'll see your own body or bedroom, you could have a false awakening that you woke up on the side of the road in a ditch. You could also dream of seeing your own body laying in bed without having a false awakening. I mean, WILDs using the Twin Bodies Technique start out this way.
 Originally Posted by moonshine
Apparently, one of the key differences between a lucid and a supernatural OBE is that in an OBE you will be able to see yourself sleeping in bed.
I suppose what I'm getting at is that I would call this a False Awakening.
Though I doubt the "believers" would agree with that assesment.
But that has nothing to do with dreaming that you've woken up. In a lucid you can see yourself sleeping in bed, too. And an OBE just refers to being out of your own body. I mean, you'd assume that means you can 'see' your body, but that's not really what that means. It just means the experience of being outside of your physical body.
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