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What Makes You Believe in Time Travel?
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<blockquote data-quote="Anonynez" data-source="post: 111552" data-attributes="member: 3528"><p>I absolutely agree with this. I often say that our body is merely a vessel that our soul inhabits. If we are so inclined, or enlightened enough, I believe that we have the ability to travel laterally or in some astral form. The down side to this for me personally is that when I have these dreams, I wake up feeling like I never actually slept. I'm exhausted from the subconscious journey that I've just returned from. However, I also feel that there are vast differences between working out unfiltered thoughts that lay in your subconscious through dreams, and interpreting those dreams therapeutically, versus having OOB experiences in which you can physically feel, smell, see, taste, hear. </p><p></p><p>For example: Imagine you had been thinking of changing jobs, and then you overheard a coworker discussing the possibility of leaving the company that you work for. While commuting home, you see an expensive sports car on the highway and you think to yourself, "Oh man that's cool!". Then subsequently, that night when you go to sleep, you have a dream about you and your coworker commuting to a new job in that expensive sports car, but in the back seat is a very large snake. You're petrified of snakes. So, you jump out of the car, which then wakes you up. Well, this could merely be interpreted as a dream of collected thoughts throughout your day that are weighing on your subconscious, and the the snake could simply represent change or the fear of change, as snakes in dreams often do represent that. This is basic Freudian/Jung dream interpretation. This is a basic dream or subconscious thought. </p><p></p><p>On the other hand, if you have a dream in which you are in a place that seems familiar, the people in this dream know you, you somehow know them, and there is a specific feeling or emotion that coincides with this dream, then this type of dream is what I would consider to be traveling to alternate dimensions, timelines, worldlines, hexadents, whichever you prefer to call them. These dreams have the ability to take a physical and emotional toll on the body and the mind, sometimes even having a very profound long term affect on an individual. </p><p></p><p>Many people have no idea that this is a possibility because they're not open to the idea of it. I am very open to the idea of dimensional travel while the pineal gland is secreting trace amounts of DMT. It has been widely studied, and one of the most common occurrences amongst test subjects have been visions of hexagonal walls and/or Platonic solids, and the feeling of having traveled somewhere else entirely separate of their own existence.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anonynez, post: 111552, member: 3528"] I absolutely agree with this. I often say that our body is merely a vessel that our soul inhabits. If we are so inclined, or enlightened enough, I believe that we have the ability to travel laterally or in some astral form. The down side to this for me personally is that when I have these dreams, I wake up feeling like I never actually slept. I'm exhausted from the subconscious journey that I've just returned from. However, I also feel that there are vast differences between working out unfiltered thoughts that lay in your subconscious through dreams, and interpreting those dreams therapeutically, versus having OOB experiences in which you can physically feel, smell, see, taste, hear. For example: Imagine you had been thinking of changing jobs, and then you overheard a coworker discussing the possibility of leaving the company that you work for. While commuting home, you see an expensive sports car on the highway and you think to yourself, "Oh man that's cool!". Then subsequently, that night when you go to sleep, you have a dream about you and your coworker commuting to a new job in that expensive sports car, but in the back seat is a very large snake. You're petrified of snakes. So, you jump out of the car, which then wakes you up. Well, this could merely be interpreted as a dream of collected thoughts throughout your day that are weighing on your subconscious, and the the snake could simply represent change or the fear of change, as snakes in dreams often do represent that. This is basic Freudian/Jung dream interpretation. This is a basic dream or subconscious thought. On the other hand, if you have a dream in which you are in a place that seems familiar, the people in this dream know you, you somehow know them, and there is a specific feeling or emotion that coincides with this dream, then this type of dream is what I would consider to be traveling to alternate dimensions, timelines, worldlines, hexadents, whichever you prefer to call them. These dreams have the ability to take a physical and emotional toll on the body and the mind, sometimes even having a very profound long term affect on an individual. Many people have no idea that this is a possibility because they're not open to the idea of it. I am very open to the idea of dimensional travel while the pineal gland is secreting trace amounts of DMT. It has been widely studied, and one of the most common occurrences amongst test subjects have been visions of hexagonal walls and/or Platonic solids, and the feeling of having traveled somewhere else entirely separate of their own existence. [/QUOTE]
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