Becoming the Ideal Candidate for OBEs - Part 1
by Bob Peterson
For this blog article, I'm presenting another excerpt from my new book, Hacking the Out of Body Experience, which is still unpublished. Due to its size, I've broken this chapter into two articles. This is the first half.
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Can
we
use
science to transform
ourselves
into
ideal (or
at least better)
candidates
for OBEs? I believe the answer is yes.
We
start by
examining
what
scientists
know
about the people who
are
predisposed to OBEs. Then
we change our habits to “reprogram”
our brains for
OBE using
a
concept neuroscientists
called
neuroplasticity: the brain’s ability to rewire
itself.
There
are two kinds of OBE habits we
can
develop: habits that make OBEs more likely to occur
(which
I’ll talk about throughout the entire
book),
and habits to make you a better candidate for OBEs, which I’ll
cover now.
There
are also bad habits you
should
break (like watching too much television) but we’ll get into those
later.
Daily
Meditation
The
first
way
to become
a better candidate for OBEs is to meditate daily.
There
are literally hundreds of meditation techniques, and all of them can
make you a better candidate for OBEs.
In
a way, direct
OBE induction itself
is
a very specific kind of meditation where you focus your mind in a
certain way (more
about that in chapter 17).
Some
OBE authors achieve
their OBEs entirely
through
meditation. For
example, pretty
much
all of Jurgen
Ziewe’s
OBEs were
the result of his meditation, even though his goal in meditating
wasn’t specifically for that
(he
was after more lofty goals like Nirvana, Satori, oneness
with God, or whatever you want to call it.)
While
it’s
important to practice OBE techniques, that’s
not what
I mean
here. Here
I
want to talk about “normal” meditation; the kind where you just
sit quietly, clear your mind and still your thoughts. For
example, one
of the most simple
and powerful
meditation techniques
is
“mindfulness
meditation”
in
which you
simply
sit
and cultivate
a focused awareness on the present moment, and extend a loving
awareness toward
others.
I usually meditate twice a day: A fifteen-to-twenty
minute silent
“mindfulness”
meditation early
in
the morning after I wake up, and a “binaural beat” meditation
under headphones in the evening. I’ll
go into more details about binaural beats and other sound
technologies in chapter 65.
There’s
ample scientific evidence that meditation rewires your brain. For
example, a 2014 article in the Huffington Post1
talks about the work of psychiatrist Dr. Dan Siegel, executive
director of the Mindsight Institute. According
to the
article:
“As
Siegel explained, the concept of "neural integration"
refers to the interaction between various disparate parts of the
brain. And through mindfulness practices like meditation, we can
actually grow integrative fibers in the brain -- studies have shown
that mindful awareness increases the connectivity of separate areas
of the brain.”
Can
that
make you a better candidate for OBEs? Everything I know about OBEs
says yes. Of
course, that
doesn’t guarantee that you’ll have OBEs. Renown skeptic Dr. Susan
Blackmore has meditated every day for more than 30 years, and she
claims it hasn’t helped her induce any OBEs. So
think of meditation
as
just one piece
of the puzzle.
Strengthening
your active imagination
Another
thing science tells us is that OBEs happen more often to creative
people, people who use their imaginations. In other words, people
who
focus on “inner events” more than “outer events.” In terms of
brain science, they spend a lot of time on
“task negative” brain events (mind-wandering, daydreaming) and
less time on
“task positive” brain events (focused tasks).
In
terms of neuroscience,
this
means they
exercise,
or even over-use,
the “default
mode
network”
(DMN)
which
I’ll cover in more detail in chapter 71.
A
lot of people tell me, “I used to have OBEs when I was a child, but
then they stopped.” So
what changed? Why
do children have more OBEs? I believe it’s
because
they
use their
active
imagination more
than adults.
Kids use their active imagination constantly. I
once read an article about a 9-year-old girl who could self-induce
OBEs. Someone asked her how she did it. She said something like,
“It’s easy. Just pretend you’re
on a roller-coaster, then try to move but don’t really move.
Eventually, you’ll start to get faster and faster, and you’ll
actually feel like you’re shaking. At some point, you’ll just pop
out of your body.” She
figured out that using her active imagination while she’s relaxed
is a key factor. Her
instruction to “move but don’t really move” sounds very much
like an OBE technique I developed called
the “Almost Move Technique” which I
explain in
chapter 30.
As
we get older, our brains and belief systems tend to, for
lack of a better word,
“solidify” and
become more
rigid.
Our
brains develop habitual patterns (think of them as ruts) and we
use our active imagination less. So
the first step is to break out of these ruts.
The
more you use your active imagination, the easier it will be to
achieve
OBEs. In
my first book, I
have an exercise called
“Pretend Day.”2
The
whole point was
to get
you to use
your active imagination as
much as you can
by
pretending
weird
things happen. For
example, imagine
you pull out a gun and shoot a stoplight that’s holding
you back. Or
pretend there are purple
dragons
circling in the sky above you, or
balls of light encircling your head. It
doesn’t matter what you fantasize about; just that you do
fantasize.
So
to become a better candidate for OBEs, make
every day “pretend day.” Learn
to actively
engage
in playful fantasy. Don’t
consider this a waste of time; consider
it a necessary part of rewiring your brain for OBEs.
Developing
absorption
Science
tells us one
of the most important attributes
of OBE-susceptible people is absorption.3
I
wrote about this
in my second book.4
Absorption
is commonly measured by the Tellegen Absorption Scale (TAS)
by psychologists to test how absorbed people get
in
their own
mental
imagery, or how
focused
they
are on
inner events. According
to scientists, people
who rate high on the TAS also
tend to be more easily
hypnotized.
They’re
also
typically better at an important OBE skill: visualization. Absorption
is also
strongly
correlated with openness to experience. (This
may
suggest
drugs used to treat ADD
might
help
you focus more on OBEs.)
So
another way to rewire your brain for OBEs is to develop absorption.
Many
scientists seem to treat absorption and suggestibility as a static
and unchanging trait, but I
know of at least two ways to develop absorption. The first is to read
(or
write) fiction
stories
and books.
I
especially favor science fiction and fantasy novels that conjure up
images of strange new worlds and the creatures that inhabit them,
like
elves, trolls and gnomes.
You
can lose yourself and become absorbed in a television
show
or a movie,
but
they
don’t have the same effect because they feed your brain with both
visual and auditory data: there’s not
much
creativity left
for
the viewer.
They lead you by the nose and tell you exactly what to think and
feel.
When
you read fiction, you
do something different: you
create a mental image of the events occurring in the story.
As
you read, try to imagine the faces of the people in the story. Try to
visualize the circumstances they’re in. Try to become absorbed into
the story’s plot to the exclusion of everything else in
the outside world.
Again,
this is not a waste of time; it’s a technique to rewire your brain.
The
second way to develop absorption is to listen to music. I’m
not talking about background music; that’s actually
counterproductive. Listen
intently,
under headphones. Don’t
combine it with anything else. Put
your phone down and give
it your full attention.
Try
to get totally lost in the music. Focus on its ups and downs, and how
the music makes you feel. It’s
better to listen to instrumental songs rather than songs with lyrics.
Some
genres of music are more conducive to this process than others. For
example, as
appealing as they might be to you, Country
and
Folk music
might
be
poor choices
for this because they
tend to emphasize stories
conveyed in words, using
the music only to emphasize the story. Classical
/ Baroque
music
emphasizes
the music only, which
is better for this purpose.
It’s
is
highly creative and
can drag you up and down in wonderful ways.
Unfortunately,
I
find most Classical music boring, so I tend to favor music
with some
lyrics,
but where
the
music overpowers the lyrics, and not the other way around. I like
long
progressive
rock songs
by Yes that are heavy on music, with lyrics that are nothing
more than
poetry (like
“Close
To The Edge”),
or
the earlier, more progressive songs by Pink Floyd (like “Echoes.”)
I also listen to progressive metal that’s
music-heavy
(like
Dream Theater),
and
symphonic
metal (like
Epica).
Bands
that
are “trippy” like
“Dead Can Dance” are also
good
for getting entranced. I’ll talk more about OBE music in chapter
53.
(To be continued)
Bob Peterson
22 January 2019
1 What
Neuroscience Can Teach Us About Compassion,
Carolyn Gregoire,
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/what-neuroscience-can-tea_n_5268853
2 Out
of Body Experiences, Robert Peterson, Hampton Roads Publishing,
1997, pg. 40.
4 Lessons
Out of the Body, Robert Peterson, Hampton Roads Publishing,
2001, pg. 221.
5 How
Enlightenment Changes Your Brain, Andrew Newberg and Mark Robert
Waldman, Penguin Random House, 2016, pg. 124.