The Little Purple Notebook On How To Escape From This Universe
Copyleft � 1998 by Maximilian J. Sandor, Ph.D.
Subscription Information: Maria Loren
[email protected]
Website:
http://transmillennium.net/pnohteftu/
Exteriorization by Thawing Viewpoints
In many circles a lot of attention is given to the achievement of
viewpoints and perceptions from outside the body.
The underlying assumption most often seems to be that an 'exteriorization'
from the body would be tantamount to 'freedom' of the Being itself -
brought about through the 'freedom' from the body.
The fallacy of such an assumption becomes obvious if one considers that at
the time of impending death of the physical body, every Being will enter an
'exterior' state relative to the body. This does not make the Being more
free at all - if anything it will increase its craving for physical and
mental sensations.
From another perspective, an exteriorization can be seen as a relocation of
the assumed center of origin of the Being's view. Unless the viewpoints
themselves are changing in the process, nothing more has been achieved than
a limited, spatial move relative to the current body.
Exteriorization processes therefore are likely to leave the original
attachments to the body unchanged, and, in quite a lot of cases, they can
cause a host of problems
which are known as 'out-int'.
A Being attaches to a body at anchorpoints, usually concentrated at head,
neck, and shoulder. It does so via fixed viewpoints, sometimes called
'anchor beams'.
Changing the distance of the Being's viewpoint origin can cause those
anchor beams to be out of balance. Then these beams will 'snap' to the body
with increased force, since it 'appears to 'them' that they have lost
control.
Dizziness, extremely painful headaches, muscle spasms, and other phenomena
can occur and can thus lead to a significant discomfort of the person.
On top of the physical discomfort, any state of exteriorization will
restimulate prior experiences of being exterior to the body.
However, for countless life cycles, these experiences occurred only at the
time of death or extreme danger. Unless first cleared successfully, both
body _and_ Being can be expected to dramatize those events to a more or
less marked degree.
But a complete handling of problems while being exterior presupposes the
ability to duplicate the viewpoint of being exterior. Since the viewpoint
of being exterior ultimately requires to _be_ exterior_ a catch-22
situation arises.
Exteriorization processes are still in high demand. They promise a quick
and easy fix of all the problems a person may have and they appeal to the
'instant gratification' mentality of today's times.
There is no way around the step-by-step resolution of one's fixed
viewpoints, however, and in the long run a more patient and comprehensive
approach is much more likely to work for a person.
One way to go about it is to look at the way a person keeps holding its
anchorpoints on the body in the first place.
They are held in its position by 'beams' of fixed and immobilized
attention. These have been 'frozen' in time
and any disturbance will cause an immediate reinforcement and recreation by
its generating viewpoints.
If the generating viewpoints can be 'unfrozen', or thawed, the Being would
not hold on to its body in the frantical way it does.
Furthermore, experience shows that thawing viewpoints will allow the Being
to allow itself to have more 'permeating' viewpoints instead of fixed
viewpoints along an unmoving axis.
But experience also shows that the Being will get into a state of general
disorientation when it starts thawing
or unfocussing fixed viewpoints. This state of disorientation (which can
easily be of a overwhelming magnitude) causes the Being to compulsively
recreate fixed viewpoints.
It apparently becomes necessary to backtrack one step further in the
causative chain that leads to the interiozation of Beings into bodies.
Fixed viewpoints invariably seem to follow a confusion that the Being had
about something. To resolve such
a confusion, the Being will grasp anything that appears 'stable', even if
it doesn't make sense at all.
If the attachment to a 'stable' point in physical or mental space
(sometimes called a 'stable datum') was successful at the time, the Being
may use this stable point as a reference in the future as well.
Even if the stable datum made sense at the time of the original confusion,
it will not make sense in different situations and times and it is likely
to cause more confusions in the future -the circle is closing and the
Being, insisting on a stable datum that helped in the past, will reinforce
its anchor beams onto whatever represents this stable datum.
In short, until the confusion prior to a fixed viewpoint is recognized as
such, there will be considerable resistance to thawing this frozen
viewpoint. And, as mentioned above, if the Being now attempts to move this
fixed viewpoint, as done directly or indirectly in most exteriorization
processes, another layer of the Being's personality will reinforce or
recreate this viewpoint with a force greater than ever before.
On the other hand, it the prior confusions are successfully resolved, the
previously fixed viewpoints can now be used to permeate space and time.
Exteriorization then happens as a side effect of this permeation and it is
not just a moving of viewpoints with effort.
These considerations lead to the following sequence of
'permeation/exteriorization by thawing viewpoints':
* find an anchorpoint (typically a 'ridge') on the body;
* locate the anchor beam attached to the point;
* identify the fixed viewpoint that is holding the
anchor beam in place;
* start thawing the frozen viewpoint either directly
or with the help of modality-changing procedures
(like in NLP);
* while thawing, spot the confusion that prompted the
fixation of this viewpoint;
* and (very important!) hold the confusion in view until
its force vanished completely.
With every fixed viewpoint thus resolved, the Being will be more able to
focus _and_ unfocus at will.
Once the number of frozen viewpoints falls below a certain threshold, the
Being can enter 'boundless states' of the mind in which no fixation on
individual ('concrete') objects exists any more.
These 'boundless states' are the stepping stones on the way to complete
liberation - a state where no restrictions exist in regards to the choice
of the Being to experience moods in general as well as perceptions through
individual viewpoints in particular.
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Copyleft � 1998 by Maximilian J. Sandor, Ph.D.