Page 9 of 16 FirstFirst 12345678910111213141516 LastLast
Results 81 to 90 of 157

Thread: On being Exterior, your views ?

  1. #81
    Patron Meritorious thefiredragon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    florida
    Posts
    735

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by programmer_guy View Post
    Anyone who can go exterior should be able to prove it.
    And it should be easily reproduced by any independent peer review.
    It's that simple.
    Back in 90s I was living in scn student dorms, and my best friend missed his mother. On TRs he went exterior ,went home and saw that his mom moved all furniture in the house and hanged new curtains. He called his mom on the phone later and discribed how the house looks now, the color of the curtains and everything and his mom was very surprised and was keep asking how did he know.
    I also can go exterior and do that a lot
    One time,for example,my kids were playing at playground and I went out of my body and felt that some danger is comming. I told my kids to leave right away and we went to the library. When we came back, we passed the same playground. The huge branch of a very old tree felt down and smashed the fence,bent down the swings and smashed a metal "car" with a -in pipe inside that my daugher liked to hide in.
    Does this count as a prove?
    --
    ~

  2. #82
    Cabal Of One Panda Termint's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    10,065

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Student of Trinity View Post
    In my experience, that's an intermediate stage of understanding something — the point at which it seems awfully subtle, but I think I'm so clever that I've managed to figure it out. I find that thinking I'm clever is a sure sign that I don't yet really understand it. Once it's really clear, the simple questions also have simple answers, and I only feel stupid for not having seen them sooner. That's not very satisfying to my ego, but in my experience, it's what genuine progress in understanding is like.

    From the subtle middle point, the naive initial assumptions seem foolish. But from the simple endpoint, that initial level of misunderstanding seems mild and easily corrected, in comparison with the smug convolutions of the middle stage. I'm not sure why the path to deeper understanding so often goes through such a tricky intermediate zone, when in hindsight there usually turns out to have been a much simpler route. Maybe it's just me.
    I like this too and can assure you, it's not just you.
    Dave Gibbons - Sydney, Australia. 34 years in scientology 1974 - 2008
    No longer a scientologist.
    I don't believe everything I read on the Internet.
    I do believe everything I write.

  3. #83

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by nexus100 View Post
    I think as one understands an area one can visit it. This is in degrees as well. The better one knows an area, the easier it is to locate what is created there. That visit includes time.

    One creates one's own reality as a viewpoint. One sees from one spot. But one is also creating all reality as God. So what one is willing to see, one can see. What one is willing to know, one can know. Taking this approach pretty much answers all questions about why things are the way they are. But there is still all of the rest of creation to visit. This is a large scale game.
    I disagree in part. Going exterior on the way to a concentration camp death is not a about seeing something willingly and I am sure this was experienced by at least some of the Jews who were then murdered by the Nazis.

    There is self and others. It's not a 'just about you' thing. Circumstances have much to do with the effect of exteriorization aka out-of-body experienced.
    Last edited by AnonyMary; 8th November 2010 at 10:43 PM. Reason: typo
    ~ Mary McConnell, my nom de plume
    Reaching For The Tipping Point A place to keep up on what is being done to expose Scn & it's front groups, like Narconon, CCHR etc to the general public. Lots of up-to-date info. Join us
    My Scribd Scn & Narconon Legal Dox
    My blogs include:
    Formerly Fooled and Finally Free From The Deceptive Cult Called Scientology

    Ex-Sea Org Helpline
    "...leaving the confines of Scientology is a process, not a single event."

  4. #84

    Default

    Back when I first started running into Scientologists, I'd already had decades of experience with people having 'out of body' experiences or 'astral traveling' or any number of related things I'd even experienced myself.

    What *surprised* me was that Scientologists used the term 'going exterior' for just being kind of blown away or feeling weird, with no relationship to what us 'wogs' would consider 'out of body'. Strange but true.

    In retrospect, I shouldn't have been surprised. After all, their *own* concept of 'Clear', which launched the whole game has been redefined numerous times since 1950, most of the redefinitions being towards 'yawn'.

    Not to speak of 'OT', which per marketing should mean being able to alter the course of planets, but in practice sinks to the level of 'I managed to get out of bed without tripping'.

    Zinj

  5. #85
    Floater Good twin's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    In that oily film on top
    Posts
    8,760
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Yeah. What Zinj said.

    When I was in I was always amazed at how fixated Scientologists were on "exteriorization". The way I understood it the whole out int thing wasn't really possible if you knew you were a thetan, but the cult made tons of dough on people getting that rundown and getting it over and over again. It always seemed so absurd to me.

    Now, since removing myself from the cult, it still seems absurd, but so does my own previous opinion of the whole thing. Now it's like, so what? Can you hold a job? Are you allergic to cats? Who cares where you're perceiving from?

    My mom was amazingly aware and perceptive long before I found the cult. I wasn't impressed with her so much either. She always knew who was on the other end of the ringing phone and she could manifest wishes like no one else I've ever known. She always knew what I was thinking and she knew exactly which boys were going to break my heart. She never disapproved of Scientology. I think she always hoped it would help me understand her better.

    Ironic huh?
    VEDA IS GOD

    Sometimes I'm the Evil Twin.

    http://itwastruelove.blogspot.com

  6. #86
    True Ex-Scientologist programmer_guy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    U.S.
    Posts
    5,231

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by thefiredragon View Post
    Back in 90s I was living in scn student dorms, and my best friend missed his mother. On TRs he went exterior ,went home and saw that his mom moved all furniture in the house and hanged new curtains. He called his mom on the phone later and discribed how the house looks now, the color of the curtains and everything and his mom was very surprised and was keep asking how did he know.
    I also can go exterior and do that a lot
    One time,for example,my kids were playing at playground and I went out of my body and felt that some danger is comming. I told my kids to leave right away and we went to the library. When we came back, we passed the same playground. The huge branch of a very old tree felt down and smashed the fence,bent down the swings and smashed a metal "car" with a -in pipe inside that my daugher liked to hide in.
    Does this count as a prove?
    --
    Do you have a journal where you record how many times you have been right and how many times you have been wrong?

    I was on chat here once when I suggested that some of us get and use webcams so that we could do a video conference call using skype (I already had mine). Mick Wenlock was one who was "not going for it". So, I suggested to Mick that he get a webcam instead of that new horse. He laughed and said that they were, indeed, buying another horse. Was I "exterior"? Nope. Guess how I did that. :D
    The emphasis on finding and describing "knowledge structures" that are somewhere "inside" the individual encourages us to overlook the fact that human cognition is always situated in a complex sociocultural world and cannot be unaffected by it. - Edwin Hutchins
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Hutchins

  7. #87
    Unbeliever uniquemand's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    North Kingstown, RI
    Posts
    8,155

    Default

    A proof would be a situation in which there were witnesses, and a person who made those sorts of changes, and then you called in and described the changes in such a way that the witnesses also understood that you had nailed it, ideally with the whole thing recorded on video with audio. Not reporting an anecdote after the fact without any corroboration, and with no controls.

  8. #88
    True Ex-Scientologist programmer_guy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    U.S.
    Posts
    5,231

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by uniquemand View Post
    A proof would be a situation in which there were witnesses, and a person who made those sorts of changes, and then you called in and described the changes in such a way that the witnesses also understood that you had nailed it, ideally with the whole thing recorded on video with audio. Not reporting an anecdote after the fact without any corroboration, and with no controls.
    ^^^ THIS ^^^

    Correctamundo!
    The emphasis on finding and describing "knowledge structures" that are somewhere "inside" the individual encourages us to overlook the fact that human cognition is always situated in a complex sociocultural world and cannot be unaffected by it. - Edwin Hutchins
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Hutchins

  9. #89

    Default

    Back when I was about 20 I had an experience where I jumped through about 30 different people and adopted their viewpoints (and thoughts) in a few minutes, before returning to myself.

    There is *no* way I could 'prove' that, but, the experience itself was the lesson and the realization wasn't particularly related to the experience. I realized that 'I'm not I'.

    That lesson has stuck with me and been very useful. Proof notwithstanding.

    Zinj

  10. #90
    Crusader SweetnessandLight's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Sunny Southern Teegeeack
    Posts
    7,013

    Smile

    Yep!

    Good discussion, folks! Good Twin, I think your Mom must have been a long lost-relative! :D

    Maybe you have to experience it first before you can believe in it?

    I still think most of us are capable of doing all sorts of these kinds of things, unless we have some organic brain damage...
    Yes, you can fly, but first you have to break out of that cocoon. You are capable of self rescue at all times. "Every blade of grass has its own special angel watching over it and whispering, 'grow...grow'." -The Talmud "I am still determined to be cheerful and happy, in whatever situation I may be, for I have learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends upon our disposition, and not upon our circumstances." -Martha Washington

Page 9 of 16 FirstFirst 12345678910111213141516 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. 580793 Views / Scientology Security Guys
    By AnonKat in forum Anonymous videos
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 19th July 2010, 11:01 PM
  2. South Australian Politician Shares views on Scn - oh yeah !
    By DorothyInOz in forum General discussion
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 7th January 2010, 11:59 PM
  3. LRH Views on BTs is nuts.
    By Flag-2005 in forum L Ron Hubbard
    Replies: 103
    Last Post: 20th January 2009, 02:05 AM
  4. need info on details of views on psychiatry
    By grantz7 in forum The Attick
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 3rd April 2007, 06:48 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •