Astral Projection OBE and Life in The Spirit World
April 1, 2009 by James Hewson
Filed under Life After Death
Astral projection is a type of Out of Body Experience, occasionally referred to as an OBE or OOBE which sits somewhere on the boundary amongst psionic capability, scrying and religious mysticism. It is a greatly controversial topic with many cynics alleging that it is all in the imagination or merely an instance of lucid dreaming. It is, however, something which has an radically protracted history, akin to yoga and meditation. Astral Travel is the wilful act of having the spirit depart the body, and not to be muddled with an out of body experience which occurs involuntarily such as while dreaming, or in a near death experience.
Travelling using the astral body is expressed within many mystical readings and has more lately been studied by scientists exploring accounts of individuals who have encountered a near death experience. Astral projection was additionally used by many aged civilisations comprising the Aztec Indians and the Egyptians.
Scientific affirmation is now proposing that we are considerably more than our earthly body and that astral projection is as simple as riding a bicycle. Employing brain wave technology it was established that a particular blend of alpha and theta harmonics gave rise to instantaneous astral projection away from the physical person. Commonly, in the astral projection practice, the subject characterizes themselves as existing in a spirit world which repeatedly has no parallel to any earthly environment, even though they express they can travel at different periods and to varying physical surroundings. In comparison with astral projection, etheric projection is illustrated as the capacity to move around in the material earth in an etheric individual which is generally, although not always, unseen to people who are at present within their bodies.
Psychics state that their awareness or spirit is moved into an astral body or double. Psychics frequently imply that the unconscious mind includes the soul or astral person, resulting in tumbling dreams or awakening with a dropping feeling or unexpected jolt. Some psychics and metaphysical investigators consider the astral body or spirit body as a unconnected piece of our existence and that our awareness or spirit lives in a world recognized as the astral plane. It is also attested to by psychics that the cord (which materialises when you begin your journey) is your lifeline and means of returning to your body which can be cut when you attempt astral projection, thereby making it hopeless to move back towards your body. Additional psychics express that the silver rope is joined to you when you come into the physical body for the initial time, and it is not severed again up to the time you depart for the final time.
It is considered by those whom believe, that travelling to greater dimensions by way of astral projection is an very good way of furthering yourself. There are areas that you can proceed to which can put you in first hand contact with understanding and energies that can revolutionize your person, mind and psyche in a very short time period. With no definitive proof at the present time however, the question around can anyone successfully willingly depart from their living body is something that no one can answer definitively and conclusively at this point. However as further is known about the world and how the mind functions, we may come closer to discovering an answer to our queries about astral travel and what causes some individuals to travel while other people never experience this awareness.
What Did The Greeks Believe About The Afterlife?
March 27, 2009 by James Hewson
Filed under Life After Death
The ancient Greek notion of the afterlife and the rituals accompanying burials were previously well instituted by the 6th century B.C. In the Odyssey, Homer depicts the Underworld, deep below the earth, where Hades, the brother of Zeus and Poseidon, and his spouse, Persephone, ruled over a myriad of wandering legions of gloomy figures known as the ‘shades’ which were all those who had previously perished. It was not a joyful locality, and indeed, the soul of the great warrior Achilles informed Odysseus that he would might as well be a miserable helot on Earth than lord of all the departed in the The land of the dead.
The Greeks conceived that at this point of death the soul, or ghost of the deceased, was released from the body as a brief puff of wind. The deceased was then readied for interment conforming to the time honoured practices. Ancient scholarly authorities insist on the need of a correct funeral and refer to the exclusion of burial ceremonies as an defamation to human nobility. Families of the dead, principally women, administered the elaborate funeral traditions that were traditionally made up of three sections. These were the placing of the body, the burial march, and the burying of the individual or cremated ashes of the deceased. Following being cleaned and daubed with oil, the individual was clothed and positioned on a high bed inside the dwelling. Throughout the placing of the body, relations and friends drew near to grieve and provide their respects. Lamentation of the deceased is highlighted in aged Greek paintings at least as ancient as the Geometric era, when vases were adorned with areas illustrating the departed surrounded by grievers. The final stage of the process was to bring the deceased to the burial ground in a procession, the ekphora, which commonly took place almost ahead of dawn and a handful of objects were deposited into the grave, but imposing earth stacks, orthogonal constructed crypts, and elaborate marble stelai and carvings were frequently formed to indicate the grave and to safeguard that the deceased would always be remembered. Eternal life lay in the lasting recollection of the deceased by the living and from representations on white ground lekythoi, we understand that the women of Traditional Athens made habitual visits to the burial sites with gifts that included little cakes and liquid offerings.
The most sumptuous burial mausoleums were built in the 6th century B.C. by upper-class kindreds of Attica in exclusive funeral land along the roadside on the relatives land or approaching Athens. Relief carvings, figures, and tall stelai enthroned by finials identified many of these burial places. Each funerary mausoleum had an engraved foundation with an epitaph, frequently in poetry that memorialized the deceased. A relief illustrating a generalised impression of the departed occasionally summoned up characteristics of the individual’s existence, with the inclusion of a minion, belongings, and animals. On ancient reliefs, it is simple to recognise the deceased individual nevertheless, throughout the 4th century B.C., further family associates were attached to the scenes and generally many names were etched into the tribute, making it hard to differentiate the deceased from the grievers. Like all aged marble carving, funerary figures and burial stelai were brightly coloured, and comprehensive remains of scarlet, dark, cobalt, and green colouring can nevertheless be viewed.
Many of the best Attic burial memorials endured in a burial place positioned in the outlying Kerameikos area situated on the edge of Athens barely outside the gateways of the old city barrier. The burial ground was being used for centuries and awe-inspiring Geometrical craters marked burial mounds of the 8th century B.C., in addition to excavations which have exposed a obvious structure of graves from the Traditional era. At the demise of the 5th century B.C., Athenian households started to inter their deceased in modest stone sarcophagi positioned in the ground inside grave areas coordinated in manufactured terraces supported by a tall retaining barriers. Marble cenotaphs belonging to various associates of a relatives were positioned alongside the edge of the terrace rather than over the tombs themselves.
As we can see the Greeks belived a signficant amount about the afterlife and paid great attention to trusted traditions when burying their loved ones and did not deviate from this for many years.









