LYCOS RETRIEVER
Astral Projection
built 114 days ago
Astral Projection is about travelling outside the physical bounderies presented by your mortal body. Successfully projecting your astral form is not as complicated as it may at first sound, although it does takes time and practice to properly control your travel patterns.
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Astral Projection make “full-on trance” combined with goa elements today. Fans of goa-trance claim that Astral Projection has lost their distinctive sound in favor of the “full on trance” style. However, their last two tracks “Open Society” and “The Prophecy” have been greeted more enthusiastically by goa-trance fans, causing renewed interest among goa-trance fans in their new album Open Society due in 2008.
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It is often thought that Astral Projection (Out-of-Body Experiences) is only experienced by people that have had NDE (Near Death Experience). But that’s not true. Thousands and thousands of people around the world are trained in this art. If they can do it, with practice, surely you can do it too.
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The challenge in talking with those who are into Astral Projection, is that - sometimes - they believe that all of their experiences negate almost anything which is shared with them. Many of them feel as though they have a superior knowledge of life, the universe and the future – because of their experiences.
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It is possible to achieve an OBE using the Mastering Astral Projection presets alone, without the techniques spelled out in the book. However, simply listening to the presets without learning OBE methods is like listening to music and expecting to learn how to waltz. While it’s certainly possible, it’s much more effective to practice a little technique first.
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Astral Projection by Edward O'Connor could be a finalist for the Pretentious Title Contest, though it has an interesting jacket designed by Daniel Cullen. Set in humid Miami in the 1960s O'Connor tells the crackling coming-of-age story of Goodwin DeFoe, a mixed up teenager whose violent alcoholic parents conduct battles that make war-time Vietnam sound safer. Goodwin decides to take up the guitar and his first teacher Chuck Buffington is "A poor man, so poor in fact that on days he gave lessons he had to ride a bicycle from his rented bungalow in the black part of Coconut Grove all the way down to the music store in the Dadeland mall. . ." Buffington is ... a drinker, repeatedly married, terminally broke, but a genuine musical talent. Music becomes Goodwin's savior, making his troublesome adolescence and traumatic home life tolerable. Buffington becomes both friend and father figure, until Goodwin clearly surpasses him as a guitarist, and Goodwin's insane parents take their destructive behavior to a higher level.
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