So I was on the Psipog chat last night (gabbly, not the IRC) and somebody suggested taking vitamin B6 to improve dreaming. I thought, hey why not, and I took a multivitamin that had a lot (150% of the daily recommended amount) of B6 in it. The results were amazing. Upon awakening, I remembered all of my dreams from last night, I had five or six, it was hard to differentiate them because some were so similar. Almost all of them had a war theme to them, some of them I was a general trying to plan strategy, other times I was an ambassador (that was for the Cold War) other times I was a random foot soldier. One of the dreams was even some of my friends fighting each other with non lethal guns at the school! The only other dream that wasn’t war related was a dream that I had in the dream, if you can understand that. I was telling my friends in the dream about it before another dream started. So yeah, I have no real science to back this up, but from last nights experiment, B6 is effective at aiding dreaming. Why not try it? Its a harmless over the counter vitamin after all.

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Today I’m going to write what I thought of “The Art Of Dreaming,” by
Carlos Castenada. For those of you unfamiliar with Castenada, I recommend you read a little about him at least, as he has done many things in the field of perception, most notably his tutelage under a Yaqui Indian “Sorcerer” named Don Juan. This is the second Castenada book I’ve read, the first being “A Separate Reality.” The Art Of Dreaming deals with what the title suggests, namely Dreaming.

Don Juan says that dreaming is useful for training different types of perception (or for anybody familiar with the luminous egg concept, he says that perception is a ball about three feet behind the shoulder blades. If it is moved to intersect with different filaments or even with the same ones in different places, a different perception occurs. This is non-nonsensical until cohesion is reached, but that is too much for me to cover.) If that sounded interesting, stop by the library, they’d probably have it. Or at the worst, get it online. What is really interesting about this book is that it not only deals with Lucid Dreaming (being aware of dreaming while dreaming) but what can be accomplished by it. One can open the doorways of perception through dreaming, and visit other worlds, according to Castenada and Don Juan. Later in the book he even begins to go these places physically, but that usually happens by accident. Don Juan mainly focuses on the “Seven Gates of Dreaming” of which Castenada crosses four during the book. The first gate is relatively simple, it is basically becoming lucid in a dream, and how to maintain that. The second is a little more odd, it involves traveling to the world of “inorganic beings.” I could talk a while about them, but I will not, sufficient to say they are very interesting to talk about, and essential to all sorcerers, says Don Juan. The third gate has to do with “perfecting the energy body.” The fourth gate is a little more abstract, and involves entering other’s dreams, as far as I could tell. These are just the VERY most basic ideas behind each gate, there is much more.

Another aspect of this book that was very exciting to me, as a one who practices lucid dreaming, was that I could relate to some of it. Once he got past the first gate, not as much, but on that level I could identify things I had personally experienced that matched what Don Juan had described. I also noticed many similarities between what Don Juan describes and what
Robert Monroe, the author of “Journeys Out Of The Body” describes. That book merits a read as well, by the way. There are many similarities to what Monroe describes and what Castenada describes, which says to me that this isn’t too fluffy. Robert Monroe had a very scientific approach, and hap a scientist help him do laboratory experiments with out of body experiences. So to all of you out there who may wish to read this book, I would encourage you to do it. And if you’re interested in the parallels it has to Monroe’s book, read that as well. Both are extremely interesting and good reads, as long as you keep an open mind.

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Ok, so school’s been quite the evil taskmaster as of late, leaving little time for any Psi activities. I haven’t been doing much, just gathering energy like I usually do, grounding1, the like. I suppose about the only thing I’ve been doing is messing around with this. It’s fairly interesting for me, and its useful in that it allows you to see what works and what doesn’t without hours of practice. Its basically the super entry level psi wheel2. You’ll need Java if you want to try it.

Oh, and if you ever liked frogger, here it is, back again.

1 The act of connecting to the earth and replenishing/cleansing energy
2 The popular way of practicing telekinesis, (PK or TK) it is a folded peice of paper on a pushpin, sometimes under glass. I’ll try and get diagrams up for it sooner or later…or you could just look here. The credit goes to Sean Conelly for writing it. The psi wheel is around pg 37 or so, although its recommended reading for any psion so reading the whole thing wouldn’t be bad either.

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So this post comes to you straight from a late night cram session where I kind of lost focus. In any event, I’ll keep track of psychic phenomenon I experience, hear about, and find on the internet. I’ll also talk about out of body experiences and lucid dreaming. So hang on, its gonna be a wild ride.

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