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Inner Journeys Visualizing By: Paul Cass
From: casspa@atlantis.CSOS.ORST.EDU (Paul Cass) There has been some question on visualizing and how difficult it is for some people to accomplish this. Personally I think it is a matter of practice and exercising mental muscles that we do not normally use. Infact I think that in many ways we are trained not to use the abilities that we are born with. We are consistently directed toward what we can feel, see, touch, smell etc.. There is no doubt that these are all good and necessary but there are other ways of seeing things, and imaging and visualization are simply tools to help us do that. To help I have typed up a few exercises from a book on shamanism by Jose Stevens plus a few from some other sources and a couple of my own. I.
II. Choose an object in your home. Relax and close your eyes. Re-create the object in your mind as carefully as possible, including every detail you remember. If you need to, open your eyes and look at the object again. When you have re-created this object to the best of your ability, begin to focus on each part of it. Notice everything: color, texture, smell, sound, temperature. Take each quality that you have noticed and describe it to yourself in natural terms. For instance, if you are looking at a lamp with a rough brownish ceramic base and a silk white shade, you might see the base as have the same qualities and color as a rock, and the shade may resemble the white petal of a lily. Go through the entire object in this way using every sense you can. Now let your imagination take over. Begin making some changes in your object, again using natural qualities and all the senses. You can make these changes humorous for added benefit. For example the lamp now can become furry like an animal, smell like cinnamon and dance around the room singing loudly. This step is an important one since it exercises your imagination as well as your ability to empower your images with the spirit of nature. Spend as much time here as you like. You may even try to allow the object to change on its own without your instruction. See what comes in; it may surprise you. III. Close your eyes and visualize a cube floating about six feet in front of you. Mentally paint the cube red and then picture cuts being made in the cube; two from the top surface down, two from one side to the other, and two from front to back. Finally you are left with one large cube composed of a whole bunch of smaller cubes. Without opening your eyes count how many small cubes go into making up the one large cube. How many have red paint on 3 sides, how many with red paint on 2 sides, how many with red paint on 1 side and how many with no paint at all. This exercise actually combines a number of different facilities and helps promote mental acuity. IV. In your area locate a plant, an animal and a rock that attract you. In turn, for each of these entities:
V. In a place free from poinsonous plants, ticks or other dangers, get down on all fours. Imagine that you are a microbial cell crawling around in this planet's gigantic global life community. You are, after all in its atmosphere, therefore you are functioning as a bacterium or cell in the Earth organism. VII. For each of the above exercises write a Haiku. A Haiku is three line prose whose first line contians 5 syllables, second line contains 7 syllables and third closing line contains 5 syllables.
Orange sunrise leaves.
oooops more next time...
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Last modified:
28-11-01
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