Hi Readers, Today thoughstmate gonna give you some aspects of OOBE (Out of Body Experience).
Everybody might be heard this term before many times, so i thought to give some information about this
Phenomenon. Every human being may had the experience in life before, If not happened wait it will also happen for you.
Ok first let me give you what is OOBE,
"An out-of-body experience (OBE or sometimes OOBE) is an experience that typically involves a sensation of floating outside one's body and, in some cases, perceiving one's physical body from a place outside one's body (autoscopy)."
Reference : Wikipedia, Livescience, Google Images
Everybody might be heard this term before many times, so i thought to give some information about this
Phenomenon. Every human being may had the experience in life before, If not happened wait it will also happen for you.
Ok first let me give you what is OOBE,
"An out-of-body experience (OBE or sometimes OOBE) is an experience that typically involves a sensation of floating outside one's body and, in some cases, perceiving one's physical body from a place outside one's body (autoscopy)."
Out-of-body experiences are a global phenomenon. Paramahansa Yogananda famously wrote
about watching one of his teachers in India leave his body while
moseying along a river, jumping into one of a dead man lying on its
bank, then proceeding to walk. (He never mentions how or if his teacher
reclaims his former ‘meat casing.’) And then, of course, there’s Jaqen
H'ghar, who in his last appearance in Game of Thrones does a similar trick by shapeshifting before leaving Arya Stark.
We are fascinated with the possibility of
becoming somebody else. Everything from make-up and masking to an
unquenchable longing for afterlife fires the neurons that contemplate an
existence beyond and outside of this one. The notion of ‘leaving’ our
body might be an enticing one, though, as VS Ramachandran writes in The Tell-Tale Brain, it has less to do with a soul and plenty with our brain’s right hemisphere.
Our right brain, he notes, can take a
detached view of reality, like when we’re preparing a speech and
envisioning an audience to present it in front of. The mental ability to
‘see’ ourselves in front of an invented human audience belongs to our
right hemisphere. He extends this fact to out-of-body experiences
(OBE’s).
Damage to the right frontoparietal regions or anesthesia using the drug ketamine (which may influence the same circuits) removes this inhibition. As a result, you start leaving your body, even to the extent of not feeling your own pain; you see your pain ‘objectively’ as if someone else were experiencing it.
Ramachandran cites one of his stranger cases: a software
engineer named Patrick who, due to a tumor on his brain’s right side,
noticed a ‘phantom twin’ attached attached to the left side of his body.
When the neuroscientist irrigated Patrick’s left ear canal with ice
water, the patient noticed that his twin was shrinking in size and
changing posture.
More tellingly, the desire to leave our
bodies occurs in trauma when, for example, a woman is raped or someone
encounters a near-death experience: the right hemisphere attempts to
remove ‘us’ from the experience, effectively shutting down mirror-neuron
activity and creating a detached sensation in our bodies.
I can verify the latter. Upon fracturing
my femur in 1986, there were many times during my three months of bed
rest in which I projected ‘me’ outwards, often into a healthy body that
functioned properly. I’m not sure if it was the trauma or the numerous
drugs I was ingesting for pain and night terror, but the idea that ‘I’
was no longer in my body was a regular occurrence.
What interests me most about OBE’s from a
psychological and spiritual perspective is this: Why do we crave to be
out of the body we’re in? What are we really running away from?
Pushback against brain science goes
something like this: 'Science hasn’t proven that you can’t leave your
body, so your stance is just as plausible as ours.' This form of
argument was used when Skeptic magazine publisher Michael Shermer discussed Alexander’s heaven with the neurosurgeon himself, along with OBE cheerleaders Marianne Williamson and Rabbi Marvin Hier on Larry King.
The biggest problem is treating ‘science’
as one stagnant field always out to disprove a spiritual metaphor.
Watching the video, Shermer was the only thinker who showed any
humility, admitting that if he were to meet a divinity, he would change
his opinions about existence. The other three were not nearly so
flexible in their assertions. Yet this is what good science does:
matures in the face of evidence. If only our spiritual guides were so
humble.
As Shermer states, we have the capacity
to treat other people’s anecdotal tales as potentially flawed, but if
our brains inhibit certain neural firings, we declare that our
experience must have happened with fundamentalist zeal. This is the
argument he uses with Alexander, who merely nods without offering
anything substantial in return.
Our brains are complex organs that we are
just beginning to learn about. We don’t have all the answers about
it—it is, in fact, the ‘it’ that is trying to understand itself. I’m
simply not sure what social or spiritual worth leaving our bodies would
have even if true.
We spend so much time trying to become
somebody or something else—I’ve worked at health clubs, gyms and yoga
studios for well over a decade, so this I know well—that I continually
wonder when do we simply come to terms with who we are and what we’re
doing in the present moment? What could possibly be more spiritual than
that?
Reference : Wikipedia, Livescience, Google Images
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