by joshfircand » September 13th, 2006, 4:20 pm
Well, I've definitely been having pleasant dreams lately. Not sure if I'd lay that at the feet of the file, but if the file is helping even if it isn't prompting, I'm not going to argue. And I do know I remembered the contents of the dream, after several moments, this morning, and can bring some of them back now, so I'm not terrifically concerned about being unable to remember them.
It is getting slightly easier to relax, while listening to the file, and I do enjoy doing so. Some of the recording problems have become quite noticable, after repeated listening, however, as did the one grammatical issue towards the end. Something about 'I want to picture yourself' The omitted 'you' always catches me.
Question for you, Blink. I've seen a number of people on these boards, who claim to successfully trance often, write about it as though they 'fell asleep' soon into the induction (before any sort of 'count down'), and only regained awareness as the awakening sequence was reached. Is this normal / the goal of us who aspire to trance & hypnotic fun? In other words, when I listen to a hypnosis file, although I relax nicely, and occasionally experience mild sensations of floating or of being quite immobile (almost rigid, ESPECIALLY in the neck / back of the head area, even though the muscles are 'relaxed') I never have any loss of awareness of what I'm listening to. I am aware that I am listening, and am aware of the words of what I am listening to. Not at all 'asleep' or in any sense unaware that time is passing, nor do I miss being aware of anything that is said (at least during the act of listening). Should I expect to someday reach this state of turning off that awareness, or perhaps is it simply that these other individuals are more adept at depth of trance than I am? If not, would this have an impact, other than on the sort of effects that could be achieved? (I've read that things like positive and negative hallucinations require different depths of trance for auditory, for visual, and so on)
-Curious In Chicago