Sunday, July 30, 2006

Lucid Dreaming Techniques

Lucid Dreaming Techniques


Here's a brief look at some of the best techniques for bringing the light of lucid awareness to your dreams. This isn't meant to replace a committed, consistent effort, or reading books on the subject such as Creative Dreaming , or Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming, but perhaps it can serve as a jumping off point for those who want to efficiently focus their efforts without delay. Some techniques are less suitable to a regular daily work schedule, however, the more you can focus on the various techniques and lucid dreaming in general, the more frequent will be your lucid dreams.

[ Master dream recall: No other practice is more effective. The main barrier to realizing when one is dreaming is that our waking and dreaming minds are not connected nearly as much as they could be with simple intention, practice and focus. Making a consistent effort to remember dreams will help your waking mind to ally itself more closely with your dreaming awareness and will also allow you to become more familiar with your personal dream content - characters, settings, feelings or sensations that seem odd (though only after you awaken) because they're often not a usual part of your waking experience. This will then allow your waking reasoning and reflective capabilities to be more present in dreams so that you recognize unfamiliar or unlikely surroundings or feelings while you're still actually experiencing them in a dream. Success with lucid dreaming is most likely if you recall one dream or more per night, in fact you may already be having lucid dreams and simply not remembering them. So, to increase dream recall: As you go to bed, clearly ask yourself to remember your dreams when you awaken in the morning or during the night. When you do awaken, keep your eyes closed (or shut them if already opened) and remain as motionless as possible. Gather as many images, feelings or impressions as you can and then rise and quickly jot them down in a notebook (which you keep bedside), no matter how brief or vague they may at first seem. You'll be surprised at how much more you begin to remember as you write. This is also an excellent way to increase intuitive capabilities, since dreaming and intuition are closely related.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Gaia's Brain threat: When I invented the Web! by Tim Berners-Lee on Net Neutrality (again)!>



via smart mobs site>


by Tim Berners-Lee

Net Neutrality: This is serious

Submitted by timbl on Wed, 2006-06-21 16:35. :: Public Policy and the Web

( real video, download m4v )

When I invented the Web, I didn't have to ask anyone's permission. Now, hundreds of millions of people are using it freely. I am worried that that is going end in the USA.

I blogged on net neutrality before, and so did a lot of other people. (see e.g. Danny Weitzner, SaveTheInternet.com, etc.) Since then, some telecommunications companies spent a lot of money on public relations and TV ads, and the US House seems to have wavered from the path of preserving net neutrality. There has been some misinformation spread about. So here are some clarifications. ( real video Mpegs to come)

Net neutrality is this:

If I pay to connect to the Net with a certain quality of service, and you pay to connect with that or greater quality of service, then we can communicate at that level.
That's all. Its up to the ISPs to make sure they interoperate so that that happens.

Net Neutrality is NOT asking for the internet for free.

Net Neutrality is NOT saying that one shouldn't pay more money for high quality of service. We always have, and we always will.

There have been suggestions that we don't need legislation because we haven't had it. These are nonsense, because in fact we have had net neutrality in the past -- it is only recently that real explicit threats have occurred.

Control of information is hugely powerful. In the US, the threat is that companies control what I can access for commercial reasons. (In China, control is by the government for political reasons.) There is a very strong short-term incentive for a company to grab control of TV distribution over the Internet even though it is against the long-term interests of the industry.

Yes, regulation to keep the Internet open is regulation. And mostly, the Internet thrives on lack of regulation. But some basic values have to be Linkpreserved. For example, the market system depends on the rule that you can't photocopy money. Democracy depends on freedom of speech. Freedom of connection, with any application, to any party, is the fundamental social basis of the Internet, and, now, the society based on it.

Let's see whether the United States is capable as acting according to its important values, or whether it is, as so many people are saying, run by the misguided short-term interested of large corporations.

I hope that Congress can protect net neutrality, so I can continue to innovate in the internet space. I want to see the explosion of innovations happening out there on the Web, so diverse and so exciting, continue unabated.
http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/144


Gaia's brains are the NooSphere's emerging embodiment...



Lucid Dreaming kick start program MP3


Link

Links for This Post:

LD4ALL.COM. I would like to make one important note that I think people missed. They had a tendencies to play this at the beginning of the night which is a mistake in my experiences. I've had little success when playing this at the beginning of the night. The ideal is to wake up around 3AM, play the CD so it Loops or repeats until 6AM or whenever it's time to wake up. You have to play it a good volume or wear headphones. Eventually the voice on the CD tells you that your dreaming while your in a dream. I've had wonderful success with the CD and I hope other people will post their experiences with it.

Download "Lucid Dream Remix MP3" Click on this link and either save the file to play later or just open it to play. The running time is 24.05 minutes (see instructions below for more)

Dream Views Forum Post "Free Lucid Dream Induction mp3/CD - download"

While doing some research this morning on lucid dream induction devices for my psychology work, I chanced upon the Dream Views Forum, one of a couple of active lucid dream communities on the web.

I spotted the above post about the free MP3 download and read through a long thread which is more than 22 pages. The original post's MP3 link is no longer good but the original poster put a new link in at the end which is what you see above as the download.
http://www.bruceeisner.com/mindware/

Friday, July 28, 2006

led's


http://www.aec.at/en/festival2006/blog/index.asp
ok

Tarnas ideas in a "book" form>>re: Grof, Alli, & Jung: archetypal astrology ?














By Scott London





London: You've written about the importance of a core of people in a society being historically informed. Why is that so important?

Tarnas: In order to understand our moment in history and where we can go in the future, we have to know what brought us here. In order to be strategically intelligent, we need to be able to comprehend the sources of our world. Our world is shaped by our worldview. How we approach reality is defined by the kinds of assumptions we have about that reality, and that, in turn, shapes reality and feeds it back to us. The subject and the object are deeply implicated in each other.

In this sense, it's very important for us to understand the sources of our worldview and therefore the whole history of our philosophies, our sciences, our religions that have led us to this point and shaped the worldview that we now find ourselves in.Link

London: I take it this was your rationale for writing The Passion of the Western Mind?

Tarnas: Yes, I felt it was really important to write a work that would, in basically one volume, attempt to coherently describe the great evolution of the Western worldview, starting with the ancient Greeks and Hebrews and going right up through the classical period, the medieval period, the Renaissance, the scientific revolution, modernity, and now our own postmodern era where everything is in such flux.
http://www.scottlondon.com/interviews/tarnas.html



and

"Anima Mundi and the Individual"
Co-Creating the Future with Astrology

with
Darby Costello and Richard Tarnas
November 9 - 18, 2006

Packages and Prices


We hope you will join us for one of these life-changing events!
http://astrologyinbali.com/



EXPLORING THE BOOK — COSMOS AND PSYCHE


Table of Contents
Preface
The Birth of the Modern Self
The Dawn of a New Universe
The Two Suitors: A Parable

The above sample sections of Cosmos and Psyche are posted in Adobe's Acrobat PDF format. Viewing this type of file format requires the use of Adobe's Acrobat Reader. If you do not have Acrobat Reader on your system you can download it now.

You can also read an excerpt from Cosmos and Psyche in the Dec. 2005 / Jan. 2006 edition of The Mountain Astrologer.

See also this excerpt from The Passion of the Western Mind.
http://www.cosmosandpsyche.com/ExploreTheBook.cfm

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Fraser Clark from 1996! what a time warp!

Rave Culture and the End of the World . . . as we know it!

By Lorenzo on July 25th, 2006
Posted in Lorenzo's Posts, All Posts, Announcements | No Comments »

Last night I posted a podcast of a talk that Fraser Clark gave at Stanford University in 1996. And if you take the time to listen to it, I believe you will find that it is still very much up to date and will be well worth your time to listen to.





Beyond Belief: the cults of Burning Wo/Man by Erik Davis




Beyond Belief
The Cults of Burning Man


This piece appeared in AfterBurn: Reflections on Burning Man, edited by Lee Gilmore and Mark Van Proyen (University of New Mexico, 2005). An earlier version appeared as a self-produced chapbook given away at Burning Man 2003.


For without corruption, there can no Generation consist.
—Corpus Hermeticum

I tell you: one must still have chaos in one to give birth to a dancing star!
—Nietzsche, "Thus Spoke Zarathustra"


http://www.techgnosis.com/index.php
Black Rock cliché has that you can't say anything very penetrating about Burning Man because its diversity and contradictions undermine any generalizations you might be tempted to make. This truism is solid enough, and should be mulled over by any Burner foolish enough, like me, to venture into a written analysis of the yearly festival. Yet behind this notion of impossible generalizations lurks a higher and more important injunction: to keep the event free from the prison of interpretation and explanation, from the insidious net of Meaning. This refusal is prophylactic. By setting our bullshit detectors on high alert, Burners ward off pretension, self-consciousness, and all of the pre-packaged "experiences" that have come to define late capitalist subjectivity. This tactic also helps sustain the event's tribal vibe. On the playa, we are united in our evasion of significance.

Thus it is with some trepidation that I turn to one of the more vexing questions that one might ask about Burning Man: can or should we speak of the event as a sacred gathering? Even if we acknowledge the vagueness of terms like sacred, spiritual, and religious, it is still safe to say that, from the outside at least, Burning Man comes off as exceptionally profane. Ironic and blasphemous, intoxicated and lewd, Burning Man's ADD theater of the absurd might even be said to embody the slap-happy nihilism of postmodern culture itself. Moreover, many Burners would agree with this characterization. According to my own anecdotal inquiries and observations, a good portion of committed attendees would deny that spirituality or sacred emotions have any bearing on their rollicking good times.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Cosmos & Psyche site

http://www.cosmosandpsyche.com/TourDates.cfm

EXPLORING THE BOOK — COSMOS AND PSYCHE

Table of Contents
Preface
The Birth of the Modern Self
The Dawn of a New UniverseLink
The Two Suitors: A Parable

The above sample sections of Cosmos and Psyche are posted in Adobe's Acrobat PDF format. Viewing this type of file format requires the use of Adobe's Acrobat Reader. If you do not have Acrobat Reader on your system you can download it now.

Sunday, July 16, 2006

Tarnas @ Esalen 21-23 06! Alli? Grof? Tarnas? aah humm?! Cosmos & Psyche

Weekend of July 21-23, 2006

Cosmos and Psyche: Intimations of a New World View

Richard Tarnas

The limits of our cosmological imagination define the limits of our existence: Do we live in a disenchanted, mechanistic, purposeless universe as a randomly produced oddity of isolated consciousness, or do we participate in a living cosmos of unfolding meaning and purpose?


March 19, 2005
Richard Tarnas

Every now and then a book about astrology lands on Tapestry's doorstep. As soon as one comes in, it goes out. Right into the give-away pile. Astrology might be good for a laugh but it’s not something you’re going to hear about on CBC Radio!

So, here’s the problem. One day, a book lands on our doorstep. It’s about astrology, but it’s written by a highly respected scholar — whose last book was praised by the likes of Joseph Campbell and Huston Smith. His name is Richard Tarnas and the book is called Cosmos and Psyche. There's only one option — interview him! You'll hear the results on this week's Tapestry.

Cosmos and Psyche: Intimations of a New World View is published by Viking and distributed in Canada by Penguin.


Listen to the interview Richard Tarnas
(runs 54:38)

RealPlayer is required to listen to audio files.
Download the RealPlayer plug-in for your browser.


Music featured on the program:
Innocenti by Brian Eno from the CD The Shutov Assembly.
http://www.cbc.ca/tapestry/archives/2006/031906.html