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Daydreaming
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Daydreaming on Thu Jul 06, 2006 9:52 pm

paraplayer

Joined: 12 Jan 2006
Posts: 147

Daydreaming is fantastic. It's usually a tool to help drown out the droning of your dreadful teacher but I've also noticed whenever I'm daydreaming of spinning my psiwheel or of that "happy place" everyone has my PK grows enourmously.

Lately I've had a lot of trouble moving the wheel, I'd get very frustrated which would turn into a horrible circle *gasp!*.

So on several occasions i've needed to take a break from concentrating, I just relax and daydream. After a few minutes, I get up and remember my practice. So still in a "daydreamy" state of mind I look at my psiwheel and with hardly any effort at all I can spin it like crazy.

I don't know what you make of this (remember it's happened numerous times). But it'd be interesting for everyone to try PK while still in a "daydreamy" state of mind.

Banana.

That is all.
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Posted on Thu Jul 06, 2006 11:04 pm

PK_11

Joined: 28 May 2006
Posts: 142

Your mind is like a computer. It needs 100% (or a very large percentage) of its Ram to do PK. When you're thinking of other things, you can't dedicate all that Ram to one action.

When you exit a "daydreamy" state of mind, your mind is clear and able to focus everything on one action.

People meditate beforehand for this reason.
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Posted on Fri Jul 07, 2006 12:36 am

FutileSpark

Joined: 06 Jul 2006
Posts: 7

PK_11, I'd like to disagree. I agree that it does require a lot of brain power, but I don't believe that 100% is required. I've spun the psiwheel and held conversations on AIM at the same time.

Daydreaming about spinning the psiwheel may, in fact, be causing your subconcience to actually practice while not actually doing it. Allow me to explain.

In the millitary, fighter pilots train in a flight simulator, which creates a beleivable world where they are pressed up against similar, real life situations. Perhaps daydreaming is a way for your brain to enter a sort of simulator for telekinesis, and practice without actually doing it.
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Posted on Fri Jul 07, 2006 12:47 am

PK_11

Joined: 28 May 2006
Posts: 142

FutileSpark wrote:
PK_11, I'd like to disagree. I agree that it does require a lot of brain power, but I don't believe that 100% is required. I've spun the psiwheel and held conversations on AIM at the same time.

Daydreaming about spinning the psiwheel may, in fact, be causing your subconcience to actually practice while not actually doing it. Allow me to explain.

In the millitary, fighter pilots train in a flight simulator, which creates a beleivable world where they are pressed up against similar, real life situations. Perhaps daydreaming is a way for your brain to enter a sort of simulator for telekinesis, and practice without actually doing it.


"or a very large percentage"

I agree that is sort of runs a "simulation" in your subconcious that practices.
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Posted on Fri Jul 07, 2006 4:04 pm

Ultimaduck

Joined: 30 Jun 2006
Posts: 158

Your daydream state is very much like a meditation session: it relaxes and focuses you.
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Posted on Sat Jul 08, 2006 11:30 pm

athil

Joined: 05 Jul 2006
Posts: 38

When PK doesn't work, I try making something else like starting a video game. So I play a bit, enough to get in the game(dream). Then, I stop playing and I return to my practise and it works better.
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