
Work data on dreaming and sleep states, out-of-body experiences, the Face of God exercise and adoration of the machine.
The talk explores themes of consciousness, out-of-body experiences, and the nature of human transformation. It examines the role of the human biological machine as a transformational apparatus and how awakening the machine facilitates change. The discussion also delves into attention, adoration, and the interplay between awareness and bodily identification. The speaker challenges conventional perspectives on selfhood, transformation, and the mechanisms of evolutionary growth, favoring experiential understanding over intellectual speculation.
The talk centers on the idea that the human biological machine, when properly awakened, serves as a transformational apparatus. The speaker challenges preconceived notions of selfhood, arguing that the machine, not the essential being, is either awake or asleep. The process of transformation is not achieved through exercises or external influences but through awakening the machine, which enables cumulative changes in being.
The discussion transitions into practical methodologies for inducing awakening, emphasizing adoration as a central tool. The speaker mentions that true attention, distinct from mere intellectual focus, is generated through profound states of adoration, which can animate the machine. The talk critiques conventional attempts at spiritual exercises, arguing that awakening doesn't result from mechanical repetition but from sustained engagement.
Out-of-body experiences (OBEs) are explored both as a spontaneous phenomenon and a deliberate tool. The speaker contrasts OBEs with hallucinations and clairvoyance, arguing that one must discern real experiences from distractions. The talk also touches on death practices, particularly terminal midwifery, reflecting on how death serves as a potential moment of awakening.
Various exercises are introduced, such as diffused vision and adoration-based experiments designed to create an unfamiliar sense of selfhood. Through these, participants are led to question their bodily identification and engage with states outside ordinary consciousness.
Ultimately, the speaker places the focus on the necessity of inner work for the sake of transformation, rather than the pursuit of superficial enlightenment. Awakening is framed as a tool, not an end, and real work begins only after transformation is well underway.
_A surreal illustration of a meditative figure sitting inside a vast, organic machine. The figure, luminous and mist-like, appears to be emerging from the machinery, its form dissolving as it observes itself from a vantage point outside its own body. The machine pulses with a warm, golden energy, intricate gears and biological veins interwoven. The space around them distorts as though time and perception are bending, evoking a hazy dreamscape where transformation is imminent. The background features distant, abstract structures suggesting other planes of existence._