"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.
It is the source of all true art and science. He to whom the emotion
is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand
wrapped in awe, is as good as dead; his eyes are closed."
-
Albert Einstein
Throughout the book, my use of quotes isn't to convince you of
certain aspects through the credibility of notable people of the past
but to elaborate on what I'm endeavouring to transmit. It has
always been a great challenge for any author to accurately describe
spiritual dimensions that exist beyond time, space and
conventional wisdom; spoken human language is all but a vain
attempt to describe the indescribable. The mind is continuously
labelling and assuming every process, but OBEs have little to do
with the intellect. In reality, it is as easy as walking, breathing or
learning to ride a bike. When learning to ride a bike, should the
child keep asking their parents endless questions, or should they
just get up and keep trying? The more questions the child asks, the
more confused and overcomplicated they may make the process;
this is the state of mind of many today trying to learn the fine art of
meditation and separating consciousness from the body.
We cannot treat astral travel in the same way as treating it like a
university degree, assigning every process with complicated
concepts to dissect cerebrally; it has to be felt and experienced by
your Being. By Being, I mean the feeling of being present, in your
core, as opposed to thinking; ‘thinking’ being phenomena that
occurs separately to Being. ‘Being’ is the silent awareness that is
essentially you, it does nothing, yet it is everything. It is the silent
observer that always been in your life.
Astral travel is a level of consciousness that is beyond logical
reasoning, at least for now. I do believe scientific organisations will
one day be able to study it with more accuracy, but in the