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THE PHASE Shattering the Illusion of Reality

Michael Raduga

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The only moral rules that might exist in the phase are those that the practitioner establishes. If desired, complete, unhindered freedom may be experienced. STUDYING POSSIBILITIES AND SENSATIONS Novice practitioners should not immediately rush towards a single specific goal if long-term practice is desired. It is better to extensively investigate the phase and its surroundings before focusing on accomplishment. This will build intimacy with the experience and allow unhindered entry and interaction with the phase. As in reality, learning whatever first reveals itself is the key to increasing and specializing knowledge. A beginning practitioner should at first enjoy the simple fact of actually being in the phase, then learn its details and functions. Once inside the phase, a practitioner should explore it, examining and interacting with everything encountered. He should also try to fully sharpen all the feelings possible in the phase in order to fully understand how unusual it is in its realism. A practitioner must experience movement: walking, running, jumping, flying, falling, swimming. Test the sensations of pain by striking a wall with a fist. The simplest way to experience taste sensations is to get to the refrigerator and try to eat everything that you find there, at the same time not forgetting to smell each item. Walk through the walls, translocate, create and handle objects. Explore. All these actions are very interesting in and of themselves. The possibilities really are infinite. However, only when they are well understood and thoroughly explored can it be said that the practitioner really knows what the phase is about. TYPICAL MISTAKES WITH PRIMARY SKILLS 
When trying to discern whether or not a phase is intact, judgment is based on similarity to the departed
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