The papaya story is the most highly dubious thing I've read in a long time, and 
of course the plural of anecdote isn't data. But some people will take anything 
as confirmation of what they want to be true.
 

 Like the alien "abduction" victim who was observed to be asleep in her car 
during an abduction. Bit of a giveaway but not unexpected the way these 
supernormal things generally go.
 

 
 
 Is an out-of-body experience a mere hallucination? 

 Is astral projection or an out-of-body experience (OOBE) merely a form of 
hallucination? This is what some neuroscientists in Canada think, after 
watching what is happening in the brain of a young woman who is able to induce 
OOBE at will.
 The case, which has gained considerable attention on the Internet, was 
separately reported by Don Butler and Jordan Kushins, based on the studies of 
Claude Messier, a psychology professor, and Andra Smith, associate professor at 
the University of Ottawa in 2012, but only recently published in “Frontiers in 
Human Neuroscience.”
 This Canadian woman claimed she had been able to trigger conscious astral 
projection since she was 4 or 5 years old, especially when she was bored during 
sleep time in preschool. She has been doing it ever since. She considers her 
ability normal and natural, with nothing supernatural, pathological or abnormal 
about it. In fact, she thought everybody could do it.
 According to her, she was able to see herself rotating in the air above her 
body, lying flat, and rolling along with the horizontal plane. She reported 
sometimes watching herself move from above, but remained aware of her unmoving 
rigid body. The subject reported no particular emotions linked to the 
experience.
 According to the article by Jordan Kushins, the researchers found that 
something dramatic and consistent with her account was happening in her brain. 
“The MRI showed a strong deactivation of the visual cortex while activating the 
left side of several areas associated with kinesthetic imagery, which includes 
mental imagery of bodily movement. This is the part of the brain that makes it 
possible for us to interact with the world. It is what makes you feel where 
your body is in relation to the world.”
 So, is astral projection or out-of-body experience real? Does the astral body 
or soul go out of the physical body during astral projection? The Ottawa 
University researchers did not think so.
 “The brain scans show that she’s going through what she is claiming, but that 
does not mean her ‘soul’ is getting out of her body. This is not an astral trip 
described by mystics. There is no paranormal activity of any kind… Scientists 
believe that these out-of-body experiences are a type of hallucination 
triggered by some neurological mechanism. This neurological mechanism may be 
present in other people, too, and some people, like this woman, may train 
themselves to activate it.”
 It is amazing how scientists can conclude that the soul or astral body does 
not go out of the physical body during an out-of-body experience and that there 
is nothing paranormal in this activity based on just one case study. It is 
entirely possible that, in the case of this woman, the astral body or “soul” 
never left her physical body, but other cases that I have come across seem to 
indicate otherwise.
 

 

 Remote viewing
 What if, for instance, the projected astral body is seen by another person 
from afar?
 During a remote viewing exercise I conducted in my ESP seminar, in which I 
asked each participant to go mentally to the house of his partner whom he has 
not met before, the sister of one participant saw somebody peeping from outside 
their gate. When the sister was asked to describe who she saw and about what 
time she saw the man at the gate, she replied, “He had a round face, crew-cut 
hair, eyeglasses, a blue shirt and black pants.”
 The description fit the partner of my participant perfectly. This participant 
was not aware that he had projected his astral body out of his physical body, 
and was seen at home by the sister of his partner.
 The other case was related to me by the father of two teenaged daughters in 
Parañaque City. The sisters had developed the skill of going out of their 
bodies at will, so the father decided to conduct impromptu experiments with 
them.
 In one experiment, the father told one daughter to go to a forested place. As 
she was walking there in her astral body, her left shoulder was pricked by a 
thorn from a plant, and it hurt. So she shot right back to her body. When she 
came back, her left shoulder had the scratch marks of a thorn.
 The other daughter, who also projected herself to a place where there were 
plenty of trees, reported seeing papaya trees with ripe papaya fruits. The 
father asked her to take a bite of one of the fruits. When she came back to her 
physical body, she had a piece of papaya in her mouth.
 Now, how would scientists explain such cases with their theory that astral 
projection is merely “hallucination triggered by some neurological mechanism?”



Read more: 
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/156426/is-an-out-of-body-experience-a-mere-hallucination#ixzz2yIMDY1xL
 
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/156426/is-an-out-of-body-experience-a-mere-hallucination#ixzz2yIMDY1xL
 

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