General Components Relating To Astral Project

By Richard Taylor


Astral project, also called astral projection or travel, involves the interpretation of out-of-body experiences that suggests that an astral body is different from the physical being and capable of travelling alone, outside of it. This specific term often refers to this particular body leaving its physical body to travel different planes. The premise is derived from religious belief in the afterlife and is also associated with close-to-death experiences.

This kind of projection experience is thought to be spontaneous. Often is is associated with surgical operations, illness, sleep, drug experiences, dreams, meditation or sleep paralysis. There are individuals who attempt this experience just for the experience or as part of a spiritual practice.

While some describe this experience as the travel to other, higher realms known as planes, it is more commonly described as a sensation of being out of body, or OBE. This OBE occurs in the normal world and involves the individual even seeing him or her self from above or outside. There is not much solid proof, outside of anecdotal evidence, to prove that people can truly leave the body. During the 1960s and 1970s there were survey issued that reported between 8 and 50 percent of people in certain groups who stated they had felt this type of experience at some point in their life.

This theme is found in ethnographic and anthropological literature on shamanism and witchcraft. It is also present in classical philosophy, religious scriptures and numerous myths. Belief in this type of projection varies by location and group.

For western philosophies, the astral body has always served as a middle body of light that connects together the soul and self. Likewise, the plane is an intermediate element of light that exists only between Heaven and Earth and is comprised of spheres of both planets and stars. Such spheres are where spirits, demons and angels exist.

Some people claim that mention of projection can be found in biblical text. There is also belief that is is present in Islamic Mysticism, scriptures of Hindu, Inuit groups, Taoism, the Amazon, ancient Egypt and mythology of the Japanese. Different religious groups and cultures have their own beliefs regarding projection and how it relates to their traditions, folktales, practices and more.

Emanuel Swedenborg was a man who wrote about out-of-body experiences in Spiritual Diary during the 1700s. He was one of the first practitioners of his kind. There were numerous publications that came out during the twentieth century on this topic, but only some of the authors were well known: Hereward Carrington, Oliver Fox, Sylvia Muldoon, Robert Monroe, Yram. There are believers and supporters in this travel and there are also non-believers and skeptics. People who do not believe in this possibility may make not of the lack of physical evidence there is to support these claims. In fact, some believe that those who claim to have had OBEs are just crazy.

Astral project, also known as projection or travel, is meant to explain OBEs. This is a theory that is a part of many religions and cultures around the world. The basic idea is that the astral body can separate itself from the physical being and travel to outside planes.




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