From: janice@mailinator.com   
      
   In article ,   
   this.email@dont.work says...   
      
   >I just do it too. It's   
   >like you're rolling out of bed only your body stays behind, you just roll.   
   >There is a measure of trust required. You have to trust that your body will   
   >stay behind, if it doesn't that could be painfully funny.   
      
   That's how I've been doing it (mostly) for the past few years -- a handy   
   tip that I picked up here, much quicker than the approaches I'd been   
   using before. Sometimes there's still an imagination component required,   
   though, because if I can't see or touch anything then I have to pretend   
   it's there to get oriented.   
      
   >Interesting, I've never had that problem. I've never noticed a laps in my   
   >senses. Sometimes they're clearer than others. For me I've correlated my   
   >level of awakeness at the time of exit, with the clarity of my senses. The   
   >more fully awake I am before I exit, the clearer my senses seem to   
   >be.   
      
   This isn't the case for me. The visuals usually start out poor or absent   
   even if I've stayed aware during the whole transition into the OBE.   
      
   --   
      
   "We are ready for any unforeseen event that may or may not occur."   
   --George W. Bush   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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