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"What
is an average astral projection like?"
Accounts of
OBEs have been collected since the beginning of
psychical research. The first collection of cases
of spontaneous apparitions, telepathy, and
clairvoyance published in 1886 as Phantasms of the
Living [GMF86]. Frederic Myers also
collected similar cases for his Human Personality
and its Survival of Bodily Death [Mye03].
The first major collection was made by Muldoon and
Carrington and published in 1951 [MC51].
Nearly a hundred accounts were categorized
according to whether they were produced by drugs or
anaesthetics, occurred at the time of accident,
death or illness, or were set off by suppressed
desire. Finally they gave cases in which spirits
seemed to be involved. By categorizing the cases in
this way, Muldoon and Carrington were able to
compare and interpret them in the light of their
theories of astral projection, but they did not go
beyond this rather simple analysis. These
researchers implied that we do have a double, and
that it is capable of perceiving at a distance and
even of surviving without the physical body.
The largest collections of accounts of astral
projection have been amassed by Robert Crookall. In
his many books [Cro61, 64a] he has
presented hundreds of cases which show the kinds of
consistencies as Muldoon and Carrington found. He
also divided the cases according to how they were
brought about. First there were the 'natural' ones
which included those people who nearly died or were
very ill or exhausted, as well as those who were
quite well. Contrasted with these were the
'enforced' cases, being induced by anaesthetics,
suffocation and falling, or deliberately by
hypnosis.
Typical features of Crookall's accounts were the
mysterious light illuminating the darkness, the
white double, the ability to travel at will and
inability to affect material objects. Crookall
cited typical elements of the natural projection
being the cord joining the two bodies, feelings of
peace and happiness and the clarity of mind and
'realness' of everything seen. By contrast with
what Crookall calls 'the enforced' OBE, by which he
means one which is entered into deliberately by the
experient, he argued the person typically finds
himself not in happy and bright surroundings but in
a dream or conditions reminiscent of popular
conceptions of 'Hades.'
In projection two aspects can be exteriorized: in
natural OBEs the soul body or the astral body is
ejected free of the vehicle of vitality and the
vision of the experient is clear, but when the OBE
is the result of a conscious effort to have an OBE
some of the lower vehicle is shed at the same time
and clouds the vision. The same principles apply in
death: natural deaths according to NDE accounts
usually lead to an experience of paradisaical
conditions, but the victim of an 'enforced' death
is likely to find himself in Hades with clouded
vision and consciousness.
The implication of Crookall's argument is that
there is an astral body, a vehicle of vitality and
a silver cord, and that we survive death to live on
a higher plane. He believed that insofar as such a
thing could be proved, the many cases he had
collected proved the existence of out other bodies.
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