No idea, but sometimes when I meditate that way I get the sensation that I'm elevating and almost weightless. It feels wonderful. |
|
When I sit cross-legged on the floor, not full lotus (not that flexible) just one leg in front of the other, lately I feel like I am gently rotating my upper body in a circle, although as far as I know my upper body is not moving. Any ideas what could cause this or what, if anything, it signifies? |
|
Your resistance to something,
Is the only power it has over you.
This too, will pass.
My Blog
My Zen Photography
No idea, but sometimes when I meditate that way I get the sensation that I'm elevating and almost weightless. It feels wonderful. |
|
I have had sensations like my hand touching me when it was physically located in a slightly different place. A sort of partial projection during meditation. Could this sensation be my soul, like a balloon on a tether, my spiritual essence rather, just sort of floating around in there and I'm sensing that? |
|
Last edited by DreamBliss; 04-20-2012 at 09:53 AM.
Your resistance to something,
Is the only power it has over you.
This too, will pass.
My Blog
My Zen Photography
Are you familiar with the microcosmic orbit? |
|
Often when you meditate your energy begins to flow more naturally and blockages and places where it's flowing weird begin to flow and it can cause strange sensations in your body. |
|
Our truest life is when we are in dreams awake
As I know they are the chairs acting in your body influencingthe flow of energy |
|
I'm not a meditator, but I have experienced similar sensations while resting or trying to fall asleep. You aren't moving around, so no new information is getting to your brain, so it just kind of ignores that part of your body. That's about as well as I can explain it, anyway. |
|
ERROR 404: SIGNATURE NOT FOUND
I've felt something similar to this while trying to do WILD. After a few hours of laying there without moving, the relation to my extremeties becomes extremely skewed. I alternate between feeling like my arms and legs are a mile away, and that they are closer than they are. Also, my left and right sides may get confused on the edge of sleep. Upon moving, however, I regain the normal senses in my extremeties. |
|
I've had similar experiences. If I'm laying on my back, I get this really intense side-to-side rocking sensations, like I'm laying in the bottom of a row boat being t-boned by waves. If I'm sitting up, I get a sensation similar to drunk-spins. Where you feel like your body is twisting or torquing while trying to sleep after a night of heavy drinking. I'm not sure exactly what causes it. My guess is that, because of powerful calm or focus, your body becomes disorientated and your inner-ear goes crazy. Like your body faking distress in an attempt to make you to right yourself, or at least assess your surroundings. |
|
Dissociatives offer a lot of insight on this subject. If you ever try DXM, for example, you can experience very odd sensations. The neat thing is that these sensations change based on the dose and on the individual time you are taking the drug, sometimes you just get different results (sometimes very different). At lower levels, to me, my arms and hands feel like they exist in different parts of space than they visually correspond to. Often it feels like they are emerging from the middle of my chest or, while maintaining which direction they are going, they switch sides. At higher doses you can lose all sense of your body altogether, and if you watch yourself move or do anything, it is like watching a totally separate person or entity perform the action--both in look and in feeling. It probably has to do with part of your brain that is responsible for orientation in space and letting you know where you stop and the physical world begins having its signals reduced or not even being communicated to the rest of the brain, as a result your conscious self loses these feelings of the self in a physical sense or where you should be in physical space, or whether or not you are indeed moving or sitting still. |
|
This is a totally normal part of meditating. It means you are progressing well. Don't make any ontological assumptions about soul balloons being tethered or anything. There are many such experiences that will happen. As you progress they will change into different kinds of experiences like being able to see through your closed eyelids, and other things... Just keep meditating and don't really attend to much to these things, enjoy them but keep meditating. |
|
Very useful advice Dannon. Very helpful. Focusing on spinning sensation doesn't do much for me anyway. All the voices i hear and the hallucinations i see serve as distractions when i focus on them. When i typically just enjoy and observe it is a much more relaxing transitioning. |
|
I've felt a similar feeling when deep in thought before bed. I start to discuss what things mean on a deeper level with my inner self and then occasionally I start to feel like my whole body is heavier and rotating in a circle, like a spiral or some sort. I can feel this inner heaviness as it spins, it is a very odd sensation. |
|
I'd say it's a normal hallucination... no need to use spirituality to explain it |
|
An option I have considered for this for myself. Because I also experience the motion is that of a force momentum in the energy body. Something physics might be able to explain. |
|
Hi, Yes, when you get abundant cosmic energy the you touch your soul and internally first the kundalini starts spinning. Later it would be so uncontrollable that your body would have spins. Initially body may swing like pendulum (side to side) and forward-backward and later it rotates / spins. You can check the technical information on utube (you can search for Spanda Kriya Yoga | Nature Kriya Yoga | Spinning In Meditation ) You can also whatsapp for any quick help on +91 - 934 75 78781 / check the website omnature dot org |
|
Bookmarks