Meditation Idea One: Controlled Regression (maybe more)
7 years ago
General
I want to see if I'm not alone on this website. I know that's pretty obviously wrong, but just to be sure so I don't forget.
I partake in a sort of nightly meditation that rather mimics basic standards of transformation. Through meditation I find that no species is hard to become, except on the first time because you're learning.
I'm mentioning this because a few stories I recently read have given me a bit of an idea.
Depending on the type of content I'm looking for, I've noticed over the years there's a serious amount of art and especially stories that I don't quite have the privilege of seeing on other websites. Everyone has their specialty, but I do believe I've hit the jackpot. As that goes on, I also find more and more interesting artists and storytellers to follow.
Case in point, @DuskShadowBrony, just at the moment because there are a lot of other people, but there's a lot of results unless you filter them through types or sort-bys. I mention this account specifically because I notice something most in "A Teddy's Duty," just to name one gem among several others, that may or may not largely affect the storyline.
When I meditate, it involves consciously and physically pairing up with the character, in case you wouldn't understand each other without this to correct the situation.
When people regress past the point of talking, they can still think. If we aren't mentally paired up with the person regressing, I get the feeling that there's a lot we're missing.
I'm uncertain on if this has been researched before, or if it's intentional, but I do find that there's a lot more you can understand about your characters with meditation.
By controlled regression, I am not proposing to stop at a certain point. I am proposing that when the regressee gets too young to talk, we can still understand what he's thinking.
One person I don't quite remember the name of argued that in regression, your mind is the last thing to go. That having been said, if you want to know what someone that young is thinking,
I partake in a sort of nightly meditation that rather mimics basic standards of transformation. Through meditation I find that no species is hard to become, except on the first time because you're learning.
I'm mentioning this because a few stories I recently read have given me a bit of an idea.
Depending on the type of content I'm looking for, I've noticed over the years there's a serious amount of art and especially stories that I don't quite have the privilege of seeing on other websites. Everyone has their specialty, but I do believe I've hit the jackpot. As that goes on, I also find more and more interesting artists and storytellers to follow.
Case in point, @DuskShadowBrony, just at the moment because there are a lot of other people, but there's a lot of results unless you filter them through types or sort-bys. I mention this account specifically because I notice something most in "A Teddy's Duty," just to name one gem among several others, that may or may not largely affect the storyline.
When I meditate, it involves consciously and physically pairing up with the character, in case you wouldn't understand each other without this to correct the situation.
When people regress past the point of talking, they can still think. If we aren't mentally paired up with the person regressing, I get the feeling that there's a lot we're missing.
I'm uncertain on if this has been researched before, or if it's intentional, but I do find that there's a lot more you can understand about your characters with meditation.
By controlled regression, I am not proposing to stop at a certain point. I am proposing that when the regressee gets too young to talk, we can still understand what he's thinking.
One person I don't quite remember the name of argued that in regression, your mind is the last thing to go. That having been said, if you want to know what someone that young is thinking,
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