Article clipped from Newark Courier Gazette

origin. . rOrdinary dreams are constructed from the mental store- a house of the past. ESP dreams * bring new informations. *Imagery constructed fok dreams varys from ultra realis- ’c tic to highly symbolic. The de- i gree of- symbolism in an ESP' yRealistic depends on the amount t of symbolism normally found in € ^subject's dreams. -The more realistically the per- e son normally dreams, the more \ realistic his ESP dreams wai be. ESP messages may'also ap- i near as an hallucination. This mental construct isPrare^' But, i those hallucination^thatdobccur i are' usually auditory or-Visual,. ] In this ESP form, the senses feel-that4hey-are -responding to lt;stimuli when in fact there are i no tangible, physical sti mull pre- 1 sent. Subjects see but what they : see is not physically there. They 1 hear but nothing Is 'physically i—making-a-soundi-———*—Remember, the type of ESP and lt;the form It takes are separate i concepts and should not be con- i fused.In type ESP may be clalr- i voyanee, precognition, telepathy or pyschOkifiesis. Each of these types may appear in one of the v forms: intuition, realistic dreams, unrealistic dreams, or ■ hallucinations, *For example, a telepathic message may appear in a realistic dream or an intuition; a precog** nition may come as a vision or an unrealistic dream.As soon as the information from the objective world is ad-1 mitted to the subconscious and its form chosen, the message has to be translated to fit the form.tf the form is intuition, the message must be translated into : a brief summary. If the form is a realistic dream, an unrealistic r symbolic dream, or halluclna-- tion, imagery, must be constructed to fit the message. 9Ji the message comes as pys-. chokinesis, it is not necessarily ; given a form and translated. In-stead, an urge to cause physical . movement must be initiated.At this translation stage or initiation stage, long before theim-. julse sees conscious daylight,I secondary influences may alter . the original information, r Memories, hopes, anxieties, fears and desires can warp the- careful translation and produce a t •'distOrted rnessage.An imperfect, incomplete mes-p sage is then transmitted to the 2. conscious. The more distorted p the message the harder it is to
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Newark Courier Gazette

Newark, New York, US

Thu, Aug 02, 1973

Page 26

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