Thank you for the clarifications...
Carl Young used a term for dreams, which was the "collective unconscious." This happens to describe my experience of being a lucid dreamer. The lucid dreamer enters the dream world lucidly; whereas, most others are unconscious there. Thus, all of the beings that we interact with in dreams, and the OOBE are other beings, not just mental projections.
Does this mean that when I experienced that dream with my father, I was literally in the same dream-realm with him? (Given that he experienced it as well)
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I've been consistently varying between 3rd and 4th. Once I get into 4th, I rarely jump out again any more. But the problem is that sometimes I cannot get into 4th, it feels almost like some switch has been flicked when I transit from third to fourth.
Will just continue to work on my meditation. I seem to have incorporated the habit of maintaining my state in daily life, no matter what I am doing. I still do have certain spikes, but I realize them fast enough now and immediately correct myself.
One of my recent meditations was a little different. I found what works for me is to just continue letting go and letting go, as if everything that surfaces is a hotel guest and if I don't pay attention to them, they leave, allowing my mind to brighten and the charisms to surface. I still discern the factors, but I do not add nor subtract, it is as if the whole thing is natural, as if muddy water is coming to a rest.
When I did this, a very, very warm blissfulness wrapped around my body. I felt some pains and some prickling and some itchiness that spread throughout my body. Then my body seemed as if it was pulled upwards and my spine "elongated" and had some kind of a freezing experience. It didn't feel warm as in "hot", but so warm that it was almost cool. I don't know how to explain it... Do you know what is happening here?
It was almost... mental? I didn't feel any stress from my body.
When I got out of meditation, I felt so amazingly refreshed, as if every single tension was released from the body... and some part of my mind.
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I've been reading the texts of some of NHJ's students and I think I've found another answer (to the question of whether the breathing ceases or not) very similar to what Jhanananda has talked about. I'll give a good translation below:
Master Nan took off his top, and on his forehead was attached several examination devices. The doctors told Nan, "Now, think normally. (Or out of samadhi)." After a while, the doctors told him, "Now please stop your thoughts." The device reading showed a straight line, without a single movement in the brainwave. Doctor Zhou took a fright and everyone could not believe their eyes.
I remember Jhanananda said that his breathing (or pulse?) ceased in deep samadhi. It seems to be the case where even brainwaves cannot be detected when a person is in deep samadhi, which quite supports the case that the physical body is really not part of the meditation experience... Not even the brain's activity.
But this is quite troubling. What if the doctors misdiagnosed people as "brain-dead" or vegetative states, when they were simply in states of deep samadhi? There is also the Lazarus syndrome, where people wake up in morgues/cold rooms/funerals after being pronounced dead hours before. Or maybe it is just the work of karma?
Another strange commonality that I've found is that he tends to like expressing himself in poetic expression. Do you think that poetic expression is somewhat related? It's also a known fact that Chan masters (especially in ancient China) used to always write poems to express their thoughts, such as this one:
Originally Bodhi has no tree,
The bright mirror has no stand.
Originally there is not a single thing:
Where can dust alight?