Thought FormsParanormal Materializations"...'mediums' in the Occident can, while entranced, automatically and unconsciously create materializations which are much less palpable than the consciously produced Tul-pas [thought-forms], by exuding 'ectoplasm' from their own bodies. Similarly, as is suggested by instances of phantasms of the living reported by psychic research, a thought-form may be made to emanate from one human mind and be hallucinatorily perceived by another, although possessed of little or no palpableness."
"In 1973, a group consisting of eight members of the Society of Psychical Research in Toronto decided to find out more about these mysterious [PK] effects....The group was an ordinary cross-section of the population: an accountant, an engineer, an industrial designer, a scientific research assistant, and four housewives. None of them claims to be a medium."
"(1) The Toronto group produced raps and table movements, of an apparently paranormal nature, in full light, in many places, with different tables.
"...The group had motivation and expectancy....they were able to create an atmosphere of harmony. This was more than just a 'good friends' feeling; the group members have come to regard themselves as a family, and they behave together very like a closely knit family.
"If at any time an unlikely situation could be created, when all the tensions and stresses of all the members of the group were resolved, it is probable the phenomena would evaporate, at least temporarily. The tensions and stresses probably responsible for a good deal of the raps and movements were not consciously apparent to the members of the group. They only manifested themselves as a shared experience."
"In the Philip experiment regression was attained by consciously attempting to be child-like - by singing children's songs and deliberately behaving like children. In this regressed condition, thinking takes on a magical quality."
"Projection states that the uncanny powers which produce parapsychological phenomena dwell not in us, everyday normal people, but in mediums, healers, in waters, in woods and caves or in God's unfathomable grace."
Tibetan tulpas"...The yogi visualizes himself first creating and then merging with a godlike figure who embodies virtue upon virtue: unconditional love, boundless compassion, profound wisdom, and more. After merging...the yogi attempts to move, speak, and act as the deity." "Sometimes, when a master is training a novice...he tells the disciple to shut himself in a hermitage and meditate till his Yidam or tutelary god appears. After a long time, if the course is successful, the Yidam does appear, and slowly takes on the same quasi-reality as the phantom monk. A disciple who has got so far may now simply go off in triumph, with his master's congratulations and the Yidam in attendance as his guardian angel. This, however, is not the end which the master hopes for. Sometimes the disciple goes further, into a sort of dark night of the soul, and confesses with anguish that although the Yidam is present, he no longer believes in it as an independent being. It is his own creation. 'That is exactly what is necessary for you to realize', the master tells him. 'Gods, demons, the whole universe, are but a mirage which exists in the mind, springs from it and sinks into it'. In Evans-Wentz's words, 'Matter is a development of thought, crystallized mental energy'."
"If the concentration of thought and will is powerful enough - perhaps a joint effort by many people - a human tulpa [thought form] can be more than a phantasm . It can come into being by normal birth, as a stable physical form with personality. It is then called a tulku or 'phantom body'. A tulku child is not, or need not be, distinguishable from others by inspection alone. But he embodies a god or a demon or another person deceased, or an intention or hope; whatever it was that inspired the thoughts which formed him. Repetition of this process through a series of lives produces a chain of tulku personas who are fundamentally the same, though they may develop quiet differently. This accounts for the mystic succession of Dalai Lamas. One of Madam David-Neel's informants told her that the Mongols would 'construct' the returning Messianic Gesar by their own thoughts, their own yearning for him. He would be reborn as 'the tulku of all of us whom the foreigners wish to make their slaves."
"...The tulku is considered as being the reincarnation of a former individual, this latter having himself been the reincarnation of another previous individual, and so on, forming a series of reincarnations which goes back, in the past, to a personality more or less eminent who may have lived several centuries before."
"Professor H. H. Price, the Oxford philosopher and parapsychologist, suggests that once an idea has been created, it 'is no longer wholly under the control of the consciousness which gave it birth' but may operate independently on the minds of other people or on physical objects."
"Inasmuch as the mind creates the world of appearances, it can create any particular object desired. The process consists of giving palpable being to a particular object desired. The process consists of giving palpable being to a visualization, in very much the same manner as an architect gives concrete expression in three dimensions to his abstract concepts after first having given them expression in the two-dimensions of his blue-print. The Tibetans call the One Mind's concretized visualization the Khorva (Hkhorva), equivalent to the Sanskrit Sangsara; that of an incarnate deity, like the Dalai or Tashi Lama, they call a Tul-ku (Sprul-sku), and that of a magician a Tul-pa (Sprul-pa), meaning a magically produced illusion or creation. A master of yoga can dissolve a Tul-pa as readily as he can create it; and his own illusory human body, or Tul-ku, he can likewise dissolve, and thus outwit Death. Sometimes, by means of this magic, one human form can be amalgamated with another, as in the instance of the wife of Marpa, guru of Milarepa, who ended her life by incorporating herself in the body of Marpa."
"A phantom horse trots and neighs. The phantom rider who rides it can get off his beast, speak with travelers on the road, and behave in every way like a real person. A phantom house will shelter real travelers, and so on."
"Doubtob (grubthob) means he who has 'succeeded', who had 'accomplished'; this implies, who has acquired supernormal powers. These are they who are called siddha in Sanskrit."
Upon completion of a shrine (suburgan or stepa) dedicated to Shambhala:
"The term 'mandala' is a Tibetan term meaning 'magic circle' and refers to ritual diagrams or objects employed in meditation for the purpose of reuniting the devotee with the cosmos."
The unus mundus, one world, is Jung's concepts of a unitarian reality of the physical and psychic realms which sporadically manifests in the synchronistic event. "Jung says that the mandala is the inner psychic equivalent of the unus mundus." The role of consciousness in bringing about microscopic properties of the universe is a subject of much debate in theoretical physics.
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