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We Can Massively Cut Down Our Learning Time
Have a quick look at the description of your place of meditation, imagine it, and allow its name to resonate throughout your mind. To make it concrete, suppose we’re playing the piano and we hit the wrong note. With deliberate practice, we stop, go back a couple of bars, and slowly and methodically play through the next few bars. Then we go back again, and speed up a little. We repeat the process until we find ourselves automatically playing the correct note at the right speed and timing. Then we go back one last time and continue playing through the rest of the piece. Or at least, until we make the next mistake. By following this process, we can massively cut down our learning time since we’re focusing only on the parts that need the most work. So if you know how to do that, definitely use deliberate practice inside your hypnotic reality. Hypnotize yourself and step inside your hypnotic reality. Look around for some symbols and move them about so that they seem right. Don’t concern yourself with what they might represent. 
A Body That Fights To Survive
Treat it more like a decorating exercise. You may have to look a little to find it. Then sit down and play for four hours. Just like you planned. Either bring yourself out of hypnosis, or drift off to sleep. As with the previous example, at this point, the session is done. In the case of honing skills, the test is that we then do the thing in real life and notice how much better we’ve become at whatever it might be. If you want to meditate inside your hypnotic reality, it can be a good idea to have a place to do it. To save effort, it’s helpful to create this once, go back there a few times to reinforce it, and then use it at will in the future. To create a place for meditation, write out a brief plan before you begin so that you have a clear picture of where you’re going. When I enter my hypnotic reality, I will find myself drawn to a pathway through a forest and up a mountain. This pathway runs alongside a river. Too Marvelous For Words
At the end of the pathway, 17 steps are hewn into the rock, leading to an ancient stone monastery. At the top of the steps are two giant doors. I open them, and step inside a hall with a vaulted ceiling. There are all kinds of rooms in the monastery that I can explore at any time, including a library and a courtyard with a fountain for contemplation. It’s important to not go into too much detail here. It’s usually best to write just enough that the images start to form inside your mind. The key is that there should be something for your mind to latch onto, but lots of flexibility for your unconscious mind to create new things. As the final sentence of your description, give your location a name. This can be anything at all, so long as it’s easy for you to remember. From now on, my monastery will be known as K’ten. Once you’ve created your meditation location, and given it a name, you can go back there any time you choose by simply referring to it by name. The act of naming it attaches an anchor, just like the hypnotic symbols you’ve been using for change. Who Can I Turn To?
It is possible to do all of this once you’ve entered your hypnotic reality. And most people find that it’s much easier when they write things out beforehand. Beyond that, meditation works a lot like honing a skill. Get a sense of any details around how you’re going to get there, and what it’s like when you’re there. Not too much though. Just enough that you know you’ve got it inside your mind. Then, look around your place of meditation in your imagination, and allow its name to form inside your mind. Take a slow, deep breath. And allow its name to resonate inside your mind. The rule tends to be that whenever you want something to stick, it’s a good idea to repeat it three times. Now that you’ve got a plan for your place of meditation, it’s time to get started with the hypnosis. As with the other examples, work through the process to deepen the hypnosis, distort time, travel down your pathway into your hypnotic reality, and finally travel into your meditation location. Smile and nod, then take a slow, deep breath. Hypnotize yourself and step inside your hypnotic reality. Look around for the pathway, and follow it to your place of meditation. Standing at the entrance, allow the name of the place to saturate your mind as it resonates within you. Go inside, look around and explore for a bit. When you’ve explored enough, wander out and back down the pathway to where you entered your hypnotic reality. Bring yourself out of hypnosis. Since you’ve created a specific location this time around, it’s important to go back there a few times for no reason other than exploration. Do this before you use it for meditation. You will know when you’ve done it enough, because you’ll find that you can get there quickly and easily almost as soon as you enter your hypnotic reality. Also, it’s important that you know your place of meditation well enough that you can get there using only its name, without looking at the description before you hypnotize yourself. This tends to happen automatically after running through the process a few times. Depending on the kind of meditation you’re planning, you may want to decide on a theme for your meditation before you begin. So if there’s something specific that you’d like to achieve take a few moments to plan it out first. If there’s some specific purpose for your meditation, check your plan, and briefly call it up in your imagination to make sure that you’re clear on what you’re going to be doing.