Category: Out of Body Experience

Video Library

 Boundaries -Townsend

https://youtu.be/QdLKBabv2OA

Getting The Love You Want – Hendricks and Hunt 

The Act of Giving and Receiving Love

The Art and Science of Non-dual Love  

Loving Kindness Meditation

Illusions, Delusions and the Brain 

What Is An Empath – Heffernan

Am I An Empath – Heffernan

https://youtu.be/xupJ7A9rl8s

Out of Body Experiences?

He Died and Met God- Fr. Rick Wendell

Near Death Experiences with Dr. Jeff O’Driscoll, MD

A Priest on Life After Death Experience-Lampe

https://youtu.be/TjlFrgS_53Y

The Near Death Phenomenon-Geraci  

Near Death Experiences – Greyson

Are Near Death Experiences Real? – Greyson

The Gift of Near Death – Griggs 

Out of Body Experiences-Blanke  

Trauma Healing -Langberg

 Expressive Writing to Heal Trauma- Pennebaker

60 Characteristics of Complex Trauma -Fletcher

Shame and Complex Trauma with Tim Fletcher

Covid Grief and Trauma by Prof. Suresh Bada Math

What Doctors Should Know About Gender Identity

The Work: A 2 Hour – Katie

Surviving Divorce -Lengacher

Surviving Divorce Grieving

 Dating After Divorce

BPD Related Cognitive Distortions  

NLP – How To Change Your Life

How To Find Your Passions

Examination of Couples Therapy -Pactin

 Teachings of Dr. David Schnarch -Finlaysiny-Fife

 Phenomenological Therapy-Van Deurzen

https://youtu.b e/8WAx7lfs4Og

Making Relationships Work- Gottman

Perfectionism and Anxiety -Heffernan

Self Administered EMDR-Heffernan

EMDR Core Beliefs -Heffernan

Safe Place EMDR-Heffernan

Scared of Therapy -Heffernan

https://youtu.be/blubsrCrQ2o

Is Diagnosis Destiny? -Sawyer

Talking about Near Death Experiences to Others

There are some experiences that are still mysterious and difficult to describe in language.

https://youtu.be/TjlFrgS_53Y

The experience of clinically dying and then being brought back to life sometimes bestows an individual with an experience of being transported to unexplainable places in other time dimensions. These experiences are labeled as Near-Death Experiences or NDEs.

The Out of Body Experience, labeled OBOs, occur following physical trauma and unconsciousness, have allowed some individuals to see themselves from out of and above their bodies, while simultaneously witnessing, in apparent real time, those very lige saving efforts that eventually bring them back to life.

Such people have gained credibility because they are able to report seeing people and experiencing events that occurred as they were being resuscitated.

Unlike those individuals experiencing NDEs, language remains intact for explaining these experiences.

Science has been documenting and quantifying both of these mysterious experiences for decades, in order to better provide some sense of understanding to the unexplainable.

Because such experiences remain mysterious, individual and beyond understanding it has been difficult for those experiencing an NDE or OBO to gain acceptance from their family, friends or society at large.9

Thankfully, this resistance to being acknowledged is changing.

Our task here at Sawayer Logistics is to offer resources that bring such mysterious experiences into the public eye as valid phenomenon

Sharing the Near Death and Out of Body Experiences

Here at Sawayer Logistics, we like to introduce topics that are unique.

NDE’s or Near Death Experiences and OBO or Out of Body experiences represent two such topics.

NDEs and OBOs are experienced by millions of people across the world now and have been well documented in the past.

One of the major issues for those who experience a Near Death event is the use of language to directly describe the event to themselves and to others.

Unfortunately, most world languages are unable to capture what actually happens in the NDE. Adjective categories appear to offer only approximate descriptions at best.

While the NDE is difficult to describe using language, there are other ways to “grasp” the flavor of such a mysterious experience, besides the use of spoken languages.

Here are a few methods that are sometimes useful for expressing the NDE experience.

The following methods can help you express things for which you don’t have words or simply don’t care to use language because it is too inaccurate to reflect your inner experience of the NDE or the OBO.

Here We Go –

Use your voice to either make sounds that reflect your inner experience. This can be a laugh, a grunt, a scream humming sounds, singing, or playing music.

Be creative in how you use your voice to reflect your experience without using your language.

Use art in any form to draw or paint the experience to show form and color.

Keep changing the artwork as you get closer to the memory of the experience.

Add colors, size, dimensions, and the spacial relationships between things in the page.

You can draw doors, waterfalls, nature, the stars etc. or even images of floating if you had an OBE (Out of Body Experience)

Use individual or group physical activities. If you like to dance, then dance it out either alone or with a trusted partner. If you like physical contact that wrestle without words with a willing friend. If you love running or walking then walk up to and then thru the remembered experience.

Use new photography and/or existing  photographs that reflect what you felt or feel. Go out and take photos of things that resemble the feelings you can’t put into words.

These are just a few examples of how you can express those things you experience that are presently “beyond language.”

If you have had several NDE’s or OBO’, experiment with doing these activities for each one.

These activities could provide you with insights and provide you a way to understand and end express your experience with others without tripping over their own language prejudices.

The attached video addresses the conflicts that arise within an individual who experienced an NDE and had to find a way to deal with it personally and socially. In this particular video that individual is a German Catholic Priest.   https://youtu.be/TjlFrgS_53Y

What Really Is Reality?

Every experience exists in two places. 

There is the place of physical reality and our brain’s interpretation of that physical reality. 

That reality then gets complicated because our brain has a unique, interpreter function”. 

That interpreter is like a box of crayons we use to add color to the experiences we have in our very early lives.

So reality is like the blank page in a coloring book that presents itself just as it is, usually blank and white.

Our eyes and ears and nose and skin are like a black colored marker that draws the lines and designs on those first pages of the coloring book in our early years.

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