Re: A couple questions!
Hi Alan,
Light sensitivity varies among people. It can be linked with anatomy such as deep set eyes, or association with psychological triggers to flashing lights, etc. There really is no right answer for everyone.
It is good that you are experimenting with different techniques and placement. As you report, you are finding what works well for you. After a suitable adjustment period, which you have completed by now, your body will tell you if it is overstimulated. At periods of session design I have worked with the light glasses for many hours at a time. I find that the most side effect that I experience is dry eyes and at worst a mild headache. This is with the closed eye glasses, where my vision needs to continually shift between night and day vision as I design a session. I also find that when I do long periods with the glasses then my sleep schedule wants to shift. I am a lifelong night person who only over the last few years has taken on a reasonable sleep schedule which I try to maintain. Thus, I alternate design days and regular days and then this effect is muted.
So, I would say to find the happy medium between vividness and comfort. One thing to try is to see if you get a similar effect when you look downward in closed eyes that you get with raised eyebrows. This eye posture encourages relaxation while increasing the perception of blues and greens. Raised eyebrows may slightly hinder full relaxation. Again, each person is different, so maybe not.
Some people would say that images that you are experiencing are small shifts into an out of body experience or a localized remote viewing phenomena. You will want to study the imagery a bit more to see if it coincides in anyway with actual occurrences. Or it could be transitory 'familiarity phantoms' (just made that up). You may cultivate this skill further over time if that is desirable to you.
It may be off benefit to also study the Patternity session making notes of places where this occurs if it is repeatable. If you want to extract and lengthen this points then I could tell you how to do that. I could also reference my source files and pin down the frequencies and such. I am the author of Patternity btw.
Anyway, for interesting reading look at the Wikipedia article on hallucination: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halluc...oldformat=true and also the related article on Palinopsia (nothing to do with Sarah Palin ) Others interested in material on general recognized visuals from bright light and flickering sources may want to read up on Phospenes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphene?oldformat=true and Photopsia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photopsia?oldformat=true . Eidetic Imagery is also a fascinating study: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eideti...oldformat=true
Now keep in mind that many of these are written from the point of view of neurological disorders or intoxication, as one may expect given the subject.
Hope this helps,
Scott
If you know something I don't, speak up! If maybe I know something you don't, ask away!
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