domineekee wrote:
Gallia wrote:
domineekee wrote:
I kept floating into the sides of the tank
I didn't relax significantly and I found it boring.
I wonder if it is a function of time in the tank. Richard Feynman spent 2 ½ hour floating during his sessions. Also Feynman combined it with deep breathing relaxation therapy.
Richard Feynman was one of the great physicists of modern time. His research, which in part led to his magnum opus Quantum Electro-Dynamics, laid the foundation for much of theoretical physicists’ inquiries into the nature of the universe and reality. He is widely considered to be a “genius”.
In the 1950’s and 1960’s, he was an early user of floatation therapy. He used it to experiment with hallucinations and out-of-body experiences. He subjected himself to at least a dozen 2 ½ hour float sessions. During these he experienced many hallucinations and out-of-body experiences. He arrived at the following conclusions. Hallucinations are not real. Imaging things are real does not represent true reality. “The reason, I believe, that I had an out-of-body experience was that we were discussing out-of-body experiences just before I went into the tank. And the reason I had a hallucination about how memories are stored in the brain was, I think, that I had been thinking about that problem all week.”
So in a sense what Feynman’s experiments showed him was that false memories were not real but influenced by suggestion. Psychologists have found that our recollection of everyday events may not be as dependable as we would believe. Moreover, even once information has been committed to memory, it can be altered. Our recollection of memories can be manipulated and even entire sets of events can be confabulated.
Overall, it seems that most people had positive experiences with floating.
A majority of participants who underwent REST therapy reported feelings of greater self-confidence, courage, and optimism about the future; stronger belief in their own abilities; increased awareness of love for family and friends, care for human beings in general and for future generations especially. They achieve greater benefit from therapy by achieving a deeper understanding of one’s own self.