How to Yawn #1

 

 

By Atom Bergstrom

Atom’s Blog

Who doesn’t know how to yawn?

Well, there’s yawning for beginners and there’s yawning for virtuosos.

The average yawn for human beings lasts only six seconds.

Yogis consider that pathetic.

So does a Pomeranian pup named Bella.

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Ashley Geiken (“Pomeranian Breaks Record for Longest Yawn,” The Fluffington Post, 2012) wrote …

“A Pomeranian pup from Wisconsin named Bella has broken the Guinness World Record for the longest recorded yawn. Clocking in at 23 minutes and 8 seconds, Bella’s gaping maw was open so long, experts say there’s no telling how many flies may have come in or out.”

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Kerry Grens (“Bigger-Brained Species Have Longer Yawns: Yawn duration also correlates with the number of cortical neurons, according to a study,” The Scientist, Oct. 5, 2016) wrote …

“In a small study of animals whose yawn durations were tabulated from YouTube videos, researchers found that the longer the yawn, the bigger the brain. Among the 24 species analyzed, mice had the shortest yawns — lasting less than a second — and humans the longest, clocking in at more than six seconds long on average.”

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Human yawning ordinarily lasts for five to ten seconds.

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Why bother to yawn better?

Are you ready to walk the wind?

Yawning increases bodily awareness, something sorely lacking in modern Western civilization.

The Western mind is highly visual.

Yawning is tactile, connecting us to “texture, temperature, solidity, humidity, contact, weight, pressure, force, vibration, and so on.”

Yawning also connects us to “walking, standing, sitting, lying down.

Yoga and yawning go together like a cart and pony.

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The mind looks for differences.

The heart looks for similarities.

We feel with our fingers and with our hearts.

And what happens when we’re typing on a computer?

Most people lose contact with their fingers, and blend into the keyboard and computer screen.

It’s a type of astral projection, identifying with some of the outgoing breath.

Merging with the outgoing breath smooths the way to bilocation.

Radionics (instrumental biocommunication) is a limited form of biolocation.

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The ego is inflated with the incoming breath.

This can be good, bad, or indifferent.

The ego is deflated with the outgoing breath.

This can also be good, bad, or indifferent.

A Yogi can take along his ego with the outgoing breath.

Most folks get sucked into The Matrix when they exhale, so their astral projection becomes like a drop of water dissolved in the ocean instead of a drop of oil traveling through the ocean.

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The physical body is not confined to space-time.

The physical body is a quantum body, something the mind refuses to acknowledge.

Thinking out of the box means thinking out of space-time.

A group of us were hanging out with John Lilly at Rice University when someone asked him, “Do you astral project?”

“Yes,” he replied, “but I reduce myself to a mathematical point to eliminate drag. That way I can travel at the speed of light.”

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John C. Lilly (Center of the Cyclone: Looking into Inner Space, 1972) wrote …

“The old psychic textbooks gave directions for getting into +6 by creating an astral body and an astral cord so that one can stay connected back with the physical body. This is excess baggage that one does not need. This is using up some of one’s computational machinery in a narcissistic security operation. The more efficient means of travel is in the point, without the artificial construction of a needless body on these levels (cf. R.A. Monroe’s account, bibliography).

“The same consideration holds true for the entities that one meets in state +6. There is no point in clothing them with the bodies of angels or other types of human projections. This might use up your store of computational ability, which is needed for much more profound tasks on +6.”

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Adano Ley (Swami Nitty-Gritty) took it to the next level, saying …

“There is no astral projection. It’s really respiratory disengagement. The one element called breath is separate from the mechanism.”

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Adano’s morning greeting often was …

“Happy new you! Are you ready to walk the wind?”
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'How to Yawn #1' have 4 comments

  1. April 9, 2018 @ 3:59 pm Atom

    I gained ten pounds by drinking two beers and eating a single Tootsie Roll under emotional stress.

    It happened in the 1970s.

    No other food or drink – not even a sip of water – was consumed for over 24 hours.

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    I argued with a girlfriend (the Light Bulb Crusher), and hitchhiked home to Carpinteria from Orange County.

    I was an experienced hitchhiker with more than a few cross-country journeys under my belt, and it was only 130 miles or so, but things didn’t go so well this time.

    I couldn’t get out of Malibu, and spent the night in a culvert under Pacific Coast Highway, adding to the “pressure.”

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    Home again, I rushed to the bathroom scale to see how much weight I had lost.

    But the scale read ten pounds heavier than the day I left.

    Two brews and a Tootsie Roll aren’t part of any bodybuilding protocol I’ve come across.

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    At first I thought my metabolism had down-regulated.

    I’d gained ten pounds without eating, so why not force-feed myself for the rest of the week, and gain ten more pounds with eating?

    I stuffed myself with excess calories from fat and carbs for seven days in a row.

    The ten pounds while not eating vanished.

    One day of “fasting” followed by one week of binge eating was a zero-sum game.

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    I inflated like a blowfish facing a predator, then deflated like one out of danger.

    This may be an asset to bodybuilders and folks with low blood pressure, but it’s a liability for people with central obesity and high blood pressure.

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    Reply

  2. April 9, 2018 @ 7:01 pm Amber

    Atom, Do you have suggestion in regards to bloat; If someone’s experiencing bloat from a situation that may be long (I.E. college) is the best thing to do to just keep remembering it doesn’t really matter in the moments that would be on the verge of stress? I gotta eat..for now! XD

    Reply

    • April 10, 2018 @ 11:01 am Atom

      Pandiculation (yawning and stretching) is the best general “Recycling” option.

      Going through the colors (black, gray, brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet, white) is a close second.

      Free-form dancing helps.

      “Confessing our sins” is basically group therapy, so some of these “you’re not alone” gatherings can help.

      Meditation of the “know thyself” variety is always recommended.

      Reply


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