Term: Creative Visualization
DEFINITIONs:
1. Creative visualization involves the fashioning of an image in the conscious mind and the charging (and constant recharging) of that image by the enormous psychic energy of the unconscious.
SOURCE: Truth about Creative Visualization, Keith Randolph
2. A process of using visualizations to affect your unconscious. This will have an effect on the Astral Plane leading to changes on the physical plane.
Related Encyclopedia Articles
by Keith Randolph
Visualization doesn’t always manifest that dramatically, of course, and it is not solely a psychic phenomenon whose effects are accomplished through telepathy, clairvoyance, astral projection, precognition or psychokinesis. It is much more than that.
Visualization forces us to communicate with ...
by Keith Randolph
The Simontons had rediscovered one of the world’s oldest systems of healing. It goes back at least as far as the ancient Egyptians. Hermes, the great Egyptian healer, believed physical diseases were caused by the mind along with the spirit and could be cured if the sufferer vividly visualized the ...
by Keith Randolph
Two minutes later Ellsworth’s phone rang. When he answered, he was surprised to hear his former superior’s voice.
The voice was shaking. He asked Ellsworth if he would take a train, at company expense, to the home office 200 miles away and join him the next morning. He wouldn’t say what had ...
by Keith Randolph
The most famous clairvoyant visualizer of all time is probably Edgar Cayce (1877-1945). Cayce would go into a light trance and clairvoyantly diagnose illnesses of people he did not know or had not even met. Thousands of people were helped by the man who became known as the "Sleeping Prophet." One ...
by Keith Randolph
The effectiveness of visualization as a method of dealing with psychological problems has long been recognized. Sigmund Freud believed that images were the "language" of the unconscious. "Thinking in pictures … approximates more closely unconscious processes than does thinking in words," he ...
by Keith Randolph
In Brent’s program, students gather in a relaxing atmosphere, either sitting in comfortable chairs or lying on the floor, while the lights are dimmed to ensure a minimum of distractions.
Members of the group are encouraged to talk with one another so that they can develop a sense of trust and ...
by Keith Randolph
One of the
more spectacular cases involving the use of visualization to change or repair
the body is told by Evelyn M. Monahan, a writer and lecturer who in the early
1960s was involved in a serious accident. Her head was badly injured and as a
result she went blind. Her doctors told her that ...
by Keith Randolph
In recent years parapsychologists have conducted extensive research into what Charles Honorton, a pioneering investigator in this area, calls "internal attention states." Honorton and others have shown that ESP can be significantly enhanced if the subject’s mind is free of all distractions and ...
by Keith Randolph
When the patient came to the University of Oregon Medical School, he was barely alive. The 61-year-old man was suffering from a particularly deadly form of throat cancer. His weight had dropped from 130 pounds to 98 pounds. He could barely swallow, and could breathe only with great difficulty. ...
by Keith Randolph
Sometimes
there is an element of precognition (the ability to foresee the future) in
visualization. The image the visualizer conjures up may not be from his
imagination, as he thinks; it may be a glimpse of an actual physical
environment or situation he will experience at some point in the ...
by Keith Randolph
Until the
1920s, however, scientists considered such ideas no more than superstition or
religious folly. The mind and body were believed wholly separate things, and it
was considered absurd that mere thoughts might heal. Of course everyone knew
thoughts could arouse the body sexually, excite ...
by Keith Randolph
As Claude M. Bristol puts it in his famous book The Magic of Believing, "The person with a clear goal, a clear picture of his desire, or an ideal always before him, causes it, through repetition, to be buried deeply in his subconscious mind and is thus enabled, thanks to its generative and ...
by Keith Randolph
Visualization plays a key role in the successes of many great athletes. Most obviously, of course, visualization in-creases confidence and motivation. Less obviously, it affects and sharpens players’ muscles.
This was discovered by physiologist Edmund Jacobson when he had subjects visualize ...
by Keith Randolph
You have heard of??"maybe even used??"the technique called "positive thinking." That technique is based on creative visualization, which is an easy, effective method for tapping into the innate power of the mind. Some people apply visualization without actually knowing what they are doing, and ...
by Keith Randolph
The higher self is that part of your psyche which links you with what one writer calls "the supply of infinite love, wisdom and energy in the universe." Mystics who have experienced it in its pure form describe it as a blinding white light. Mystics say the experience of illumination (also called ...
by Keith Randolph
In his Handbook of Astral Projection, Richard A. Greene discusses an OBE-producing visualization exercise calling for the practitioner to "transfer... consciousness into any object and try to see from the object’s point of view."
One person who tried this technique successfully describes how he ...
by Keith Randolph
So far we have been considering visualization as a technique that works because it forces us to concentrate all our energies, psychological and psychic, on positive images. We have seen visualization as a method of transcending the many negative forces that distract and bedevil us. But what about ...
by Keith Randolph
In traditional cultures the shaman functions as healer and seer. His role is to mediate between the material world and the spiritual world. When someone requests a healing, the shaman visualizes his soul traveling through other realms of existence seeking the patient’s soul. When found he returns ...
by Keith Randolph
Visualization is an extraordinarily powerful instrument. In focusing our psychological and psychic powers and drawing on the untapped potential of the unconscious, we are dealing with forces that in some ways seem almost magical. One writer on visualization, Robert Hezzelwood, speaks of the "wizard ...
by Keith Randolph
Psychologists and psychiatrists increasingly make use of visualization techniques to deal with patients’ fears and anxieties. Two psychiatrists independently devised methods of using negative imaging for positive purposes.
One of them, A. Beck of the University of Pennsylvania, has described his ...