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Home > Out-of-body experience


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An out-of-body experience (or OBE, or OOBE) is the subjective perception that one is no longer in one's body, while (generally) being able to perceive it from the outside. It is sometimes associated with near-death experiences, hypnopompic or hypnagogic dreams, mystical trances or occult phenomena, and psychoactive drugs, mainly dissociative hallucinogens such as ketamine, DXM and PCP.

An OBE may be contrasted with astral projection, which does not require the perception of one's own body from the outside, and which does not typically posit that one's consciousness or soulThis page is about the core essence of a being. For the music genre, see soul music; for the chief city of South Korea see Seoul. The soul in several philosophical movements and many religious traditions, is the core essence of a being. In some traditions is actually travelling through our day-to-day physical reality.

An OBE may also be contrasted with dreaming, lucidLucid dreaming is consciously perceiving and recognizing that one is in a dream while one is sleeping, and having control over the " dreamscape", the faux-reality dream world within a dream. Stephen LaBerge, a published author and expert on the subject, h or otherwise, by the intense perception of being awake and of the reality of the experience.


1 Features

Not every OBE has exactly the same features, and it may be that there are several different types of OBE that have different causes and meanings. Based on collections of firsthand accounts of "spontaneous" OBEs, (those were not part of a planned program to induce the experience), such as those collected at [1], some observations can be made:

Many properties of these OBEs were similar:

It's worth repeating that even those (perhaps especially those) who describe the experience as something fantastic that occurs during sleep, and who describe the end of the experience by saying "and then I woke up", are very specific in describing the experience as one which was clearly not a dream; many described their sense of feeling more awake than they felt when they were normally awake. One compared the experience to that of lucid dreaming, but said that it was "more real".

On the other hand, the basis for the belief that the experience was real was not primarily external evidence. Very few from this set of 66 considered it needful to verify for themselves that they were physically out of body by, for example, checking on events at other locations. This type of verification was not what caused them to believe that the experience was "real" in the first place. Instead, it was the quality of the experience that drove their perception of its reality, and made it different from a dreaming or illusory experience. Some quotes:

Only 2 of the 66 cases involved attempts to verify the experience as being "really" out of body by checking people's or objects' positions in another room.

The quality of the experiences which were strictly part of the OBE had no direct bearing on the remainder of the rest of the experience. For example, some described vivid spiritual experiences following the OBE, which continue to influence their lives. On the other hand, others describe a kind of fading into what are self-reported as dreams of no consequence. Conversely, many people report spiritual experiences during sleep or otherwise which are not preceded by an OBE.

A small minority of the OBEs were not accompanied by sleep:



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