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17 answers

Yes I believe it is very much possible. And those are probably very good moments.

2007-12-16 04:18:05 · answer #1 · answered by Bella Wolffe 3 · 1 1

Yes. For in that stillness, all of life is present, and in that moment one can be vibrantly alive. Being present, is the ultimate experience, and being entirely still is being entirely alive.

2007-12-15 05:08:05 · answer #2 · answered by Lyra 5 · 2 0

I believe this to be a true state to be achieved. It's a kind of quiet power that is a state of mind which requires no movement to accomplish. When the mind is fully active, one can accomplish many tasks within, while being fully immobile without. One does not have to be completely still, however, in order to achieve this state, as some monks practice a slow walk while remaining in this state.

As to how to achieve said state, the method to get there differs with each person. The best advice I can offer is to examine the descriptions above and think for yourself as to how you can reach this state; changing your mindset from your current state of consciousness to a higher state of mental activity. I will say this: It can be done, as I have done it.

2007-12-15 01:51:13 · answer #3 · answered by darkridr 6 · 2 1

Yes, where the physical body sets still, focused, and resting, now sound asleep -- and any one of subtle Bodies within moves out and up, then moves onward and rides the supernal winds...

"So that ascending into the radiant ethers, midst the immortals, shall be thyself a god." --- the great Pythagoras of Samos, Greece...6th Century BCE.

2007-12-15 11:34:24 · answer #4 · answered by ? 6 · 1 0

Yes, the vibrations of life pulse with or without physical movement. In fact it might be difficult to pick up on the vibrations if you are fidgeting or your mind is chattering like away like a monkey.

2007-12-15 14:02:50 · answer #5 · answered by Rational Humanist 7 · 1 0

I think being still is vital to being vibrantly alive. It's difficult to focus when you fidget.

2007-12-15 01:59:30 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Read "Johnny Got His Gun." It's about a man who is paralyzed, blind, deaf, and mute, and how even though he can't experience the world around him, he is very much alive inside, as evidenced by his many adventures in his imagination.

2007-12-15 01:42:27 · answer #7 · answered by Molten Orange 5 · 4 0

When a woman becomes pregnant and senses the first flutter of another life growing within...

2007-12-15 10:56:32 · answer #8 · answered by midnite rainbow 5 · 2 0

Yes... I have had those moments...when I could smell the rain and taste the roses....the pulse of the world was my own...yes...and I am drug free
It was like I could see the molecules in the air...

2007-12-15 01:42:15 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Yes when you are hit by thunder-bolt on the golf course.

2007-12-15 03:41:12 · answer #10 · answered by veraswanee 5 · 1 0

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