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Note: This book is being published at this site with full authorization from the author. Please be advised of the copyright notice at the end of each page. We would like you to visit all of the sites supporting the work of Project Renaissance at:
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How
to Image Stream:
What you need is an external focus to describe your images TO. A tape recorder
with blank tape, or a simple Dictaphone like every office used to have, provides
you a potential listener for that all-essential focus. Call in a friend, or
phone to call up a friend and keep him or her on the line, and you have, even
better, a live listener to serve as that external focus.
Of that half of you who did get an image, some found a strong, clear,
definite image or set of images, while others just got a glimpse, a faint impression
which you might think was hardly worth describing, or weren't certain whether
you were just making up the idea rather than seeing an image--
--Yet whatever you got, the key is to examine and describe it aloud,
in as rich detail as possible even if you feel at first as if you are "forcing"
it and "making up" some of it to fill your description to your external
focus listener. More, though, and more, will come as you describe - be
alert to this happening, and describe the new impressions when they come. Your
images will become rich and vivid and even their meanings - as Image Stream
contents are often symbolic or metaphoric - will start to become apparent.
THAT is Image Streaming. Each full-flow Image Streaming session should
run from 10 to 30 minutes. Examine whatever images happen to be playing in your
mind's eye at the time, while describing them in rich detail to a live or potential
listener (person or tape recorder). Even minimum, trivial-seeming impressions
or whatever: describe them in such richly textured detail as to force anyone
listening to experience and see what you are describing. 10 to 20 minutes at
a time, practice several hours of Image Streaming and you will have mastered
the basic skills needed to make other forms of visual thinking work for you.
--And you will also have experienced some of the other benefits of Image Streaming
as well, including improved intellectual performance and creativity.
Even if your imagery is already clear and vivid, you will be astonished at how
much more so it quickly becomes when you describe it in this way, while
continuing to examine it. This improvement is even stronger if--
1. You describe in as sensory-textured detail as possible. The major part of
your brain that we want to bring on line, works with sensory images even in
profoundly intellectual matters. Explanation takes you away from that sensory
immediacy. Instead of saying, "I'm at the beach" or "This is
Virginia Beach,î detail instead the warmth of sand under your toes, the sound
of surf, the smell of salt, the wheeling of the gulls above you in the almost-white
sky, black and white of the gulls on that paler white far above you ....
2. Describe as rapidly as you can, to get more and more detail in. Describe
faster than you can stop to judge whether or not something is worth mentioning,
just go ahead and flow it through (and see what comes with it) . This is a kind
of "brainstorm" only with description instead of ideas or answers,
and has a similar rule to brainstorming's "if it occurs to you, express
it!" Really rapid-flow describing exerts almost a Venturi force or suction
pulling other perceptions into focus.
3. All this is done most easily with eyes shut, so that your inner visual circuits
aren't distracted away from these initially subtler signals, and so they can
operate at full sensitivity. In other words, please keep eyes closed during
such processing, in order to see more freely.
What If You DIDN'T Get Pictures?
Please pursue whichever of the back-up procedures below which work for you,
until you are able to do pure Image Streaming. Most of the following are forcing
techniques, to get a flow of something started which, by describing it
while you are examining it, will bring other perceptions on line until you find
yourself working with actual and consciously undirected images. Once you achieve
this, then please do log several hours of Image Streaming, 10 to 30 minutes
at a time.
--What we call the "Ten/Ten Test"--if, after at least 10 minutes per
day of Image Streaming for at least ten days, you don't find your life positively
and miraculously transformed, then ignore everything we've said and do something
else instead. But if you do find Socratic and other miracles happening in your
life, please do continue the practice of Image Streaming: no matter how good
things become, they can become even better for you! --Fair test?
Special Segment Insert: For Those Who Did Not At First "Get Pix:
Here, however, following below is a series of back-up procedures, any one of
which is pretty likely to help you to get pictures started. Once you
do get any kind of impression at all started, "describe the Dickens
out of it," as if you were still looking at it even if it was but a fleeting
glimpse or impression - and you will find more coming. --And more coming. --And
more coming!
If you did get pictures, these back-up procedures would only slow you
down from getting your Image Streaming accomplished (unless you are planning
to teach it, in which case you'll want to be familiar with all the back-up techniques).
It'd be better to go ahead and begin experiencing and practicing.
For years it was cited as "a scientific fact" that one American in
three is unable to "get pictures," to visualize. In our experience,
not one person out of thousands has been able to get through the following "back-up"
procedures without getting pictures in his or her mind's eye and thus begin
to harvest the benefits of visual thinking. (And: oh, yes--this writer was one
of those who "absolutely can't visualize,, until, by dint of methods much
harder to use than those here, he finally became able to "get pictures
in his mind's eye" and start thinking visually. He found visual thinking
so very, very useful, that he began teaching it to others -- initially by methods
similar to the ones he had been taught by, only these didn't work for a lot
of people. Consulting his own visual thinking for guidance how to enable this
person or that one to begin getting visual imagery, one method after another
literally taught itself to this writer.(11) One of the first remains one of
the strongest, the "Helper Technique,, version of Image Streaming.
1. Helper Technique for beginning Image Streaming: For this technique
you definitely do need a live partner, following these next instructions with
you.
Normally, it's preferred that you simply close eyes and begin noticing--and
describing--whatever images happen to be there. Imagery is going on there
all the time, an ongoing commentary on everything. For some of us, though, that
natural, ongoing process is far enough unconscious that this "Helper Technique"
may be needed--
--Though that imagery goes on all the time, some images come through a little
more strongly than do others, and while this is happening, you automatically
make little responses which are visible to outside observers. These little responses
are "attention cues" because you make these responses when you start
to give attention to some stimulus. A partner observing these cues can, whenever
they happen, gently ask, "What was in your awareness just then?"--until
the one who was asked, realizes s/he was seeing something just then,
and thus begin the flow of description from that point.
Here are ways to make two of these attention cues highly visible and obvious
enough that an untrained observer can spot them and appropriately ask you that
question--
A. When you start to give attention to something, you hold your breath. If your
partner is instructed to breathe slowly, smoothly, rewardingly, and continuously,
with no pauses between breathing in and breathing out, then the attention-cue
pause in breathing becomes highly visible by contrast, and an occasion for asking
that partner, "What was in your awareness just then?"
B. If partner keeps eyes closed and the observer notices them moving around
under the lids, what is it that they are looking at? Eye movement under the
closed lids is what is significant here, not eyelid flutter. When you spot that
eye movement, ask partner, "What was in your awareness just then?"
When in doubt as to either cue, go ahead and ask the question.
--Meanwhile, if the one who is to Image Stream notices any images happening,
go ahead and start describing them anyway, instead of waiting for your partner
to ask you what was in your awareness just then.
Once anything at all is spotted, the would-be Image Streamer is to describe
the dickens out of it in as much detail as possible, even forcing some made-up
detail if need be, to get the flow started. (Spotter asks no more questions
unless flow falters, in order not to slow the flow or interrupt it.) More, much
more imagery will come and, after awhile, the Image Streamer can truly begin
enjoying functioning as an accurate reporter of increasingly meaningful and
intriguing internal event perceptions.
This spotting and identifying of attention cues is the preferred way to get
Image Streaming started if you weren't able to simply look in and self-start
as above. However, with so many other back-up techniques available: if 10 minutes'
try of such closed-eyes breathing and cue reinforcing does not bring about the
sought-for perceptions and experience of "pix," switch to one of the
following alternative methods.
In each of these procedures hereafter, we will refer to the person seeking to
see images as the Image Streamer, and the listening partner as Listener. Once
both of you get images going you can both play both roles simultaneously, one
of you describing until you have to pause for breath, the other then rushing
in with some description of his/her own images and vice versa, to get a lot
of viewing and describing into the available time. Some of the following, including
# 2, "After Image" next below, can be done by just the Image
Streamer working alone with a tape recorder.
2. After-Image is another way to get inner visual impressions going,
as basis for that descriptive flow which leads to further visual mental awarenesses.
Stare at a bright light (but nowhere nearly as bright as the sun!--20-40 watts
is more than bright enough) for a half minute, or another part of the room or
windows which have strong light/dark contrast. After that, especially when you
close eyes, you should have momentary after-images, left-over prints of that
light on the retina at back of the eye. You may experience seeing a gloating
blob of light or color, perhaps a line or so. Describe that in some detail and
continue describing it as that afterimage begins to change color and shape.
Unreinforced after-images last only a few seconds. Reinforced by attention and
description, your after-image can last long minutes--we've found experimentally
some which lasted 4 hours! If yours fades out after a few moments, recharge
on the light again and resume describing.
At some point in that process of examining and describing your after-images,
you may notice experiencing some other kinds of image, whether just trace impressions
or a momentary eye, face, landscape, vase or whatever. It's those other kinds
of image which we're hoping to get to and describe in this experience, so please
notice when this happens, and switch to describing that new image - in present
tense, as if you were still looking at it even if it were only a momentary glimpse
that you caught. With sufficiently forceful and detailed sustained flow of description,
more images will come.
Again: if 10-20 minutes's sustained effort with After-Image did not lead you
to more interesting images, try another procedure. The same for any of these
procedures. No one has "run the gauntlet" of these several various
procedures without getting pictures in their mind's eye with which to begin
visual thinking. Once you have a procedure productive for you, practice
the imagery-and-describing as such. After getting started, do not try out all
the other back-up procedures since that would slow down your more essential
practice, unless you plan to teach visual thinking to others and so wish to
familiarize yourself with all the techniques for getting people started into
imagery. What matters is the Image Streaming itself, not how you got it started.
3. Worth Describing--you may have been getting blobs of color, lines,
patterns, other visual impressions and not reporting them because you thought
they were too trivial to mention. -- Or impressions in other sensory channels--sounds,
tingles, impressions of pressure or movement. These are still inner phenomena
worth reporting and if you report them rapidly and detailedly enough and sustain
that flow of description, you will find this leading to other impressions some
of which clearly will not seem so trivial to you.
If, after 10-20 minutes of reporting blobs of color, this has not led to any
other kind of imagery that you've noticed, you can, with eyes kept closed:
A. Deliberately look beyond the color as beyond a colored screen, just
a few feet further distant, and see..... (whatever impression: resume describing
from there) . Or,
B. Breathe as if to "breathe in" the nearest of the colors, clearing
thereby the way to see other impressions.....
4. Phosphenes--gently rub your own closed eyes like a sleepy child, and
describe the light and-color blips which result from that changing slight pressure.
Go in with describing from there.....
The next two procedures become deeply enough introspective that it's easy to
nod off--the reason Einstein kept a rock in either hand--so for these two we
strongly recommend using a live partner as listener and "spotter."
Another reason for using a live partner with either or both of these is that
we will be using again those "attention cues" from "the Helper
Technique" ----- The instructions for these next two procedures are worded
for the use of your listener/spotter partner to follow in working with you as
the intended Image Streamer.
5. Stream From Memory--have your image-seeking partner, still with closed
eyes, remember a real scene, especially a very beautiful landscape or object
or even a dream. Or have him/her make up a beautiful garden or park. Even if
these are just made-up story words at first and not a perceived experience,
have your image-seeking partner begin describing that scene to you in as rich
detail as possible while keeping eyes closed Have your image-seeking partner
like a reporter, sending that description to you from amidst that scene as if
it is going on right now instead of being a memory of back when. While your
partner is describing this memory, watch his or her closed eyes closely: when
you see them move under the lids, seize that occasion to ask your partner what
s/he saw just then..... It's noticing those images that's our key to pick up
on and switch the describing to, whether they are memories or new fresh images.
--Especially when images show up that don't fit the "story" or scene
being described.....
Keep encouraging description until it is flowing, even if it has to be from
word-memories or make believe and not pictures, until images are in fact flowing.
Once description is flowing, "get out of the way of the flow" by not
interrupting with questions or with any encouragement more involved than a lightly
positive "um-hm.î The flow of description will bring flow of pictures,
sooner or later, if that description is in richly textured detail, sustained
without interruption or lapse or much repetition, and if the describer keeps
eyes closed to see more freely.
6. "Door"--much the same as with # 5 just above, except instead
of a garden, park, or remembered beautiful scene, have your partner imagine
being in front of a closed door. Have your partner describe that door, and the
feel of that door as if s/he had just put a hand on it. Then have your
partner suddenly fling open that door to catch by surprise whatever's there
to see on the other side of it, and ask his or her first impressions of what
was there or "what might have been there.î Get your partner to describing
that impression, even if it were hardly there, as if it were still there,
see what else comes into view.
If nothing at all came, repeat the door procedure but with colorful, textured
window curtains, or with jumping around the end of a high wall, with the idea
that something unexpected but valuable or useful will likely be in view
on the other side if partner opens that view suddenly enough. The more unexpected
the contents of the imagery, the better your chances that the image is coming
from further ranges of the brain and not just the conscious treadmill portion
(which is likely to deal up pictures of what you already consciously know about
the context or present situation) . The more surprising the imagery contents,
the better your chances of getting sensitive, comprehensively based fresh perceptions
and insights.
Both you and your partner please note: after you have become conscious of your
imagery and have some practice in observing and describing it, you can also
use such doors, curtains, corners, etc. as a way to find ingenious possible
answers and solutions to questions and problems. In contact with this
side of the visual barrier, pose your question. Then, suddenly, look into the
"answer space" beyond and describe your first impression of what's
there, with the expectation of being surprised. If your answer is metaphoric
and hard to understand, as sometimes happens, find second and third such "answer-spaces"
but program to be shown exactly the same answer to the same question, though
shown to you in a wholly different way or picture. What's the same when
everything is different, becomes key to the meaning: inductive inference. Take
any answer, however clear or certain-meaning, with a grain of salt, verify it
as you would ideas and answers from any other source.
Key to the above, the following, or any other "back-up" procedure
to ensure visual imagery happening, is: once you find any kind of impression
at all, "describe the Dickens out of it" as if it were still in view,
until more appears. Keep finding fresh things to say about it which describe
it, even if it's long gone, until more appears. The ideal discovery state, and
the ideal personal growth state, is the process of rapidly describing in rich,
accurate detail the flow of visual mental images which are undirected except
for their intermodulations with your rich treasure-trove of beyond-consciousness
understandings and perceptions.
The ability to Image Stream is natural, the difficulty some initially
have is learned, artificial. Children just don't have any difficulty seeing
their inner images. The very highest incidence of people having difficulty "getting
pix" this writer has thus far met have been people who train other
people in imagery or in various forms of meditation! Yet none, even of
these, is able to go through all 6 of the above back-up procedures and all of
those following below, without "getting pix" and starting to get the
benefits of visual thinking.
It almost doesn't matter how you get the rapid flow of detailed, sensory-rich
textured description going. Once you do have it going, to report accurately
actual ongoing inner phenomena is so much more rewarding than is "just
making up a story" that, over time, this reinforcive effect in the practice
of Image Streaming will train anyone to be a highly efficient, sensitive, accurate
observer, not only of his inner imagery but in all senses, interior and
exterior. It's getting the richly textured flow of describing started,
and keeping it going without interruption, pause or much repetition, that's
important: the rest will naturally take care of itself. Here are some more ways
to get that initial flow going:
7. Music--Listen to some richly textured music with your eyes closed
(and tape recorder ready to record)--preferably classical music, French Impressionistic
music or progressive jazz, with "enough music per unit of music" to
attract and involve your more sensitive faculties. Notice when you have
an image or images and begin describing, persist in that describing. (A very
old idea indeed - remember Walt Disney's Fantasia?) If you've really
had a problem visualizing, up until now, a live partner could be invaluable
at this point, not only as your live listener but to spot your attention-cues
when some especially strong image starts to catch your attention: eye movements
under the lids, or breathing pause, or shifts in face and neck and shoulder
muscles ...
8. Background sounds--Pick up a record or tape of background sounds,
at one of the "New Age"-type record shops or bookstores or health
food stores. Listen to these background sounds with eyes closed. Detailedly
describe, to tape or to live listener (who can also act as your Spotter alerting
you when you are responding with attention-cues--"what were you
seeing just then?") what images these sounds evoke for you (which
may or may not be the images those sounds logically should evoke for
you--go with what actually comes up). Let the sounds end but keep on describing,
noticing when other images emerge and describing these in turn, since this use
of evocative sounds is a form of directed imagery and you wish to go on to the
undirected form - i.e., Image Streaming.
9. House blindfolded--Go around your house blindfolded feeling
different objects. Describe at length the appearance of each item you feel.
Or, get someone to set up a grab-bag for you, of many highly diverse objects,
each object for you to feel, to describe the feeling of, and regardless of whether
you successfully identify what it is, to describe the appearance of.
See if at some point in working through your grab bag this way, eyes closed
or blindfolded, you don't notice other images also coming.....
(This is also a mildly effective creative problem-solving technique. If you've
been working to solve a problem and haven't yet gotten your a-ha! to resolve
it, you can turn to perception by asking yourself, 'How would a blind man experience
this problem differently than I? How would he I see I it differently than I'm
seeing it now?' --or deaf person? Or any other sense handicapped? or dwarf?
Or 6'0" basketball center? Anything to change the way you are looking at
the problem and to get you from your stuck "knowledge,, and your neuronal
habituation into perception...)
10. Air sculpting--with eyes closed (and other people not about!)
begin "sculpting" from thin air (or even from clay) some object d'art.
Keeping eyes closed, then "hold your sculpture in your hand" and describe
its appearance in detail. See if other images don't also begin to emerge for
you.
11. Passenger--when riding as a passenger in train, bus or car, describe
in detail with your eyes kept closed what you think is the appearance
of the landscape or street scenes you are riding through. See if after some
of this you don't notice other images also happening.
--Each of these, you see, are calling on other resources to help you visualize
your way through these situations. How many times have you had to feel your
way through the dark to some goal, even though in your own house--such as going
to the bathroom without waking anyone else. What about all those fictional stories
about being kidnapped and the victim figuring out where he was while blindfolded
in the escape car?
Another item of the same type, setting up a situational, multi-sensory demand
upon your imaging faculties to bring their response above conscious threshold:
12. Eat Blindfolded--describe the appearance, in detail, of what
you're eating and see if more pictures don't also come.
13. Arrange 4-5 different delicious aromas from your spice rack. Set them before
you, unstoppered. Shuffle them around with eyes closed and with eyes kept closed,
try to identify them. See if any of the aromas trigger further visual images.
If they trigger only memories instead, describe a scene from one of those memories
in as vivid detail as you can, with eyes kept closed, and see if other images
don't develop which can then also be described ....
Another type of method, again the goal being that of providing some visual
stimulus from which to begin the rapid flow of describing to pull onto line
other, subtler free imagery also to describe ...
14. At night with all lights out, just inside your bathroom I eyes open,
orient toward the lights, turn them on and immediately close eyes! You should
find some rather elaborate after-images or even a scene of some sort--describe
the Dickens out of it and see what else comes.....
Variant: flicking the bathroom lights on and off several quick times with eyes
open, then closing eyes and proceeding as above. See how your after-imagery
comes out with the lights finally out; and with the lights finally on.
15. Obtain a simple stroboscope (IF you are not epileptic!). Set the
stroboscopic light to somewhere between 4 and 12 beats per second. Look into
that stroboscopic light with eyes kept closed--describe as best you can the
evoked colors and patterns for awhile and be alert to other images also happening.
IF no other kind of image happens after 10-15 minutes of this, start describing
some imagined or remembered scene in detail, while continuing to look into the
strobe light with closed eyes and be alert to such imagery as may develop for
you .... If nothing additional still comes, try again with the strobe set to
different frequencies, whatever frequency makes the greatest color and pattern
display to your closed eyes ....
Another type of method--
16. Read a good, fully entertaining novel, or at least a story long enough
to get really into. Then with tape set up and eyes closed, "word-paint"
some scenes from the story besides those described by the author. See
if more also then unfolds. Or, remember a very favorite story or novel and do
likewise with that. Again, see if you can pick up on noticing other images also
happening as you get well into the rapid descriptive flow, so that you can move
from directed to undirected free association imagery.
The key in any event is (1) to get anything at all started from which to describe;
(2) to describe so rapidly, run so fast, that to keep up the flow you have
to reach beyond what you've consciously calculated, so that you can (3) force
your loud-conscious mind to accept for processing fresh inputs from your
subtler resources--from beyond where it's already got everything all paved over.
You can make work out of this, or each of these and other options can be a fresh,
enjoyable new exploration bringing you new experiences and opening toward new
skills. Because we perceive more with pleasure than we do when not experiencing
pleasure, we suggest that if you need any of these resources to get your Image
Streaming going, make that ploy as enjoyable an exploration as you can. To do
so improves the chances that your senses and mind will open to fresh new perception,
which is your purpose.
------------
Other "Start-Up" Procedures for Anyone's Use: Guided Paths Into
Unguided Image Streams:
Favorites of many people are the 8 following procedures. Each provides
a special guided imagery device which then can open for you into some
especially enjoyable unguided free-flow Image Streams. So much so, even
if you are already normally able to simply "look in" and "get
pix" with which to start describing to tape recorder or listener, you may
want to occasionally vary your entry into the Image Stream with one or another
of the following guided starts--one of this author's personal favorites is this
next procedure ....
17. Tree and Cloud--Imagine, and describe, walking in a meadow. Find
yourself going uphill in this meadow toward a single immense tree at the very
top of the hill. Engage all your senses in the experiencing of warm breeze,
sunshine on your neck, face and shoulders, smells of the meadow, the pull of
walking up a gradual slope for a long time, the variety of wildflowers, the
sounds of the grasses, the sounds of your own steps in those grasses, and of
your breathing .... To rest up from climbing that long hill, lie down in the
soft moss at base of the tree--look up the tree's immense trunk, between its
branches low and high, near and far, at the sky. See the clouds moving across
the sky, as you lock at them up the trunk and from between the branches. See
how the movement of the clouds makes you feel like the tree is moving instead.
Experience how the movement of the clouds across the sky makes you feel as if
it's the tree, the hill and you who are moving instead of the clouds .... Let
that movement, let that experience, take you wherever, describing as you go.....
18. Windblown Leaf--Be a leaf, or a fluff of dandelion, blowing with
the wind, around corners of buildings and over trees and swiftly racing across
an immense landscape..... Describe as you go, toward wherever ....
19. Beneath the Boat: Imagine riding a boat gently onto the lake or downstream
in a broad slow river. Peer down into the water, past the sparkle and the ripples,
try to make out what's below there. At first maybe you see only the water reflections,
ripples and sparkle in this imaginary boat ride but as you peer more intently,
you begin to see .... ?
20. Climbing a steep hillside or Mountainside, through a forest: describe
this fully multisensory experience. As you approach the top, you near a clearing,
the scenery unexpectedly opens up to show you .... what?
These next three are liked especially by those who are oriented toward science
and technology--
21. The elevator you are on is stopping, its door is opening-- where?
(Some scene you've not seen before, some place you've not been before, the door
slides open and-- (fast, very first impression!)--
22. Be a seed or spore, floating in far outer space, cocooned and having
floated comfortably and safely in space for millions of years. Now approach
some world, different from any world you've ever seen before. Drift down onto
that world, reporting back here as you go there, rapidly describe in detail
as you see and experience more and more of this new world ....
--Now be a person on that world. Suddenly look down where your feet would be
if you were human, what do you see? What surface are you on? Continue describing
from there ....
23. Radio Pulse--imagine what it might be like, simply flowing as a pulse
of electricity along some wire--into a great radio telescope and transmitter--what
would it be like to be a radio wave pulsed out through that telescope? --across
deep space, between stars, between galaxies, to..... where? First impression:
describe ....
This last device for now is of a type which frequently gives rise to truly high,
great, illuminating experiences.....
24. Tremendous light you sense is on the other side of the door (or curtain),
at the head of a long climb of stairs. A sense of excitement, expectation, high
exhilaration, seems also to await you on the far side of that door (or curtain)
. Describe that door or curtain, feel it, stroke it, describe it further; you
sense something very bright or very powerful or very illuminating behind it.
Suddenly: open that door, rise exhilarated into that light! --So much light,
at first you can't quite see what's there, but you begin to clear the air by
breathing in the light, slowly and luxuriously and feeling more exhilarated
with each breathful of light you take in, and there you begin to see around
you.....what?
You can easily think of hundreds of other such devices for "triggering"
a flow of images and experiences, and for shaping or partially shaping contexts
without directing the images themselves.
Contrary to recent general belief, virtually every human can quickly
and readily learn to "get pictures" in his mind's eye, thus becoming
able to do visual thinking. We have provided here, after the main Image-Streaming
procedure above, some of the back-up procedures we now keep on hand to ensure
that everyone "gets pictures" and becomes able to think visually.
Thus, the benefits and advantages of visual thinking are widely available,
not just to a fortunate few but to everyone who cares to make use of
them!
(You are welcome freely to even teach Image Streaming to others whom you care
about, and even to replicate this paper--in whole to preserve context, but not
in part, despite the copyright notice at the end of this paper--so long as you
cite in each instance your source having been via Project Renaissance.)
Here, more perhaps than in any other context, we are looking at equal opportunity!
You now have this paper in your hands. You are virtually guaranteed success
if you bother to learn and practice simple activities which, apparently, everyone
can readily learn and practice! (--And if you're tough enough to see through
to application the unique discoveries you will be making!) Starting advantage
differences of birth, wealth, placement, schooling, even intelligence, can make
little long-run difference compared to the advantages of simple sustained practice
of these activities and your active resolve to see their results through
to fruition.
There is some justice in the world.
And, indeed: once you've started examining your perceptions and detailing what
you find in them, you are just as capable of Socratic miracles as anyone
else!
Note, though, that for most people, for most purposes, these "back-up"
procedures are a sidetrack--an admittedly somewhat entertaining sidetrack but
a sidetrack nonetheless. For most of your Image Streaming exploration experiences,
once you've learned how to do so, should simply be to look in, see "what's
playing there now," and to begin describing as you continue to examine
what's currently "there."
--And in the nature of things, every one of the images you did get up, which
was not an afterimage and which was not an object or set of objects that you
decided beforehand to see but which came from "somewhere else besides where
you were telling the story from''--EVERY such undirected image is full
of message, pregnant with meaning, addressing some issue or key insight for
you with your subtlest, most comprehensive resources which are, indeed,
"brighter than we are" even though they are very much a part of you.
Although technical solutions and inventions often come in literal images, many
important "messages" gotten from your subtler resources are metaphoric,
symbolic, and that is why we now refer you to two books each of which presents
you extensive detailed instructions on ho@ to decode these experiences, how
to make sense of them, and how to develop your visual thinking skills within
hours to the point where you can put questions and issues of all kinds to your
inner faculties, instantly get images in response which answer them, and almost
as instantly become able to understand and verify those answers!
One of those books, the one which Success Magazine liked so well it has
carried it for sale for 3 years, with several articles, is A Method For Personal
Growth and Development (op.cit.), exploring many forms of application of
Image Streaming to creative solution-finding, all the way to the most advanced
of all post-Einsteinian Discovery Technique, High Thinktank. The other, focussed
more on technical and scientific discovery and inventing, and upon entrepreneurial
innovation, will be published by or before the start of 1995--Techniques
of Original, Inspired Scientific Discovery, Technical Invention And Innovation.--(op.cit.),
by our branch in Singapore which produced our Beyond Teaching And Learning.
That third strongly recommended book, Beyond Teaching And Learning (op.cit.),
applies Image-Streaming and related techniques to eight major families of radically
enhanced and accelerated learning and growth technique, some of which families
have 50 or more specific methods associated with them. --Not all 50 are in the
book, just a representative example or so from each family.
The most comprehensive and extensive of all our publications, a set of texts,
tapes and equipment which will become a course titled The Beyond-Einstein
Training, now under preparation, is expected to be completed and published
by October, 1994. The Beyond-Einstein Training represents Project Renaissance's
attempt to take most of the entire field to a yet higher level.
Project Renaissance has published 80-some books, monographs, and other special
educational resources as of mid-1994, date of this present paper's publication.
Many of these- indeed, more than we can really afford--are kept still in print
because each has made a unique, and uniquely valued, contribution.
One division of Project Renaissance is C.E.L.T.--the Compendium of Enhanced
Learning Techniques, a project initially commissioned by the Society for
Accelerative Learning and Teaching to prepare an encyclopedia and information
depot which should become available in all libraries. It is intended to contain
all available instructions, and research data organized a la Consumer's Guide,
on all major methods of teaching, learning, training or other instruction from
around the world which yield learning outcomes highly superior to those of standard
methods currently in general use. Data and operationally detailed instructions
will be available to anyone, anywhere, and through most libraries and electronets.
The review task, originally thought to number in the hundreds of methods, has
grown to include thousands. Presently without funding, the CELT Project has
managed one major publication thus far, that of some of the Project Renaissance
techniques in the book Beyond Teaching And Learning (op.cit.).
Project Renaissance, in turn, is the education-and-arts division of MCM, Inc.,
a nonprofit education and research 501 (C) (3) founded in Maryland in 1970 with
Win Wenger as president. Project Renaissance is the main part of the endeavor,
carrying forward its program of research, publication, consultation, and training.
Most of its training programs are offered non-
commercially, through arrangements with local sponsoring institutions, organizations
and groups around the world.
The academic publishing wing of Project Renaissance is known as The Library
of The Republic of the Sciences. The Institute of Visual Thinking consults,
conducts research mainly into visual thinking methods and processes, and conducts
a number of diverse local thinktanks each based upon different methods for comparison.
Copyright 1993, 1994 by Win Wenger, Ph.D. Project Renaissance, 301/948-1122
or Box 332, Gaithersburg, MD 20884-0332 U.S. This paper may, however, be copied
freely--in whole including this copyright notice, but not in part, to share
with those whom you care about.
by Win Wenger, Beyond Teaching And Learning, 2nd, international, edition. Singapore: Project Renaissance, 1992.
As
reported, for example, by Charles P. Reinert, Ph.D. A Preliminary Comparison
Between Two Methods of Intellectual Skill Development. Marshall, MN: Department
of Chemistry/Physics, Southwest State University, 1989. Or from the same
source, A Preliminary Study of the Effect of Verbally Described Imagery
in the Development of Intellectual Skills At the University Level, 1990.
Several different kinds of population have also been so tested but not reported,
as in the instance of patients in a nursing home initially too ill to be
tested, but who reportedly demonstrated the same kinds of gain including
in physical well-being. There should be many more such studies by now, reflecting
our 20 years of effort to get such performed, but most universities as of
this writing remain aggressively adamant in their secure "knowledge"
that "intelligence,' cannot be improved, and in fact variously have
blocked a half-dozen studies of the matter from happening that were pending.
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof," but science
should also be objective enough
See
Win Wenger's main text of educative methods, Beyond Teaching And Learning.
Singapore and Gaithersburg, Md. : Project Renaissance, 1992.
Win
Wenger, A Method For Personal Growth and Development. Gaithersburg, MD:
Project Renaissance, 3rd edition, 1991.
Sidney
J. Parnes, Visionizing: State of the Art Processes for Encouraging Innovative
Excellence. Buffalo, NY: Creative Education Foundation, 1988.
--in
Win Wenger, A Method For Personal Growth & Development,op.cit.
--in
Win Wenger, Ph.D. Beyond O.K.--Psychegenic Tools Relating to Health of Body
& Mind. Gaithersburg, MD: Psychegenics Press, 1979.
--in
Win Wenger, Ph.D., Beyond Teaching And Learning, op. cit.
--In
the forthcoming book by Win Wenger, Ph.D. Original, Inspired Invention And
Scientific Discovery: Techniques. Singapore, Project Renaissance, 1994 (pending)
. An older book meanwhile helps supply some of this context: --Wenger and
Susan Wenger, Your Limitless Inventing Machine, 3rd edition, 3rd printing,
Gaithersburg, MD: Psychegenics Press ' 1981. A special version of the newer
of these two books is being published in the various new democracies of
the former Eastern bloc and in the underdeveloped countries, for use by
common citizens there: Creating Wealth, For Yourself And For Others, In
Countries Without Capital.
Cookbook
recipe-like instructions, literally word-for-word until one gets used-enough
to the procedure to improvise, provide how to train entire groups at a time,
numbering as many as several hundred participants. Two different group-training
scripts are published, in Beyond Teaching And Learning (op.cit.) and in
A Method For Personal Growth & Development (op.cit.).
By the Principle of Re-Investment of Methods. We seem to be the first to apply this key principle. We've been applying it relentlessly since the late 1960s. The principle runs thus: IF you have a good method for solving problems, one of its best uses is on the problem of how to create better methods of solving problems! -- And one of the best uses of those better methods is on the problem of how to create even better methods of solving problems! Keep on re-investing your methods into creating better methods, and after awhile you'llbe hitting into some pretty heavy-duty systems. We have done so.We are. Our intent is, for so long as we draw breath, to usethe best of what we've found in search of yet better. If other programs can be persuaded into a similar self-instructive search, things could get pretty interesting!
©1998 by Project Renaisssance (regarding this internet version only, other copyrights may apply). While we encourage the free distribution of this article (complete text only, including this notice and acknowledgement of source), we do require that expressed permission be granted by Project Renaissance for any major republication. For minor printing and sharing, we only request that you notify us. If you like what you read here, learn about the upcoming Double Festival Seven being held near Washington D.C. on November 13-17, 1998.
You may reach us via internet at win@thebestweb.com or anakin@dur.mindspring.com
You may reach us via telephone at (301)948-1122
You may reach us via groundmail at Box 332, Gaithersburg, MD 20884-0332 USA
this version originally published at http://www.anakin.com