But controlling the conscious
mind, as we have seen, is not so easy. The ten wild horses of sense and motor
organs are ceaselessly chasing about from one object of pleasure to the next
with the agitated mind in tow. Reining in their restless activity is the first
step in calming the mind, as some very interesting research in the West, called
"Sensory Deprivation Experiments" has shown.
In these experiments, which were
specifically designed to "turn off" the ten organs, the subjects are
suspended in huge tubs of warm water, the exact temperament of the skin, so
there will be no sensation on the skin at all. They are fastened so they can
not move (their hands and feet motor organs are turned off), and they are
blindfolded (eyes turned off). They do not eat or excrete during the course of
the experiment (taste and excretory organs turned off); they do not speak
(vocal cord off) nor engage in sexual activity (sexual organ off). The room is
completely soundproof (ears turned off) and no smells enter (nose off). All
their ten sensory and motor organs have become completely inactive during the
course of the experiment. And …. They fall asleep.
They sleep sometimes for as long as twenty-four hours.
Without any external stimulation to draw their sense and motor organs into
activity, the conscious mind turns off, and they lose all track of time. After
they wake up, and feel no more need for sleep, what do you think they
experience next?
Into the Subconscious mind
Hallucinations. Visions.
Daydreams, waking fantasies more vivid than any experience they have ever had
in their lives. Even people who consider themselves quite unimaginative,
experience brilliant visions which startle them with their intensity and they
become absorbed in these internal cinemas. With the sense and motor organs
turned off, and their operator, the conscious mind, also not functioning the
subjects plunge deep into the subconscious layer of their minds, the receptacle
of dreams, memories and stored images; and without any external disturbances or
interruptions, these, images combine and recombine in a fantastic kaleidoscopic
college.
The functions of th subconscious
mind are memory and deep reflection, and when it is given free play by the absence of conscious activity, the
subjects relive memories, and experience imagined images, as if they were
indeed real.
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