I thought it was common for people who drive to think of their cars as extensions of themselves.
I haven’t driven in any car in the last 5 years, which is the time over which I have become more conscious about my perception, so I can’t really tell. I would have to ask someone who has that experience and who also has a reference for hat I’m speaking about, to be certain.
Or do you mean that you can feel the process of incorporating an object into your sense of self? I can believe that would be very rare.
Yes, that’s what’s more what I mean but it’s very hard to find appropriate words. Some people in that state will tell you that they lose their sense of self.
It takes a bit of meditation to get there.
The biggest influence for myself is Danis Bois’s perceptive pedagogy (the former English name was somatic-psychoeducation). The problem is that it’s not a well known method with little resources in English. Reading “The Wild Region of Lived Experience: Using Somatic-Psychoeducation” is unlikely very productive if you don’t have previous knowledge.
Focusing by Eugene Gendlin is a book that helped a few people in the LW-sphere. It gives you a clear 6-step process. A clear process is useful for learning and the more you understand the subject domain, the more you can derivate.
I haven’t driven in any car in the last 5 years, which is the time over which I have become more conscious about my perception, so I can’t really tell. I would have to ask someone who has that experience and who also has a reference for hat I’m speaking about, to be certain.
Yes, that’s what’s more what I mean but it’s very hard to find appropriate words. Some people in that state will tell you that they lose their sense of self. It takes a bit of meditation to get there.
Is there a way to train this?
The biggest influence for myself is Danis Bois’s perceptive pedagogy (the former English name was somatic-psychoeducation). The problem is that it’s not a well known method with little resources in English. Reading “The Wild Region of Lived Experience: Using Somatic-Psychoeducation” is unlikely very productive if you don’t have previous knowledge.
Focusing by Eugene Gendlin is a book that helped a few people in the LW-sphere. It gives you a clear 6-step process. A clear process is useful for learning and the more you understand the subject domain, the more you can derivate.