The large field of the so-called out-of-body experiences is precisely about the “location of self” moving outside of the body. I understand that specific types of meditation and mental exercises can produce this effect fairly reliably. So can some psychoactives.
the sensation of being “in my head” persists even when I have my eyes closed
Don’t forget that your ears which provide you with hearing and the sense of balance and orientation are on your head, too.
I’ve have had out of body experiences which match the description of other out of body experiences fairly well (for example, while I am half dreaming with eyes open during sleep paralysis) and I think that’s completely different.
In an out-of-body experience of the type that I have, you feel like your head and other body parts are somewhere different than where it really is.Your sense of self in relation to your body is preserved. You might still be in your head, but you imagine your head is somewhere else. (And hallucinate visual and tactile phenomenon consistent with your body being somewhere else).
It’s not much different drom a regular dream—instead of dreaming you’re in a fantasy place, you dream you are in your room but in another location of your room. (Then you feel a sort of snap back to your true body when the dream ends)
That’s different from feeling a sense of self as localized somewhere other than behind the eyes.
The large field of the so-called out-of-body experiences is precisely about the “location of self” moving outside of the body. I understand that specific types of meditation and mental exercises can produce this effect fairly reliably. So can some psychoactives.
Don’t forget that your ears which provide you with hearing and the sense of balance and orientation are on your head, too.
I’ve have had out of body experiences which match the description of other out of body experiences fairly well (for example, while I am half dreaming with eyes open during sleep paralysis) and I think that’s completely different.
In an out-of-body experience of the type that I have, you feel like your head and other body parts are somewhere different than where it really is.Your sense of self in relation to your body is preserved. You might still be in your head, but you imagine your head is somewhere else. (And hallucinate visual and tactile phenomenon consistent with your body being somewhere else).
It’s not much different drom a regular dream—instead of dreaming you’re in a fantasy place, you dream you are in your room but in another location of your room. (Then you feel a sort of snap back to your true body when the dream ends)
That’s different from feeling a sense of self as localized somewhere other than behind the eyes.