Did you do Image Streaming right?

by Win Wenger

It's easy for the beginning Image Streamer to take shortcuts, but in doing so you may have skipped one provision or another that is crucial to the effects associated with Image Streaming. Use the following checklist to make certain that you get the full benefits of Image Streaming.

Can you say the following?

  • I described aloud, to a live and meaningful listener or at least to an audio recorder with the idea that someone would later hear that recording. Note: it is that describing aloud an ongoing perception to an audience which most develops that perception, prevents lazy short-cuts, and strengthens both what you are saying and what and how you are hearing what you are saying, in the key development loop.
  • I described in sensory detail, more than or rather than explaining what it was I was seeing or imagining. I used the sensory language of the sensory-associative majority of the brain, which we consult in Image Streaming, to strengthen conscious contact with that greater brain.
  • I described rapidly and mostly did not edit what I was saying.
  • I described mostly while I was observing, what I was observing.
  • I gave my attention and description to images or impressions as they were happening, seeking to notice them as they came along rather than consciously directing them.
  • I looked-and-described first, only after am I trying to figure out what the images or impressions actually mean.
  • After gathering and detailing my images and impressions, I do usually try to figure out what they mean. Going back and forth between those images and their possible meanings, strengthens the pathways of contact that were laid down across your brain when first noticing and describing aloud those images.
  • I usually involve more than one sense in these Image Streaming experiences, as a way of strengthening conscious contact with the greater part of my brain.