From: frans (f.smith_at_c...)
Date: 2001-08-10 01:23:21
Hi Rob,
I know this yoga exercise, pranayama.
Its an important excercise to calm the
mind, and to get rid of neg.emotions.
Modern science has also noticed this
fact (but i can't find the artikel).
The nostrills are indeed bio-feed-back
sinds you can learn to control or to change the circulation, and in such way
to alter emotional conditions.
It is effective and cheap.
(usefreebiofeedback)
A group dedicated to use free NostrillFB.
programmers: to tell how to do it.
Hardware proffesionals: to teach the
yoga way of cleaning the nostrills.
Just joking.
Only one thing i don't know. To open
both nostrills ??? how ?
And...if you like to horrify somebody,
tell them how to clean the nostrills, that
is, the yogi-way.
Best
Frans
----- Original Message -----
From: Rob Sacks
To: buildcheapeeg_at_yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2001 1:31 AM
Subject: Re: [buildcheapeeg] The cheapest biofeedback device
Have any of you folks tried this with
the nostrils? That's the classic Hatha/
Kundalini method. Normally one nostril
is open at a time (this isn't yoga, it's
just an observation.) Yogis try to bring
this under voluntary control, open both,
open one preferentially, etc. Associated with
a whole yogic "subtle" neural physiology
that I won't go into here for fear I
might horrify somebody.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Lucas Darten" <ljdarten_at_hotmail.com>
To: <buildcheapeeg_at_yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, August 09, 2001 7:29 PM
Subject: Re: [buildcheapeeg] The cheapest biofeedback device
> I found that I could make both images disappear entirely too. forgot to
> mention that one. Haven't tried it recently though, I think I am out of
> practice.
>
> I think that it is relatively easy to do(as compared to willing your whole
> vision to blank, or making an object you are focused on not be visible)just
> because the brain as a whole can put together the image behind the object
> without seeing the object and without any holes in vision.
>
> I would think that making both images appear solid at once, or making both
> disappear, or even just making them both appear with the same solidity(that
> one, for me anyways, is easiest) are good excercises for getting the sides
> of the brain to work together simultaneously, meaning neither is really
> dominant over the other. Any other thoughts on this?
>
> LJDarten.
>
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