While meditation is optional with Holosync, it is a central part of the recommended use for LifeFlow. Clearly that cannot be what happens, or at least not the only thing that happens. No other sound overloads my brain at least faster than that. I have mocked this in the part, I hope, saying that if so they should play the sound of screaming babies. They actually claim that the intention is to overload certain parts of the brain in the hope that it will reorganize on a higher level of efficiency. They start with delta waves from day one, which may be nice if you want to substitute meditation for sleep, but is very hard to assimilate. However, Holosync uses more of a “brute force” approach. And reports from several users seem to bear all of this out. But they both maintain that for most people, the pleasant experiences dominate. Even unpleasant or scary stuff to some degree. Oh, there are similarities: They both use binaural beat technology to create a standing wave in the brain of a desired frequency, and they both warn their users that this may cause weird experiences as formerly unconscious material comes to the surface. You cannot just substitute one for the other and use them in the same way, then expect the same results. The thing is, the two competitors have quite different approaches. Holosync has a lot more PR, so people tend to discover it first.) (I am guilty of picking up LifeFlow after Holosync as well, although for other reasons. Something I have noticed on the Project Meditation forum is that there are people who go for LifeFlow because it is cheaper than Holosync, which they have considered before or even started with.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |