I think in the early excercises that's what you have to do but later you have to concentrate enough to actually see or hear what you're imagining. That seems pretty difficult but it's possible. --- In BardonPraxis@yahoogroups.com, "golden558dragon" <tim100lund@h...> wrote: > > Do you ever hum a musical tone when you are alone ??? As I understand > the mentioned exercise in Bardons book (and I am as new to them as > you, so I might be wrong), it is no different from hearing a tune > inside you head without doing the humming. > The same thing go with visualisation, from my understanding it is no > different than plain old visual imagination. A good illustration would > be, if I were to say Donald Duck or Pamela Anderson. Both of these > names, will properly create a picture of them in your mind. > "All" you do from my understanding of the exercise, is to take this > technique and train it so that you are able to hold and intensify the > pictures/sounds in your mind. But again I am also new to this, so I > might be totally wrong. > > > --- In BardonPraxis@yahoogroups.com, "sineadoconnorfan" > <sineadoconnorfan@y...> wrote: > > > > Everyone does it all the time? You mean in dreams? Actually hearing > > a imagined sound seems pretty difficult. > > > > --- In BardonPraxis@yahoogroups.com, Jwingate2002@a... wrote: > > > > > > In a message dated 30/10/2004 17:00:02 GMT Daylight Time, > > > sineadoconnorfan@y... writes: > > > > > > >>Some of the > > > excercises to me also seemed impossible like making a imagination > > > appear to the physical eyes or a imagined sound to the hearing<< > > > > > > > > > I could already do this before I ever heard of magic, with sound > > anyway. > > > Many musicians do. In fact everyone does it all the time. Jason > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]