Connection Account: Difference between revisions
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<blockquote class="definition">A '''Connection Account''' is somebody’s verbal or written account of their own, or somebody else's, connection experience. Connection accounts always include an actual description of connection, and they usually include some indication of the [[Connection Outcomes]] that resulted. </blockquote> | <blockquote class="definition">A '''Connection Account''' is somebody’s verbal or written account of their own, or somebody else's, connection experience. Connection accounts always include an actual description of connection, and they usually include some indication of the [[Connection Outcomes]] that resulted. </blockquote> | ||
==Researching Connection== | |||
{{#ask:[[Is a::Research Method]]}} | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
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[[category:terms]] | [[category:terms]] | ||
[[category:outcomes]][[category:lightningpath]][[Is a::Research | [[category:outcomes]][[category:lightningpath]][[Is a::Research Method| ]] | ||
[[Is a:: Connection Study Method| ]] | [[Is a:: Connection Study Method| ]] |
Revision as of 23:21, 12 February 2020
- Connection
- Connection Framework
- Connection Practice
- Connection Appliance
- Connection Supplement
- Connection Manual
- Connection Event
- Connection Outcome
- Connection Pathology
A Connection Account is somebody’s verbal or written account of their own, or somebody else's, connection experience. Connection accounts always include an actual description of connection, and they usually include some indication of the Connection Outcomes that resulted.
Researching Connection
Connection Account, Connection Literature
Notes
Connection accounts are peppered throughout the spiritual literature of this planet. They are often taken as signs of spiritual legitimacy and spiritual wisdom by naive individuals.
Connection accounts provide one avenue researchers can use to investigate Connection and Connection Experience.
Caution must be exercised when considering an individual's connection account, and the claims they make, especially when mental illness is involved. Connection experiences are common and easy to induce,[1][2] and even people with mental illness can experience significant experiences, and even relatively permanent connection.[3] Assuming an individual is being honest and is not engaged in a fanciful construction, a connection experience (or two, or three, etc.) indicates only that a connection experience has occurred. It cannot be used to verify the emotional or mental health of an individual, nor can it be used as an indication that an individual is spiritually knowledgeable or wise.
Footnotes
- ↑ Sosteric. Rocket Scientists’ Guide to Authentic Spirituality. St. Albert, Alberta: Lightning Path Press. https://press.lightningpath.org/product/rocket-scientists-guide-authentic-spirituality/.
- ↑ Sosteric. “Everybody Has a Connection Experience: Prevalence, Confusions, Interference, and Redefinition.” Spirituality Studies 4, no. 2 (2018). https://www.spirituality-studies.org/dp-volume4-issue2-fall2018/files/assets/common/downloads/files/4-2-sosteric.pdf.
- ↑ "Memoirs of my Nervous Illness" is the account of a paranoid schizophrenic struggling with connection. See Schreber, Daniel Paul. Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. New York: NYRB Classics, 2000. https://amzn.to/2U8Se6Q.