(15 Jul 2018, 00:53 )Like Ra Wrote: [ -> ]I understand it as follows (greatly simplified):
Etheric world - Etheric body - SCM - CM - Real Body - Real World
Let's quickly switch to tulpas - aka separate identities. Please read this wiki page thoroughly first:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Milligan
Think computers. From what I understand, the Conscious Mind (CM) part can be virtualized. Instead of one CM (singlet), multiple virtual isolated CM's can be created with the admin access to the resources:
Etheric world - Etheric body - SCM - [CM1, CM2, CM3, ...] - Real Body - Real World
Same SubConscious Mind (SCM), same real body, but different identities. Identities can occupy and lock the resources, can interact with each other, can create new identities, can shut down or put to sleep other identities, can use the physical body, can connect to different egregors, create new egregors, use entire memory, etc.
Just like with computer operating systems, within each virtual environment (CM) there are active and background processes the CM switches between, and services, that perform the "autopilot" tasks. In "esoteric" the virtual environments are called "tulpas" and the "services" are called "servitors". While servitors are somehow "conscious" and "intelligent", unlike tulpas they are not "autonomous" or "fully self-sentient", they can be killed and/or reprogrammed. Once tulpa is created and "fully functional" it cannot be reprogrammed from another virtual CM.
Some "to be avoided hypnosis files" with the word "takeover" in the names are oriented on creating a tulpa (that might be either fully controlled by an egregor, e.g. Bambi, or be an independent(?) identity, as in EMG's file), that becomes "active" and locks up the original CM. And no, I'm not going to prove or disprove if it works 😉
What fascinates me is the fact that the mind virtualization is supported by the human hardware! The main reason I see is to protect the physical body, higher self and the whole system from self-destroying, when the original CM experiences extreme shocks, traumas or depressions.