(January 17, 2013 at 2:30 am)Drich Wrote:You have absolutely no clue how easily humans can "feel" something falsely. Having something "feel real" is not the same as actually being real.(January 16, 2013 at 6:12 pm)Brian37 Wrote: I can guess what should be the honest answer that wont follow.
"I had a dream and refuse to accept the fact that it was just a dream. I also failed to take into account all the other dreams, which a majority we don't remember, and or chose to ignore the ones that don't fit. I fail to consider sample rate errors and selection bias. I am merely seeing what I want to see."
My eyes were open to something I did not know could exist. The clarity and realism of it has been set in my mind as a physical memory and not a dream. (meaning it seems and plays out as if I were there.) It is as real as anything else I have experienced in this life.
Honestly. If my experience of God was like yours i would most likly share your beliefs. I am not a man of great faith. I am a show me person and even then... I've experienced alot because it took alot to convince me, and even then I question and get scared when things don't go as I think they should. The only real difference between you an me? A/S/K.
IF you earnestly Take God up on His promise He will show up.
Phantom pain is a REAL psychological condition when someone loses a limb. They are NOT feeling a ghost limb. They are having a misfire in their brain that sends false signals to their brain that makes them feel that false pain.
You are merely mistaking your brain activity as being something real.
If you want to believe badly enough that something is real, you will, but that does not make it real.