Last updated over 1 year ago. What is this?

Imaginal practice, as articulated by Rob Burbea, involves engaging the faculties of imagination and visualization to cultivate deeper understandings and transformative experiences within meditative contexts. It is not merely about fanciful invention but rather a disciplined, intentional use of inner imagery that taps into profound layers of the psyche and spirit. Through directed imaginal practice, practitioners access symbolic landscapes, archetypal figures, and evocative scenarios that reveal and transmute inner patterns, fostering insights and shifts at multiple levels of perception and being. This practice enriches the meditative journey, offering a dynamic, fluid approach to exploring the mind's potential, thereby deepening one's connection to both the subtle realms of existence and the ultimate nature of reality.

See also: phenomenological approach, developmental psychology, insight meditation, imaginal dimension, mutual dependency

Dukkha and Soulmaking (Part 6) - (The Mirrored Gates) 1 mention

Elements of the Imaginal (15 - 18) - (Tending the Holy Fire) 1 mention

Dimensionality, Humility, Duty, and Love - (Four Circles, Four Parables of Stone and Light) 1 mention

Dukkha and Soulmaking (Part 4 - Mastering the Fire) - (The Mirrored Gates) 1 mention

Jhanas and Insight - (Practising the Jhānas) 1 mention

Sensing with Soul (Part 6) - (The Mirrored Gates) 1 mention

Preliminaries, Regarding Voice, Movement, and Gesture (Part 3) - (Vajra Music) 1 mention

Between Ikon and Eidos: Image and Hermeneutics in Meditation (Part 8 - Talking with Trees) - (The... 1 mention

Sensing with Soul (Part 4) - (The Mirrored Gates) 1 mention

Between Ikon and Eidos: Image and Hermeneutics in Meditation (Part 7 - The Scripture of Body and... 1 mention