We report a longitudinal single-subject case study documenting replicated electroencephalographic (EEG) signatures during high-amplitude sexual arousal states and post-arousal quiescence in a 57-year-old male subject with no formal meditative training. Data were collected using a consumer-grade EEG headset (Muse S Gen 2 / Mind Monitor, 4-channel: TP9, AF7, AF8, TP10). EEG data collection was initiated approximately three years following a spontaneous awakening event associated with a near-death experience (NDE) in June 2022, with systematic session documentation via Mind Monitor commencing approximately 14 months prior to submission and structured analytical protocols including full session field reports initiated in July 2025. Three principal findings are reported. First, spindle-band activity (11–15 Hz) was detected during high-amplitude sexual arousal states, open awareness rest, and eyes-closed baseline conditions, with independent validation via the SUMO neural network spindle detection library. Spindle density demonstrated marked attentional modulation, including an 89% reduction in spindle density upon transition from open awareness to directed interoceptive attention within a single session (FR-028). Second, bilateral global suppression events — defined as simultaneous Alpha and Beta power reaching instrumental floor across all four channels — were documented across multiple sessions (FR-026; FR-029, two events within a single 58.5-minute session) and verified as non-artifactual via established contact quality and signal continuity criteria. Third, a near-cessation hover phase was documented in FR-029, in which Alpha-Beta sum repeatedly approached but did not cross floor threshold across a 13-minute window, consistent with the subject's report of volitional threshold maintenance. The subject's resting EEG architecture exhibits reorganised baseline characteristics, including eyes-open and eyes-closed Alpha power equivalence and spindle activity prior to eye closure, suggesting persistent alteration of thalamic gating dynamics. The structural overlap between the signatures documented here and those previously reported in advanced meditators — arrived at through a completely independent pathway, without cultural priming or contemplative training — is proposed as warranting systematic investigation of thalamic gating mechanisms during sexual arousal states in a broader population. All findings are interpreted as preliminary. The theoretical framework offered is explicitly hypothetical. Replication in controlled conditions with clinical-grade hardware is required before generalisation.
Elias Lumen (Mon,) studied this question.
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