Not exactly. When we sleep normally we go through various brain frequency shifts in which we dream. With anesthesia you brain is 'turned off' with drugs, and some of them affect memory retrieval, and some parts of the brain are turned off and others on, not like in normal dreaming.
Here is an article which explains it better:
"The brain under general anesthesia isn't "asleep" as surgery patients are often told -- it is placed into a state that is a reversible coma..."
read more here:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releas...-cag122910.php
Of course, some people do get aware when the cocktail doesn't fit their own physiology, but it's a small percentage:
"A small number of those who get general anesthesia--about 0.1 to 0.2 percent--will experience awareness..."
More here:
http://www.technologyreview.com/news...er-anesthesia/
More than an OBE, I'd call it a projection. And I would say 'expand' instead of 'separate', but yes.
From Robert's Treatise:
"
Dreams
This is how the subconscious mind creates dreams: By tuning into the astral dimension during sleep, it can create any scenario it wishes. This is the subconscious mind's way of solving problems and of communicating with the conscious mind. It creates a series of complex thought form scenarios and projects them into the mind stuff of the astral dimension, where they become solid. The conscious mind then lives through and experiences these created scenarios in the dream state. In a way its like a movie projector (subconscious mind) projecting onto a movie screen (astral dimension)."
http://www.astraldynamics.com.au/content.php?193-Part-1
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