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    Thread: Why I lucid dream.

    1. #1
      The Knight TranquilityTrip's Avatar
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      Why I lucid dream.

      (Repost from something I put on r/LucidDreaming a few mins ago)

      I'm a relatively experienced lucid dreamer (roughly 25+ LDs) and I'll periodically bring up lucid dreaming to people I know don't practice it. I found, however, that most people just shrug off what I said or ask why they would want to put all that effort to control their dreams in the first place. Then it hit me, most people don't understand just how different normal dreams and lucid dreams are.

      I think this partly because of the LD community has claimed lucid dreams are "dreams you can control". Which not only isn't even technically correct (Dream control and lucidity are not the same thing. They are correlated but you can have one without the other) but it also glosses over the two most interesting aspects of lucid dreaming.


      1: Perspective

      For most people normal dreams are fuzzy memories of ridiculous occurrences strung about in a non-linear fashion. Usually they never feel like they're actually IN a dream; instead it seems more like they're watching a dream "movie" from a distance. At times it doesn't even feel like they've experienced a dream at all but only remember it after waking up (like it was placed into their heads seconds before opening their eyes).

      However, once you attain lucidity the way dreams operate fundamentally changes. You won't just remember your lucid dreams. You'll experience them in real time. You'll be there; in the moment. You won't remember having a dream in which you flew, you'll be flying in your dreams.

      This shift from a past perspective to a present perspective completely alters the dynamics of dreaming and in my opinion is the most important factor that makes lucid dreaming worthwhile.


      2: The Five(+) Senses:

      The vast majority of people will agree that they can "see" in their dreams. A smaller majority will agree they can "hear" in their dreams (though the dream-to-dream occurrence is rarer than sight). You'll find that almost no one reports experiencing any of their other senses while dreaming besides these two. This leads most people to believe that sight and sound are the only senses that are present while dreaming.

      This belief is not true and though I do not have an explanation for why our other senses are seemingly absent in most of our normal dreams I can tell you that it is possible to experience every single one of the major senses in your lucid dreams. I have personally experienced sight, sound, touch, taste, smell, temperature, weight/mass (both of myself and objects I was carrying), and bodily orientation in my dreams. As have many others.

      I felt the smooth surface of a leather chair I sat in, the cold wind across my skin as I flew at incalculable speeds, heat emminating from a burning campfire, and the weight of my body as I climbed a wall. I have heard beautiful music coming from a nearby auditorium and eaten pasta. I have both seen and felt goosebumps form on my IMAGINARY dream body.

      Yet when I tell people this they are reluctant to believe. My own brother (who was attempting to lucid dream at the time) thought I was exaggerating. There was simply no way that I could have been telling the whole truth. No way could a dream be this detailed or this exciting.

      Then a few weeks later he told me about his first lucid dream. He said that he was in a field playing football with Ray Lewis when he suddenly became lucid. He said that immediately he looked up in an attempt to fly and blasted upwards into the sky like a rocket. As he did so, he could feel the wind push across his face. This amazed him to no end and he admitted that I really wasn't exaggerating about all my stories.

      Once I discovered that all my senses were present in lucids (to varying degrees) it transformed lucid dreaming from a fun pass-time into what was essentially the ultimate virtual reality simulator. When I lucid dream I become god of a world that is at times more detailed and more beautiful than the world we are in now. A world I can experience to such an astounding degree that is is almost a reality unto itself. Yet in that one, anything is possible.

      These are the two most important reasons why I lucid dream and I hope this will convince some of you to give it a try or continue in your lucid dreaming practice if the case may be.
      Last edited by TranquilityTrip; 05-24-2015 at 09:06 PM.
      yaya, Urside and BlairBros like this.
      My Lucid Dreaming Motto - "I have walked upon the the surface of a burning star. Observed events so infinitesimal and instantaneous that they can barely be described as having occurred at all. You... you're just a dream character. And this world's most powerful dream character poses no more threat to me than it's smartest cupcake." - Dr. Manhattan (kinda)

    2. #2
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      Laurelindo's Avatar
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      Great post.

      That's true, lucid dreams really do feel exactly as "real" as waking life itself while you are in them, and that's one reason why lucid dreams are so awesome.
      I have had moments in lucid dreams when I have been running around and been very active in various ways, and it always makes me laugh when I remind myself that I am actually asleep in bed, and that I can be "physically active" in the dream while getting rest at the same time.
      It is a very weird feeling, because it would obviously be impossible to get rested in waking life if you keep moving around.
      It is also a pretty fantastic feeling when you realize that nothing in the dream is made of atoms;
      it might feel like physical matter, but it's all in your mind, and this is of course also vastly different from anything you have ever experienced in waking life.
      But the fact that it is not made of matter doesn't make it any less "real" - the experiences you have during lucid dreams can have just as much impact on you as events during waking life, and this makes dreams just as subjectively real as waking life.

      When I take walks in waking life I always pretend that my surroundings are part of a vivid lucid dream - I find that highly meditative and exciting, especially during very early mornings at around 5-6 AM.
      Last edited by Laurelindo; 05-24-2015 at 12:43 PM.

    3. #3
      Member robertcox88's Avatar
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      You can only try to enlighten people about the awesomeness of Lucid dreaming. I just told a friend about this amazing sex lucid dream that I had recently and he gave me crap about it... i could care less though his loss. What's he doing while he's sleeping? Nothing. Some people don't understand either they only use their own experience. You tell them about lucid dreams and they don't hear anything you are saying they just think you are talking about regular dreams.

    4. #4
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      Quote Originally Posted by robertcox88 View Post
      You can only try to enlighten people about the awesomeness of Lucid dreaming. I just told a friend about this amazing sex lucid dream that I had recently and he gave me crap about it... i could care less though his loss. What's he doing while he's sleeping? Nothing. Some people don't understand either they only use their own experience. You tell them about lucid dreams and they don't hear anything you are saying they just think you are talking about regular dreams.
      When I tell people about lucid dreaming I sometimes feel like they think I am high or something, especially if I mention things like being able to paint my own dream landscape, mix my senses, fly in the air with the wind in my face, talk to my own subconscious etc.
      I guess those kinds of things sound a little to "strange" to people who don't usually experience lucid dreams.

      But I almost think this makes lucid dreaming even more special - it's like our wonderful secret.

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