• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




    Results 1 to 15 of 15
    Like Tree21Likes
    • 1 Post By dolphin
    • 1 Post By Him
    • 3 Post By Sageous
    • 4 Post By AstralMango
    • 2 Post By FryingMan
    • 5 Post By Sageous
    • 1 Post By LifeGoneWild
    • 2 Post By Ginsan
    • 2 Post By FryingMan

    Thread: Is it possible that one just can't DILD?

    1. #1
      Member
      Join Date
      Dec 2016
      Posts
      7
      Likes
      3

      Is it possible that one just can't DILD?

      I have been trying lucid dreaming for 2 years. I kept a dream journal, did awareness exercises, meditated before bed, did reality checks, did WBTB 2 times per day with a consistent sleep schedule(7.5 ~ 8 hrs) - everything.

      Whenever I asked the reason of my lack of success, people simply thought of it as a problem of not enough effort, or gave mundane advices like:
      "keep a dream journal." (I do)
      "have you tried WBTB?" (I do it 4~5 days per week)
      "meditate before bed." (This is already a part of my daily routine.)
      "you're not confident enough."
      "be aware during the day." (I've been following Fryingman's advice for a long time - be aware of your surroundings.)
      "try ADA." (did it for a few months. Nothing improved during that period)
      "are you trying too hard?" (I don't think one can "try too hard" for years)
      "do you smoke weed?" (I don't do any drugs or take pills)
      (-> I do/did every basic technique mentioned above.)

      I didn't improve at all, when comparing my current state to the time when I first started lucid dreaming. At least I remembered dreams every morning when I first started(maybe beginner's luck). I remember dreams once in a while now. My induction methods didn't change at all, I think I'm actually trying harder now.

      After 2 years of little success, I came down to a conclusion that DILD is impossible for me. I didn't want to believe it because people said that everybody can DILD with enough effort.

      I'm not going to give up though - I started practicing WILD and I'll see if that fits me.

      But, what if lucid dreaming is entirely impossible? I'm getting worried. I wish I could lucid dream with "enough effort".
      Last edited by LifeGoneWild; 12-04-2016 at 03:37 PM.

    2. #2
      Member Achievements:
      Tagger Second Class Vivid Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Veteran First Class 10000 Hall Points
      dolphin's Avatar
      Join Date
      Sep 2012
      Gender
      Location
      the Pacific Ocean
      Posts
      2,503
      Likes
      3256
      DJ Entries
      153
      Perhaps taking smaller steps towards the goal of a lucid dream would make it seem more manageable.

      Something like this:
      Stage 1-Experience a dream during which you think.
      Stage 2-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual.
      Stage 3-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual and question whether you are dreaming.
      Stage 4-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual, question whether you are dreaming and realize you are dreaming.

      Do you think it is possible for you to experience a dream during which you think something is unusual?
      ThreeCat likes this.

    3. #3
      Him
      Canada Him is offline
      Member Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal 1000 Hall Points Made Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Veteran First Class
      Him's Avatar
      Join Date
      Dec 2014
      LD Count
      A lot
      Gender
      Posts
      128
      Likes
      107
      DJ Entries
      12
      Is it possible that there other stresses in your life forcing you into a mindset where you can't ld?
      LifeGoneWild likes this.

    4. #4
      high mileage oneironaut Achievements:
      Made lots of Friends on DV Stickie King Populated Wall Referrer Silver 10000 Hall Points Referrer Bronze Veteran First Class 5000 Hall Points
      Sageous's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2011
      LD Count
      40 + Yrs' Worth
      Gender
      Location
      Here & Now
      Posts
      5,031
      Likes
      7156
      ...But, what if lucid dreaming is entirely impossible? I'm getting worried. I wish I could lucid dream with "enough effort".
      It's more likely, I think, that LD'ing is entirely possible, for anyone, than it is entirely impossible... even if that first LD is proving to be maddeningly elusive. If you are able to be self-aware during waking-life, then you are able to be self-aware during dreams. Period.

      That said, DILD does indeed require a certain mindset to which not everyone can adapt well. It could just be that your mental "hard-wiring" is having a little trouble with allowing things like setting intention or working prospective memory to do their thing... a switch to WILD techniques might be just the thing for you, because with WILD you get to bring your lucid mindset to the dream with you; no need to summon it during a NLD.

      Good luck with WILD!
      LifeGoneWild, gab and ThreeCat like this.

    5. #5
      Member
      Join Date
      Dec 2016
      Posts
      7
      Likes
      3
      Quote Originally Posted by dolphin View Post
      Perhaps taking smaller steps towards the goal of a lucid dream would make it seem more manageable.

      Something like this:
      Stage 1-Experience a dream during which you think.
      Stage 2-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual.
      Stage 3-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual and question whether you are dreaming.
      Stage 4-Experience a dream during which you think something is unusual, question whether you are dreaming and realize you are dreaming.

      Do you think it is possible for you to experience a dream during which you think something is unusual?
      My expectations became lower and lower through time because of repeated failure.

      Now, I consider remembering at least something as success, but it's sad that I can't go further than that. Remembering a dream with me inside the plot or having a dream where I think something is unusual happens very rarely.

      Quote Originally Posted by Sageous View Post
      It's more likely, I think, that LD'ing is entirely possible, for anyone, than it is entirely impossible... even if that first LD is proving to be maddeningly elusive. If you are able to be self-aware during waking-life, then you are able to be self-aware during dreams. Period.

      That said, DILD does indeed require a certain mindset to which not everyone can adapt well. It could just be that your mental "hard-wiring" is having a little trouble with allowing things like setting intention or working prospective memory to do their thing... a switch to WILD techniques might be just the thing for you, because with WILD you get to bring your lucid mindset to the dream with you; no need to summon it during a NLD.

      Good luck with WILD!
      Maybe I have a bad mindset in my subconscious that prevents me from getting lucid. I'll try WILD instead, thank you.

      Quote Originally Posted by Him View Post
      Is it possible that there other stresses in your life forcing you into a mindset where you can't ld?
      Maybe. I got a lot of stress lately, but I'm not sure if it affects my dream life.
      Last edited by anderj101; 12-05-2016 at 02:01 PM. Reason: Merged 3 posts

    6. #6
      Member Achievements:
      Made lots of Friends on DV Populated Wall Referrer Bronze 1000 Hall Points Veteran First Class
      AstralMango's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2013
      Gender
      Location
      Present
      Posts
      821
      Likes
      1011
      Stress does affect dream recall, and I think it messes with your lucid dreaming mindset too.

    7. #7
      Spammer
      Join Date
      Nov 2016
      Posts
      4
      Likes
      0
      Success will pursue your passions

    8. #8
      DVA Teacher Achievements:
      Tagger First Class Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Huge Dream Journal Made Friends on DV Veteran First Class 10000 Hall Points
      FryingMan's Avatar
      Join Date
      Sep 2013
      LD Count
      297
      Location
      The Present Moment
      Posts
      5,396
      Likes
      6868
      DJ Entries
      954
      Quote Originally Posted by LifeGoneWild View Post
      "be aware during the day." (I've been following Fryingman's advice for a long time - be aware of your surroundings.)
      I don't remember saying that specifically, what I advocate is being self-aware in the present moment. Paying attention, yes, but not ADA-style, mindlessly, rather always bring your *self* into the picture. In summary, mindfulness, but with a lucid dreaming twist (reflection). I basically advocate the approach given by the Tibetan dream yoga practitioners. I strongly suggest reading their literature, particularly the renowned "The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep" and Andrew Holecek's new book "Dream Yoga: Illuminating Your Life Through Lucid Dreaming and the Tibetan Yogas of Sleep". This literature may click with you. If it doesn't, keep looking until you find something that does click.
      In particular TYoDaS gives a clear self-progress-measurement tool in the introduction to the practice section of the book. I suggest you read these several paragraphs very carefully and repeatedly until they sink in, you can find this section here:
      http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/Te...-And-Sleep.pdf, pages 66 and 67, in particular:
      You can determine for yourself how mature your practice is: as you encounter the
      phenomena of experience, examine your feelings and your reactions to the
      feelings. Are you controlled by your interactions with the objects of experience
      or do you control your reactions to them? Are you thrown into emotional
      reactions by your attractions and aversions, or can you remain in steady
      presence in diverse situations?
      If the former, practice will cultivate the presence
      needed to free you of karmic conditioning and reactivity. if the latter, you will
      increasingly develop stability in awareness and your dreams will change in
      extraordinary ways.
      Simply spending time on practices is not enough: you need to have a clear goal, and the above section makes the case very nicely exactly what we need to be shooting for.

      I remember dreams once in a while now. My induction methods didn't change at all, I think I'm actually trying harder now.
      That's an issue: I'd recommend going whole hog on dream recall for a while. With the time you've invested, I would expect you to have multiple dreams per night every night on average given good conditions (proper rest, not high stress, etc.), with at least one of them fairly vivid. You should begin feeling more and more present in your dreams, they should approach feeling like waking experiences. When you reach that point full-on lucidity is just a short step away.

      You mention being fairly stressed. I personally find stress is a dream-killer. If you can't keep your mind quiet & still, dreamy, gently pondering your dreams you just woke from, but instead instantly start churning over waking life worries and problems, dream recall will definitely be a challenge.

      It sounds like you've set up a fairly strong association that "not lucid = failure." That can also inhibit recall and lucidity itself. Instead, I'd focus on building recall and treasuring all your dreams, all your conscious experiences in fact.
      ThreeCat and gab like this.
      FryingMan's Unified Theory of Lucid Dreaming: Pay Attention, Reflect, Recall -- Both Day and Night[link]
      FryingMan's Dream Recall Tips -- Awesome Links
      “No amount of security is worth the suffering of a mediocre life chained to a routine that has killed your dreams.”
      "...develop stability in awareness and your dreams will change in extraordinary ways" -- TYoDaS

    9. #9
      Banned Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Populated Wall 3 years registered

      Join Date
      Feb 2013
      LD Count
      149 in 2016
      Gender
      Location
      Bleep
      Posts
      1,171
      Likes
      999
      DJ Entries
      48
      First, welcome to DV This is a long post and I think I've been concise but there is just a lot of stuff here.

      Yeah I definitely think it is possible that for some people, DILDs or any kind of satisfactory lucid dreaming or dream recall is not going to happen. And if I didn't think that before, after reading your post, I should believe that it's possible. I've spent some time in DV chat and talked to some people who are the opposite of you regarding dreams. 1 Woman said she had extremely vivid lucid dreams where she often cannot even tell whether she is dreaming or not (but she is aware and actually wondering whether she is dreaming or not!), she said she would often call people and talk to people to find out whether she was dreaming. I don't remember how long these dreams are, but anything from an hour to 3-4 hours a night. The dreams have consistent maps/locations and physics works and electronic devices usually work. So if you can have such superior LD-time, I think you can also be super unfortunate and have almost no ability. And there are many people like this, though less extreme, people who have great elaborate plots, people who have very vivid, long, beautiful dreams regularly.

      This may sound pretty annoying, but did you try prospective memory training? I read great things about it, though I didn't do it because I'm lazy. And just out of curiosity, how often do you get lucid? Never? How many lucid dreams did you have in total, approximately? And you say you recall dreams only once in a while now, could you maybe try the following? When you wake up, try to meditate (lying or sitting doesn't matter) and don't explicitly try to remember a dream, but just try to be mindful of your breath or your body or whatever, just do some simple awareness practice, and the dream will come to you. This (and wbtb) is my best way of recalling dreams, and writing them down obviously.

      You have my sympathy and my admiration for still not giving up. Maybe you don't care and just want to get lucid, but I think you should be proud of your perseverance and I'm not just saying this because I feel bad for you not getting good results. Oh and you can maybe try supplements.

      To the optimists in this thread, GET REAL. Some people maybe just can't get lucid? It sucks but maybe affinity for lucid dreaming and dream recall is another one of those things that is not distributed equally, like health, IQ, an attractive face, genes for athleticism, being born in poverty, to shitty parents, in a shitty society or being born in a nice place, just plain being lucky for not getting into a terrible accident or catching a nasty disease. You see clear evidence of his failure despite his great attempts and pretend that it doesn't matter and that he just needs to do a better job, it is dishonest.
      Last edited by Ginsan; 12-07-2016 at 10:12 PM.

    10. #10
      high mileage oneironaut Achievements:
      Made lots of Friends on DV Stickie King Populated Wall Referrer Silver 10000 Hall Points Referrer Bronze Veteran First Class 5000 Hall Points
      Sageous's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2011
      LD Count
      40 + Yrs' Worth
      Gender
      Location
      Here & Now
      Posts
      5,031
      Likes
      7156
      ^^ If you're looking for a little pessimism, Ginsan, here's a thought:

      Quote Originally Posted by Ginsan View Post
      1 Woman said she had extremely vivid lucid dreams where she often cannot even tell whether she is dreaming or not (but she is aware and actually wondering whether she is dreaming or not!), she said she would often call people and talk to people to find out whether she was dreaming. I don't remember how long these dreams are, but anything from an hour to 3-4 hours a night. The dreams have consistent maps/locations and physics works and electronic devices usually work.
      You might be wary of folks who offer up such grand stories of success... especially when they mistakenly equate lucidity with vividness or realness.

      Lucidity is about having the presence of your waking-life self-awareness in a dream; about knowing you are dreaming... nothing more, or less. By the same token lucidity has nothing -- nothing -- to do with vividness or accurate renditions of reality, unless you make the changes yourself after you are lucid (and then of course you wouldn't wonder about anything).

      To say your LD's are just like reality, to me, actually diminishes your account, because that means that you are still accepting the "reality" as offered by your dreaming mind in a non-lucid context (NLD's are generally "real," when perceived by a non-lucid mind; it's when you wake up later that you realize they weren't real). Again, calling friends to see if you are dreaming implies a lack of lucidity, and not a wealth of it, as do things like consistent maps/locations and physics works and electronic devices usually working (again, they all tend to work in NLD's, or at least appear to at the time; it is because of your lucidity that they fail). And then she throws in that her dreams last for hours, probably without an asterisk saying that she practices DEILD-chaining (though there are certainly exceptions, dreams by their nature really can't last much longer than 2 hours) -- a NLD can easily, as you probably know, feel upon waking like it went on for hours, though; sort of makes you wonder, doesn't it?

      From my experience with folks like this (often well-meaning, BTW, but there are a lot of 'em), she is either deeply confused about the nature of lucidity, or else might be inflating her experience just to impress.

      I would take reports like this with a grain of salt, Ginsan, and also would avoid using them as examples of how good people can get at LD'ing, because it really presents incorrect information about the state, and the experience.

      [I know this has nothing to do with the topic, but I felt obliged to throw in my 2 cents on this.]

      Also:

      To the optimists in this thread, GET REAL. Some people maybe just can't get lucid? It sucks but maybe affinity for lucid dreaming and dream recall is another one of those things that is not distributed equally, like health, IQ, an attractive face, genes for athleticism, being born in poverty, to shitty parents, in a shitty society or being born in a nice place, just plain being lucky for not getting into a terrible accident or catching a nasty disease. You see clear evidence of his failure despite his great attempts and pretend that it doesn't matter and that he just needs to do a better job, it is dishonest.
      Well said, and I agree. But keep in mind that LifeGoneWild was talking about failure at DILD, and not lucidity in general. It might not yet be time for us optimists to GET REAL, or for you to suggest that failure might be inevitable, until after LifeGoneWild has experimented with WILD as well.

      I mean no offense, Ginsan. It's just that optimism is critical to successful LD'ing, and telling someone that failure might be inevitable before they have covered all possible bases is, to me, not constructive.
      Last edited by Sageous; 12-08-2016 at 05:22 AM.

    11. #11
      Banned Achievements:
      Made Friends on DV Created Dream Journal

      Join Date
      Nov 2016
      Posts
      129
      Likes
      57
      DJ Entries
      6
      I'm digging this direction of constructivity
      Please continue on with the thread and ignore me. I'm just a branch.

      You mention that you practiced ADA for months. During this time, how did you practice ADA. How much time was spent lost in thought?

    12. #12
      Member
      Join Date
      Dec 2016
      Posts
      7
      Likes
      3
      Quote Originally Posted by Threeofeight View Post
      I'm digging this direction of constructivity
      Please continue on with the thread and ignore me. I'm just a branch.

      You mention that you practiced ADA for months. During this time, how did you practice ADA. How much time was spent lost in thought?
      I had always been thinking about my five senses. I didn't spend much time unaware or not doing ADA - I kept my awareness at least.

      Quote Originally Posted by FryingMan View Post
      I don't remember saying that specifically, what I advocate is being self-aware in the present moment.
      I phrased your words wrong in my original post..
      I read most of your famous posts and followed them! After I gave up on ADA, I decided to stick to achieving the mindfulness state you described, but it didn't change anything.

      Quote Originally Posted by Ginsan View Post
      This may sound pretty annoying, but did you try prospective memory training? I read great things about it, though I didn't do it because I'm lazy. And just out of curiosity, how often do you get lucid? Never? How many lucid dreams did you have in total, approximately? And you say you recall dreams only once in a while now, could you maybe try the following? When you wake up, try to meditate (lying or sitting doesn't matter) and don't explicitly try to remember a dream, but just try to be mindful of your breath or your body or whatever, just do some simple awareness practice, and the dream will come to you. This (and wbtb) is my best way of recalling dreams, and writing them down obviously.
      I remember reading an article about prospective memory training, but I never tried it. I'll give it a try after experimenting with WILD.
      My last lucid dream was months ago. I had a few (around 11, which are foggy half-lucids and lucid moments), but I was never fully lucid.
      When I am sure that I had a dream but I can't remember anything in the morning, I meditate. I sometimes get some fragments back.
      Last edited by LifeGoneWild; 12-08-2016 at 11:05 AM.
      Ginsan likes this.

    13. #13
      Banned Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Populated Wall 3 years registered

      Join Date
      Feb 2013
      LD Count
      149 in 2016
      Gender
      Location
      Bleep
      Posts
      1,171
      Likes
      999
      DJ Entries
      48
      Sageous I see what you mean and I don't have a meaningful response, one that would help our friend or shed light on this thing we're talking about, but I don't want to not respond, because I feel that that would be disrespectful. But I see what you mean. Have a nice day everyone
      Last edited by Ginsan; 12-08-2016 at 11:57 AM.
      Sageous and LifeGoneWild like this.

    14. #14
      Banned Achievements:
      Made Friends on DV Created Dream Journal

      Join Date
      Nov 2016
      Posts
      129
      Likes
      57
      DJ Entries
      6
      Quote Originally Posted by LifeGoneWild View Post
      I had always been thinking about my five senses. I didn't spend much time unaware or not doing ADA - I kept my awareness at least.
      Not going to assume that this might help you. But I think ADA is explained wrong. My idea of an all day mindfulness includes a sense of thoughtlessness. Does not mean the mind is shut down but to stop interfering with the mind's natural working. Focusing on senses is conscious effort. What we must achieve is effortless and let the mind interpret information given by the senses in a calm calculating fashion.
      Last edited by Threeofeight; 12-08-2016 at 02:51 PM.

    15. #15
      DVA Teacher Achievements:
      Tagger First Class Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Huge Dream Journal Made Friends on DV Veteran First Class 10000 Hall Points
      FryingMan's Avatar
      Join Date
      Sep 2013
      LD Count
      297
      Location
      The Present Moment
      Posts
      5,396
      Likes
      6868
      DJ Entries
      954
      Quote Originally Posted by LifeGoneWild View Post
      I phrased your words wrong in my original post..
      I read most of your famous posts and followed them! After I gave up on ADA, I decided to stick to achieving the mindfulness state you described, but it didn't change anything.
      You need more time, and perhaps more consistent and right effort. Read the Tibetan dream yoga literature, they also give detailed troubleshooting advice. Focus on really paying attention to all your experiences, reflecting upon them, and recalling them, both waking and dreaming experiences. Do this consistently with strong intent and desire to be present in all your experiences, and both your waking and your dreaming experiences will transform considerably.

      With little dream recall this indicates your mind is not in the right place while in bed. You mentioned stress, that's a dream killer -- learn to manage it, I'm sure that will help. If you have a sincere desire to experience your dreams (and all experiences) vividly, I'm sure you'll get there!

      I don't recall seeing your DILD workbook in the DVA. Come on over to the DILD class and open up a workbook, and fogelbise and I (co-teachers of the DILD class) will give you detailed feedback on your practice and progress. It's a great way to stay motivated as well! Hope to see you there soon!
      Threeofeight and Dexter33 like this.
      FryingMan's Unified Theory of Lucid Dreaming: Pay Attention, Reflect, Recall -- Both Day and Night[link]
      FryingMan's Dream Recall Tips -- Awesome Links
      “No amount of security is worth the suffering of a mediocre life chained to a routine that has killed your dreams.”
      "...develop stability in awareness and your dreams will change in extraordinary ways" -- TYoDaS

    Similar Threads

    1. Did I almost DILD?
      By SoulWithin in forum General Lucid Discussion
      Replies: 4
      Last Post: 10-28-2013, 10:48 AM
    2. Replies: 9
      Last Post: 08-14-2012, 04:31 AM
    3. First DILD
      By Lucidity444 in forum Lucid Experiences
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: 10-19-2009, 02:52 PM
    4. My first DILD (I think)
      By Diggadog in forum Lucid Experiences
      Replies: 3
      Last Post: 01-08-2009, 04:26 PM
    5. My first DILD!
      By Uniq0ne in forum General Lucid Discussion
      Replies: 3
      Last Post: 01-23-2008, 01:22 AM

    Bookmarks

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •