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    1. #1
      Member Bobblehat's Avatar
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      Dream Interrogation technique

      Introduction

      I wanted to design a dynamic technique that would aid dream recall and make myself think deeply about my dreams. I decided the best way to do this would be to find a way to create probing questions that would make me think in great depth about a dream and its component parts and their characteristics. The aim of the questions is to dig out every memory of a dream so that I become familiar with every part of the dream, and - if I choose to - can continue the process up to the point where I have an exhaustive, extremely detailed memory of the dream. As a result of this, the memory of that dream is established more firmly in my mind than if I'd just written the dream in my dream journal and casually reviewed it at later dates.

      An Example Dream

      I'll use this example of a dream throughout the post to help explain the technique:

      I was sat in the vet's waiting room when my mum walked in with a small tyrannosaurus rex on a lead.

      Dream Interrogation

      The probing questions are quite simple and are formed using random adjectives. (I'll describe how I generate the adjectives later.) My own preference is to create a large list of adjectives (100s!) and pick them at random.

      First probing question

      My first probing question is a How? question and is about the dream in general. Suppose my random adjective is bright. The probing question would read:

      How bright was the dream?

      To which I could answer: It was generally bright, daytime, and I could see everything clearly in the vet's waiting room.

      Second probing question

      The second probing question is a What? question. Here I go deeper and focus on the details of the dream. It uses the same adjective as the first probing question - bright, in this example - but this time the question reads:

      What was the brightest part of the dream?

      To which I could answer: The brightest part was the view outside from the window.

      A Deeper Level


      I can underline a word in my answers and then ask probing questions about that feature of the dream. Thus:

      The brightest part was the view outside from the window.

      indicates I want to focus on - and ask some questions - about the window. For the deeper level questions I usually only ask How? questions. An example about the window using the adjective wet would read:

      How wet was the window?

      To which I could answer: The window was dry because it was a nice day with no rain.

      Again, I can repeat the deeper level questions about the window for as long as I like. I also have the option to go even deeper - say, if a probing question like, "How informative was the window?" had made me recall a poster in a window, I could decide to make that poster the focus of some probing questions.


      Difficulty with using certain adjectives


      Sometimes an adjective can be difficult to apply or may seem irrelevant. For example, if I was focussing on the t-rex and the adjective is happy, then it might seem that the resulting probing question, "How happy was the t-rex?" can't be answered. In situations like this, I create three further adjectives based on a scale suggested by the initial chosen adjective (happy). Then I consider where my focus (the t-rex) falls on the scale suggested by the four adjectives. The extra three adjectives are an opposite, an extreme of that opposite, and the final extra one is an extreme of the initial adjective (happy). Thus:

      Initial adjective = happy
      Opposite of happy = sad
      Extreme of the opposite = extremely sad
      Extreme of initial adjective = absolutely ecstatic

      Which could give the scale:

      Extremely sad > sad > happy > absolutely ecstatic

      So when my probing question says, "How happy was the t-rex?" and my response is along the lines of, "How on earth can a t-rex be happy and how can I tell?" I can exaggerate the probing question a bit using the extremes - extremely sad and absolutely ecstatic, in this case.

      Q: Was the t-rex absolutely ecstatic, dancing round the room with glee?
      A: No!

      Q: Was the t-rex extremely sad, moping around the room crying?
      A: No!

      So, somewhere between these two extremes is the position of the t-rex on the scale. An eventual answer to the probing question could be:

      The t-rex seemed content, and wasn't in any distress.

      Creating A List Of Adjectives

      There are lots of methods for creating random adjective lists:

      1) Look around the room, pick an object and name three adjectives that apply to it.

      Example: My wallpaper = white, bobbly, vertical.

      Example: My curtains = green, dusty, open.

      2) Pick up a book, magazine or newspaper, choose a page and pick off the adjectives in the body of words.

      3) Use the publication from 2, but pick out nouns and name three adjectives applicable to each noun.

      4) Use a random-word generator ( Random Word Generator (Plus) ) to generate nouns and name three adjectives for each noun.


      An example of Dream Interrogation in action


      Again, using the dream example above:

      I was sat in the vet's waiting room when my mum walked in with a small tyrannosaurus rex on a lead.

      Random adjective 1 = adventurous

      First probing question = How adventurous was the dream?

      Answer: Not very! All I did was sit down and observed my mum coming in with the t-rex.

      Second probing question = What was the most adventurous part of the dream?

      Answer: My mum going into a vet's with a t-rex!

      Random adjective 2 = serious

      First probing question = How serious was the dream?

      Answer: Fairly serious. There wasn't any laughter or joking, or any smiling.

      Second probing question = What was the most serious part of the dream?

      Answer: The look on my mum's face was serious as though she was worried about her "pet".

      A Deeper Level

      I underline "mum" because I'd like to focus on my mum:

      The look on my mum's face was serious as though she was worried about her "pet".

      Random adjective = strong

      Deeper level question = How strong was your mum?

      Answer: My mum didn't need to use any unusual amount of strength because the t-rex was walking on the lead like it was well trained.

      Deeper Level 2


      I underline "walking" because I'd like to focus on the t-rex's walking:

      My mum didn't need to use any unusual amount of strength because the t-rex was walking on the lead as well as well-trained dog does.

      Random adjective = fatigued

      Deeper level question: How fatigued was the t-rex's walking?

      Answer: Not at all. The t-rex was walking strongly and its legs were springy and full of energy.

      Summary

      1) Generate random adjectives.

      2) First probing question = How?, uses a random adjective, and is about the dream

      3) Second probing question = What?, is about a part of the dream, and utilises the same adjective as the first probing question.

      4) Deeper level questions ask How?, use a random adjective and are about a word underlined in the previous answer to a question.

    2. #2
      Member Bobblehat's Avatar
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      Part two of two: Further Points

      Star Dream

      I have a "star dream" that I apply Dream Interrogation techniques to every day. The star dream I chose is a lucid dream from the past recorded in my DJ. I chose it as the star dream because it was vivid and eventful, I realised I could be dreaming in the dream, I successfully applied an RC (nose pinch) and then went on to explore my lucidity. I make sure that a lot of the interrogation is focussed on the moment of the reality check and the moment of lucidity.

      Incubation

      I think the dream interrogation technique may work if you're trying to incubate a dream. You could create an idea of what dream you'd like and use the interrogation approach to flesh out the dream and make the details specific so that you get to know your intended dream as well as the back of your hand.

      Fictional Lucid Dreams and Dreamsigns


      I like to create fictional dreams. I write these fictional dreams so that they include the moment I spot a dream sign and become lucid. To do this I look at a non-lucid dream I actually had, pick out a part of the dream, answer a probing question about that part, then exaggerate the degree of the adjective from the probing question.

      Example
      (using the t-rex dream above):

      How happy was the t-rex?

      Normal answer: The t-rex was content.

      Exaggerated answer:

      The t-rex was jumping around the room, laughing and hugging everyone.

      So I imagine that behaviour. Thus the weird behaviour of the t-rex becomes my dream sign, and I imagine that it makes me question if I'm dreaming. I then imagine my RC is performed and indicates I'm dreaming. Then I go on to pursue my lucid goals.

      The "Other Bit"

      I have had an idea of how this Dream Interrogation approach could make an induction technique. However, I have only just started testing this. PM me if you're interested. I don't know if it will work yet.

    3. #3
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      Ctharlhie's Avatar
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      Seems like a good way to assist both recall + MILDing/incubation.
      My Lucid Dreaming Articles/Tutorials:
      Mindfulness - An Alternative Approach to ADA
      Intent in Lucid Dreaming; Break that Dry-Spell, Escape the Technique Rut

      Always, no sometimes think it's me,
      But you know I know when it's a dream
      I think I know I mean a yes
      But it's all wrong
      That is I think I disagree

      -John Lennon


    4. #4
      Member Bobblehat's Avatar
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      Yeah, I've been thinking about using it with MILD, Ctharlhie. Not sure I'd want to do it at WBTB though! Seems as soon as I put pen to paper during WBTB I blow my chances of getting back to sleep again.

      It's all fairly new, this idea, but I'm thinking in the long term there might be a shorthand version with say, 20 key adjectives (such as large, coloured, mobile etc) to list characteristics. I'm also working on a way to make recall snowball from simple bits of information.

      I do like the randomness of the approach - I find if I use recall methods that are too structured I get bored with them. And they are kind of finite. With this approach I can spend a couple of minutes examining a dream or hours.

    5. #5
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      Do the interrogation at any time that is convenient, and then review it all as you're drifting off to sleep or in your WBTB, couple all the details from the interrogation with seeing yourself become lucid in the dream and affirm your intention to become lucid with mantras. That should a pretty potent MILD If you bring yourself into a trance state before that you could incubate the dream or even V-WILDing.

      As for recall, I find a strong intent to be most important. The difference for me between spending 30 seconds and 30 minutes writing your dreams in the morning is how well I set my intention through MILD.
      My Lucid Dreaming Articles/Tutorials:
      Mindfulness - An Alternative Approach to ADA
      Intent in Lucid Dreaming; Break that Dry-Spell, Escape the Technique Rut

      Always, no sometimes think it's me,
      But you know I know when it's a dream
      I think I know I mean a yes
      But it's all wrong
      That is I think I disagree

      -John Lennon


    6. #6
      Member Bobblehat's Avatar
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      30 minutes? Wow! That IS impressive...by my standards, anyway. I find recalling dreams inherently frustrating.

      I'm not really the biggest fan of MILD in its present form (and ADA would be purgatory for me, but that's a different matter). "See yourself becoming lucid" doesn't say anything to me. It's too black and white for me. It's like forming an ambition in real life that says, "Either I score a hattrick in the world cup final for England against Brazil or I don't". I'm trying to find a new definition of lucidity that goes beyond, "You're lucid if you realise it's a dream". Might not find it of course. But I'll exhaust every possibility before I go back to MILD and following LaBerge's methods verbatim to have my lucid dreams.

    7. #7
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      Quote Originally Posted by Bobblehat View Post
      30 minutes? Wow! That IS impressive...by my standards, anyway. I find recalling dreams inherently frustrating.

      I'm not really the biggest fan of MILD in its present form (and ADA would be purgatory for me, but that's a different matter). "See yourself becoming lucid" doesn't say anything to me. It's too black and white for me. It's like forming an ambition in real life that says, "Either I score a hattrick in the world cup final for England against Brazil or I don't". I'm trying to find a new definition of lucidity that goes beyond, "You're lucid if you realise it's a dream". Might not find it of course. But I'll exhaust every possibility before I go back to MILD and following LaBerge's methods verbatim to have my lucid dreams.
      Believe me 30 minutes is not a regular thing, it's only happened once, with WBTB and now I'm finally getting into my stride with MILDing, I just used it as an extreme example to illustrate my point. I believe that MILD is most powerful of all the techniques because it forces you feel that belief, that intent.
      My Lucid Dreaming Articles/Tutorials:
      Mindfulness - An Alternative Approach to ADA
      Intent in Lucid Dreaming; Break that Dry-Spell, Escape the Technique Rut

      Always, no sometimes think it's me,
      But you know I know when it's a dream
      I think I know I mean a yes
      But it's all wrong
      That is I think I disagree

      -John Lennon


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