It's normal to have dreams this vivid. Do a reality check if you aren't sure if you're dreaming or not. |
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I just had maybe one or two dreams that felt so real that I wasn't actually sure I was dreaming in the moment or not. One of them I woke in my room, but I was in my old loft bed (I have a daybed now) in the same room I have right now. The freaky part of it was that like I said, it felt so real I wasn't sure if it was reality or not. I then remember going down this step-ladder thing I used to have and realizing that, yes, this is a dream. I tried to fly from said step-ladder only to result in failing. Though I might've flown a tiny bit once I was on the floor. |
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It's normal to have dreams this vivid. Do a reality check if you aren't sure if you're dreaming or not. |
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Yea sometimes you are even confused about deciding if it's a dream or not |
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If you feel like it, please take a look at my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCof...niLAS_pFoRkqfw
If you don't, hm well have a nice day anyway ^_^
I believe that all dreams are experienced extremely vividly, like we are really there. It is just the memory of this impression that fades so quickly when waking. Building very high dream recall and very high waking awareness makes recalling these vivid experiences better and better. |
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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
I couldn't agree more. But from my perspective awareness is the primary key. Memory is nice (if you want to cherish the memory of the dream), but awareness is necessary, if you want to experience the dream. |
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So ... is this the real universe, or is it just a preliminary study?
I actually believe that a lot of dreams are as vivid as waking life, and that they just appear "blurry" when you wake up because you have forgotten a lot of details. |
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Stephen LaBerge's Full Seminar in Russia, 1998
Стивен Лаберж - Осознанные сновидения. Весь семинар 1998.
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
Speaking mainly from a NLD perspective, I find my most vivid, detailed and lifelike dreams are the ones that occurred immediately prior to waking. Both experience and recall are superior with extreme vividness and continuity. The same holds true for the one LD I had, even though it was short. |
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^^ Yes JustASimpleGuy, this is certainly true. With effort and consistency, you can push back the levels of awesome vivid recall earlier and earlier in your individual REM cycles, and in earlier sleep cycles as well. sivason says the same thing about lucidity -- in the beginning, it comes at the end of late morning REM, and as your brain gets more and more accustomed to operating in "lucid dream mode" the lucidity will occur earlier and earlier in REM, and earlier in the night, leading to longer lucid dreams. He mentions that it takes around 100 LDs for this to start happening…..ONE TO GO, WOOHOO! haha I don't expect an instant change but I absolutely do notice changes progressing over the months in this directions, at least with vivid recall of non-lucids, and I hope soon this will extend to lucids. |
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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
If you feel like it, please take a look at my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCof...niLAS_pFoRkqfw
If you don't, hm well have a nice day anyway ^_^
^^ I've had dreams where after I got lucid I feel extremely dizzy and disoriented. The experience was not hazy, though. It depends on how good your recall is. It's of course hard to be sure, but it certainly likely that that could have been the fault of memory. I've woken up from dreams and after moving suddenly they all vanished. It's of course slightly dangerous to extrapolate from personal experience to universal experience in such a personal thing as dreaming, but from a sample size of one it does seem to be true, and others have concurred, so it's not just a single data point. |
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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
I agree it's hard to tell for sure but I still think that the level of vividness might differ in each dream. |
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If you feel like it, please take a look at my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCof...niLAS_pFoRkqfw
If you don't, hm well have a nice day anyway ^_^
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