I'd recommend MILD. It's a really good long-term method which will aid you gradually. |
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I've now had a dry spell that lasted over 3 months , partly self - induced because I thought I'd take a break because I was trying too hard. I stopped doing my DJ, and slowly my recall worsened to the point that I only had snippets each night. I used to recall 2 or 3 dreams a night before that . I've just started my DJ again but want to get the basics down. I maybe need to try something different? |
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I'd recommend MILD. It's a really good long-term method which will aid you gradually. |
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Just a scared old llama on the outside planning to dominate these forums...
Don't you dare defy me!
Note: I'm big on grammar, you won't see one error coming out of me!
I would check out this thread |
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Hi, Goldenspark. I would suggest continuing the dream journal, keeping a regular sleep schedule, and practicing WBTB when it's feasible. Be consistent with your practice and sleep schedule for a month or so. Celebrate the successes and resolve to learn from any setbacks. I would also really focus on your goals for the dream state--what do you want to do once you're lucid? Let us know how it goes! |
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Stephen LaBerge's tips for MILD: (http://www.dreamviews.com/lucid-expe...ml#post2160952
Thanks guys! I listened to your audio Sensei ; Very interesting , although I was slightly surprised at your emphasis on the number of LD s - quality not quantity and all that ... but I suppose when you have had 850 + you get quality as well. I managed to get lucid OK, but most of my 30 + LDs only Iasted a few seconds , and for all my attempts at stabilising I could not seem to stay in. I will have a go at MILD - it's not a technique that I really had a proper go at . I mostly did DEILD and WBTB /WILD. I'll report how I get on . |
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You can't get quality without practice. Practice is quantity quantity quantity quantity. |
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One thing that I have worked out is that the times I have got lucid naturally were when something really odd occurred in my dream, but that in most of my dreams nothing really odd tends to happen. It's like my dreams are so like real life I don't notice . I did once decide to to the nose-pinch RC Which made me lucid, but that was a one off. I'm going to concentrate on basic MILD and see how I go. |
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One thing I think extremely helpful to breaking dry spells is to shake up your routine. Travel, go to places you've never been before, even around town. Especially wacky little shops with wild decorations and crazy shop keepers. Interact with people you don't know (crazy (or non-crazy) shop keepers are a great way to do this because it's their job to talk to you! |
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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
Similar to what frying man said about shaking up routine, sleeping in a different room, or doing a Wbtb and making the effort to go outside in the wee hours, maybe sleep on the couch...some part of you knows something is different... |
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About what fryingman said. Sleeping in a different place seems to up awareness. I think it is a hunting instinct of being more aware. You wake up at the slightest sound and you remember your surroundings really well (I usually have FAs when I am in new places. |
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Thanks for those suggestions. I've now been DJ 'ing for over a week and Iast night I remembered four good dreams, two of them vivid with one of those having a good dose of nudity just to add some spice ! Still not lucid, but I'm continuing to RC, mantra and WBTB, so hopefully that will come. I'm sure that the help and inspiration on here also really helps. |
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http://www.dreamviews.com/dreamviews...ng-sensei.html |
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What's with dry spells anyway? What causes them? Any theorys? I mean, when you are putting consistent effort and practices in and for some reasons weeks go by and no LD...some things compound the effect probably, such as diminished confidence and expectation from not lucid dreaming, but sometimes on a dry spell, I could double up efforts and really expect to LD but still nothing... |
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Last edited by Patjunfa; 05-17-2015 at 09:01 AM. Reason: Typo
As much as you want to "expect" a ld, it is near impossible to change what you actually expect. Because your experience changes your expectations. So for anyone that just started lding in the last couple years their experience is gonna be "not lucid dreams". |
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I think that dry spells can often be a result of becoming too comfortable with our abilities or our rate of LDs. I know that when I haven't had a lucid dream in a while, I train a lot harder, and put more focus into the daily practices. I might try a real (not "micro") WBTB, or practice MILD several times during the night. Eventually, lucidity hits, and it becomes easier to make that happen again--partly because of what Sensei mentioned: once you've had a few lucid dreams in a row, or had a really great week of lucid dreaming, it becomes easier to expect lucid dreams to occur. A positive mindset is super important in this practice. |
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Stephen LaBerge's tips for MILD: (http://www.dreamviews.com/lucid-expe...ml#post2160952
I managed to have a brief lucid a few nights ago, but it was a bit weird. I just spontaneously said to myself, " I must be dreaming!" (because of something unusual in my dream), but almost immediately it turned back into a non-lucid that I couldn't remember the next morning. I get the idea about one LD helping to trigger more, so I hope that will come. |
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