Hey there,
The reasons for lack of recall can be many, and to really trace the exact origin you'd need to be really specific about your habbits and what not, but two things immediately caught my eye here:
a) You're using dreamherbs and audio clips that are supposed to help? Help with what? Dream recall or lucidity? It's quite possible for people to get so fixated on lucid dreams they forget to pay attention to their regular dreams, and as a consequence see their recall evaporate. Perhaps try giving a break to the methods and techniques you've been trying for a few days, and just go to sleep normally, and focus solely on the dreams you'll have that night.
b) You used to sleep 11 hours? Now 7-8? Well the first thing to remember is that any time you sleep more, or less, you're basically changing your body's natural rythme. This means that the first few nights (probably the first week or two weeks) of any sleep habbit change, your body is going to be more tired simply because it's not used to this new rythme. More tired means more deep sleep, which in turn makes it harder to recall dreams. Its quite possible that after a week or two, when your body is adapted to the new sleep rythme, things return to normal.
Additionally, as I always recommend, pay plenty of attention to your dreams. Don't be dismissive of them, and don't make a judgement based on what is a good dream and what isn't. Even if you wake up remembering only a single image, or a sound, or even just a feeling, write it down in your dreamjournal, think on it a bit. Even if you wake up with just an idea 'I think I dreamt about a circus but I'm not sure', then write that down, think on it a bit. Work with what you have, start from the ground up, and build your recall by appreciating what you do remember, not by getting frustrated over what you don't.
Hope that helps!
-Redrivertears-
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