This method is the best so far, and it really is as good as everyone says it is.... |
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The Wake Back to Bed method ALWAYS works for me. I have been attaining lucidity for years. Fo me, I sleep 6 or 7 hours (sometimes 5) I wake up for about 15minutes. I can usually watch a little TV..that actually will make me drowsy. The most important thing in my experience with lucid dreaming, is that I must tell myself, "I will have a lucid dream. and this is what I will dream about" I repeat that over & over as the drowsiness sets in..I visualize exactly what i will dream about..and it has NEVER failed me. Sometimes it's not perfect. The other night I wanted to have a lucid dream that in my backyard was a huge beautiful pool, like one you would see in a resort..the lucid dream started..I checked my back yard, but instead of a resort like pool, there was a huge lake! I just shut the door and said "no..I want a pool, not a lake! Opened the door again and got my pool!!! I'm not sure if anyone else ever feels this way, but my LD's can be so amazing and perfect that when I finally do wake up, I am emotional over the experience! |
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This method is the best so far, and it really is as good as everyone says it is.... |
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Last edited by xXevangelaXx; 08-27-2008 at 03:02 AM.
How does this technique tie in with writing dreams in your dream journal? How can you do improve dream recall in the morning if you're not allowed to move? :/ |
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I'm guessing that by this point you are expected to have good enough recall that skipping recording that one dream in the morning doesn't make a huge difference. You can also mentally replay your dreams instead of writing them down, if you're not able to write them down for whatever reason. It's not as good, but it's something. |
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Sounds Intresting, I'll give it a go. Thanks. |
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''Practice Makes Perfect''
-- No One Is Perfect , So Why Practice ? --
_____________________________________
LD [x]
Meet My Dream Guide [ ]
Fly [ ]
Summon People [x]
I must've imagined this 50 times this morning. Sometimes it got pretty vivid (the visualization, that is), but in the end absolutely nothing happened and I just went back to sleep. |
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I'm going to try this after I sleep for a 9 hours under the impression that it's a revelation of a method (assuming by the amount of success it's bringing). |
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<<<
"I'm not scared of death. I was dead for millions of years before I was born and that never caused me any inconvenience." ~ Mark Twain
"All men have an inarticulate sense for actuality which they use as their ultimate safeguard against the aberrations of mere logic..." C.S. Lewis - The Screwtape Letters
Remembered Lucid Dreams since joining: 2
How does everybody here actually 'wake up' to do the brief awakening. I did try using an alarm, however it woke me up too much and was unable to proceed with the tech. |
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Just try to think of what you were dreaming immidiately after you wake up. And if you make yourself want to wake up at a particular time, you can do it. The trick is making yourself actually want to. |
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<<<
"I'm not scared of death. I was dead for millions of years before I was born and that never caused me any inconvenience." ~ Mark Twain
"All men have an inarticulate sense for actuality which they use as their ultimate safeguard against the aberrations of mere logic..." C.S. Lewis - The Screwtape Letters
Remembered Lucid Dreams since joining: 2
You should be waking up naturally multiple times a night, and becoming conscious of your awakening as each dream/REM period ends. |
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Has anyone named this yet? |
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goals: make something explode by pointing at it [ ] create an object [ ] create a person [ ]
radically change landscape: by walking through a wall [ ] by turning around a corner [ ]
So, I sleep for 9 hours( |
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Current projects:
-Acquire the Aurora
-Test galatamine, huperzine and choline
-Find smartwatch app for RC reminders at certain intervals
-Ressurect my dream log here, and become more active
I'm a noob at this stuff so correct me if I'm wrong, but 9 hours seems a bit much, the idea is that you should be able to fall asleep relatively quickly while consciously moving through a place that is extremely easy to visualize. |
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goals: make something explode by pointing at it [ ] create an object [ ] create a person [ ]
radically change landscape: by walking through a wall [ ] by turning around a corner [ ]
Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo there are already enough ILDs, we don't need to make up one after every different way of using each technique! |
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You only need a minimum of 6 hours of sleep not 9 hours. |
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Current projects:
-Acquire the Aurora
-Test galatamine, huperzine and choline
-Find smartwatch app for RC reminders at certain intervals
-Ressurect my dream log here, and become more active
The great thing about this technique (actually, this type of technique) is that, unlike HIT, it is possible to force it. What I mean is, if you find it isn't working, all you need to do is keep it up, and your brain will have basically no choice but to comply. In my experience using this technique (which I would classify as DEILD), it has never failed after forcing it, ever. The only times it has failed were when I gave up prematurely. |
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I woke up one time and got a drink of water then tried it. I just can't visualize enough. If I try and imagine myself running through the backyard to the fence, I imagine it too fast. Nothing happened. |
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No, no, you can't move at all when you wake up. If you move a muscle, you have just broken your SP, which means you have to wait another 20 minutes to get back to SP before you can try visualizing. |
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Huh? you have to be in SP before you can start imagining? |
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Current projects:
-Acquire the Aurora
-Test galatamine, huperzine and choline
-Find smartwatch app for RC reminders at certain intervals
-Ressurect my dream log here, and become more active
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