Make sure you are thirsty before going to sleep, and put a glass of water beside your bed, every time the REM period finished you would wake up to have a drink. This method hasn't worked for me very well but you might have a different result. |
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Hi all, |
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Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.
Make sure you are thirsty before going to sleep, and put a glass of water beside your bed, every time the REM period finished you would wake up to have a drink. This method hasn't worked for me very well but you might have a different result. |
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Actually, we all wake up naturally at the ending of each REM-sleep period (research hasn't yet found out why). These very brief awakenings are called 'micro-awakenings' and sometimes also occur spontaneously during dreaming. The prerequisite for using these awakenings to do WILD or MILD is to intend, before you go to bed, to remember to recognize the moment you wake up during the night. This way you can wake up without using an alarm clock. |
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Love what you dream. Dream what you love.
I know about the vibrate alarm but i never really found any use of it because it has never woken me up due to my incredibly thick pillow. I could use thinner ones but that would make my sleep uncomfortable. |
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Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.
Would it be easier to WILD if you wake up during an REM period? If so then how would you know exactly when your REM periods occur. I found out that if I wake up at 5:30 i'm more tired than I am if I wake up at 5:10. And most of my LDs occur if I fall asleep after I wake up at 5:30 for school but it's risky because I may over sleep for school because I don't have an alarm to wake me up at 6 or w.e. |
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I'm trying to do the same, only with regular MILD. The problem is however that we wake up naturally at the end of REM although we need REM sleep to start lucid dreaming again (especially with attempting WILD). This way we first have to go through all deep sleep stages before we start dreaming again, which greatly decreases our chances of becoming lucid. |
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Love what you dream. Dream what you love.
I wake up at the end of each dream automatically. I found that using an alarm clock for a few days, combined with CONSTANT affirmations that I would wake up at the end of each dream was enough to form the habit. It was just a matter of becoming awair of the natural awakenings. Usually I just go back to sleep when I wake up after each dream, but I also use it for WILD, MILD, and DEILD. |
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LD tasks of the month completed: 16
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I've always had the same problem. I wake up after each dream naturally for recall purposes. That means I have to wait through another sleep cycle to return to dreaming. Not too helpful for WILD. |
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when you WBTB, do you have to physically get up? or can you lie in bed for a while awake? |
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MILD: 1
That's what I've read somewhere but I can't be sure about the sleep cycles resetting - it's a good question I've wondered about. Possibly WBTB works because you're going back sleep into a time when you'll be having your longest REM periods. It definitely works though. I've found the best time is about an hour. Spending that time reading about LDing helps a lot. |
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Yeah, that's the whole point. You need to get out of bed and do something mentally active so you're not groggy at all. Some people here say they don't need to do that but according to the experts, 60-90 minutes produces the best results. There's a good tutorial on this site about WBTB. |
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For the alarm - for a while I put my cell phone in my sock and put it on my hand or foot. It always fell off of my hand, but it also always woke me up. It's startling, but definitely less annoying than waking up to a blaring alarm clock. |
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DILD: 12
WILD: 1
Lucid powers: falling through floors and ceilings, teleporting, turning on lights(sometimes), floating changing pie filling with my mind
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Lucidpedia is right. You wake up automatically at the end of REM sessions and I think this is your best chance for anytype of lucid dream. The problem is these are often very brief and you don't even realize you woke up. However, if you have already committed to having a lucid dream it will better your odds. Also, I think you can get better at fully awakening during these which definitely helps. |
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