Not lying, just misinformed. There is a sleep disorder, then there are some common hallucinations that most people experience while falling asleep. |
|
So, what you're trying to say is that most of the members are lieing! |
|
The Grandfathered Dream Journal : http://www.dreamviews.com/community/...ad.php?t=41047
Not lying, just misinformed. There is a sleep disorder, then there are some common hallucinations that most people experience while falling asleep. |
|
Last edited by Shift; 11-18-2008 at 06:37 PM.
Strange that they would claim that you need SP to have an OBE, because a study based on 400 cases of OBE found that this was only rarely the case: |
|
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:57 AM.
Fair nuff. My bad. |
|
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:52 AM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
No. After the lead blanket feeling sets in, when I try to move I can do it just as easily as when I'm fully awake. Apparently this was also the experience of xxstimpzxx in this thread that you may recall. He says: "a few times ive felt as if i was coverd by a metal blanket, and thought i had made it but when i tried to move my arm it instantly felt normal". That's exactly what it's like. |
|
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:52 AM.
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:53 AM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
I think the problem with your write up is you are referring to sleep paralysis as it occurs in the general population. It is abnormal, and therefore considered a sleep disorder. It is experienced differently when you are actively seeking it in a WILD attempt. |
|
How do you know that what people are experiencing in a WILD attempt is actually REM atonia occuring outside of REM? It could be some other sensation that people interpret as "sleep paralysis" because they have been told that they would get it. First year medical students are often convinced that they have all the symptoms they read about in textbooks. |
|
Why would you assume it is not? It feels like SP to the person experiencing it, happens at the same time SP happens, and has all the symptoms of SP. I can tell you from experience, it is sleep paralysis. It is so obvious, I can't see why you would hypothesize it is not. |
|
I have to agree with RB. |
|
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:53 AM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
Last edited by moonshine; 11-19-2008 at 05:21 PM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
I finally see what you are saying about sleep paralysis as the disorder. But if that was the case, then we wouldn't even know about it. So then no one should be running around talking about sleep paralysis because most of them wouldn't even be aware that it's happening. Since most of us lack an EEG and all of that, then the only times we can know we are in sleep paralysis is when we have attempted to move and found that we were paralyzed. I have to admit that I have pretty much stopped reading the responses to this though. So if I'm a bit off that's why, I'm getting kind of bored with the discussion. Sleep paralysis is a disorder. Lucid dreamers are crazy. REM atonia happens during REM stages. Hypnagogia happens early in the sleep cycle. My eyes hurt because I'm so tired. |
|
Last edited by Shift; 11-19-2008 at 05:08 PM.
I think you've hit it on the head here, Shift. There really are no hard boundaries when it comes to consciousness and the onset of sleep. It is easy to classify different "stages" as a limited model to describe the typical experience, but it is dangerous to give too much importance to this model. That is why semantics are dangerous in a situation like this. They begin to limit our understanding of something instead of expanding it. |
|
Obviously, since by definition sleep paralysis is REM atonia outside of REM sleep... |
|
Last edited by Shift; 11-19-2008 at 06:22 PM.
I never said no one gets sleep paralysis; some people do. The problem is when some of those people generalize their experience, and say that this is what WILDing should be like and tell newbies that this is how you induce WILDs. It is simply not the case: a feeling of being paralyzed is unnecessary for WILDing. |
|
Can't be that obvious, since at the top of this page you stated: |
|
Last edited by moonshine; 11-19-2008 at 09:05 PM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
It's not a word game. Atonia is produced by mechanisms in the pons and medulla oblongata that gate the motor neural signals from the cortex. So how would these mechanisms distinguish between signals generated by dreamed versus non-dreamed motor behavior in the cortex? In other words, if atonia was turned on in wakefulness as you are assuming, then why would it be turned off just because you wanted it to? And how could it happen instantly the very moment you decide to move? |
|
I think everyone has agreed with this already though Thor. |
|
Last edited by moonshine; 11-19-2008 at 09:30 PM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
It is abundantly clear from the discussion on pages 108-109 that he's talking about sleep paralysis as a disorder, and how you can turn it into an advantage by initiating WILDs from it. I already covered this in my article. |
|
I'm really not sure what your getting at, as you appear to be condradicting points you have already accepted. |
|
Last edited by Howie; 12-12-2008 at 12:54 AM.
Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
It is crucial to distinguish between experience and interpretation. Suppose you said: "I've got a runny nose. It must be the flu." The first sentence is your experience, the second is your interpretation of that experience. Those are two very different things. And if your doctor says: "No, I think it's most likely an allergy," it does not mean he's calling you a liar. |
|
Last edited by Shift; 11-19-2008 at 10:42 PM.
It seems that we are arguing the same points over and over. I don't really see this going anywhere. |
|
Bookmarks