I think it was correct ;)
Since people are talking about 50 year dreams and so on.
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I think it was correct ;)
Since people are talking about 50 year dreams and so on.
I never noticed Beyond Dreaming. Sounds fun...
I think this would actually be an exciting experience. Simply because life is no longer so epic, it can fuel more interest. Happened to me from a year-long LD before. What you can't do in Lucid Dreams is learn what you wanted to. Do it. If you can't play guitar, go do it. In a lucid dream, learning guitar would be incredibly inaccurate and, as a musician, I can say not fun.
Plus, you can always look forward to another lifetime in 18 hours or so. It's almost like you're God. You live your day as a normal person, then you go live another life.
I highly disregard this theory because, well, my theory, which LaBerge actually states to believe in ETWOLD, is that much of dreams are created upon awakening. Whether it was during being woken up or during recall he did not state, but the latter sounds more likely.
These "year-long dreams" are simply memories that are created even though they may or may not have taken place. The brain fills in the gap between two events. Brains have insane processing capacity, and since they don't have to necessarily render it all at once, it's very likely. In my experience of recall, once I hit a scene, I then think of a word which sparks a still-image which sparks a scene. With these year-long dreams, I just go right thorugh it from still image to still image and if I take the effort remember the entire scene.
That seems to be a matter of personality. I always have dreams that end in a life-death struggle. For instance, last night was a headcrab invasion. While I can't use that for my next bit, I'll use another one.
I had a shootout with some terrorists in a cafeteria once. I was in total control of the dream. After being shot, rather than just magically healing it as I did the others, I said "Hurts like a bitch, but let's see what it's like." and continued the course of the dream crippled. I woke up in about ten minutes so I can't say I wouldn't have skipped the months of healing. ;)
HERE'S THE LINK! http://www.dreamviews.com/f11/extrem...bility-106651/
and where the heck is Skullyy??
^wouldn't that be rather boring?
That's the point of it. He says that it's to not let the dream implode on itself just because it gets boring.
Wish that the Skully guy was still here.. :(
Might try that one day, once I get pro as at Lucid Dreaming! xD
The thing is, you probably wont even remember the beginning of the lucid. That's why people say its important to work on dream recall. I've only had one pretty long chain of lucids, and I didn't even remember the first lucid I had that night, just a slight recall of it. My most memorable lucid was one where I became lucid at a beach at night and I did that lasso thing from Bruce almighty where he pulls the moon closer. But instead of it getting closer, the sun came up instead lol.
I see what your saying though. People do fulfill some fantasies in lucids, but you have to keep good dream recall. But people do use lucids to help out their life, like myself who wants to use lucids to help my anxieties and become more outgoing. Im looking into acting a little. Just try and see if Like it, and I can use lucids to help out acting. You probably know about the benefits of lucids already.
Can you please tell me which section of EWLD you're referring to? I don't remember anything like that in EWLD. It seems inconsistent with his belief that eye movement (along with other bodily functions) tend to correspond with the dream as it's happening in the dream.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Laberge