You can feel their presence. It's like having your back toward the door, but knowing who walks in. You can feel them there. |
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When I have lucid dreams, involving other people in real life (usually my friends). I act as if the dream is shared. Is there a way that I can tell if these people are really dreaming with me while in the lucid dream? As in not asking them after I wake up. |
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You can feel their presence. It's like having your back toward the door, but knowing who walks in. You can feel them there. |
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Ask them to do something the next time you see them. See if they do. |
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Give them a specific message. Something ridiculous, but easy to remember. Maybe something very visual involving symbols that are easy to latch onto. |
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Hey, but what if they don't remember the dream? They could have terrible recall and you'd never know if you'd really shared the dream with them |
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Try reading some stuff about the early Monroe Institute experiments. Books by Robert Monroe, Tom Campbell and all those guys. They approach it from an Astral Projection standpoint, so you have to fish through some garbage about negative energy, bad understandings of quantum physics, and different levels of magical vibration. |
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part of the problem with asking them the next day, is this person's lack of dream recall like Kordan mentioned. Also most of my friends aren't into this, and might think I'm nuts if I asked them if we had a shared dream. |
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Same here. My sister and I had a shared dream once (at least that's what we both believe now), but she's not interested in LDing and thinks that the concept of shared dreaming is ridiculous. So, no one to experiment with...makes it hard to find out if I can do it...grrr. |
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Yeah, that's the best way to do it. Both wake yourselves up to ensure you both remember the dream. |
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I had a dream many years a go where I saw my friend. I told her to tell me about it in the morning. I never actually asked her though. |
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