Hi there... |
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Hi there... |
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Last edited by Different; 12-27-2011 at 02:54 PM. Reason: feel real* sorry typo :p
I'm relatively new to Ld'ing.... I've had 13 times where I realized I was dreaming, and 3 I could stabliize long enough to engage. Granted, I wasn't in there long... minutes for the longest one... but it was as real as any real experience. I was just in Puerto Rico (in real life) 6 weeks, and after two days being back, in some ways it seems like a dream... that is how any real experience and memory is, isn't it? The memory of my LD is just as clear as my other memories, and while I was in it, It was a real as other experiences. I can't say 100% as real as reality... somewhere I read DILDs are 60% and WILDs are 75% or something like that. I would give the DILDs I've had 75%. When I rubbed my hands together the feeling had a slightly "vinyl" feel to them. But it was a real experience. I believe my peripheral vision was less as I think back, but I never tried slowly spinning around to "fill in" the full landscape as was recommended somewhere. But yeah, they are really "real" if you have a clear, lucid dream. I know I was actually "there", wherever "there" was! |
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What ive read is that time is not distorted in a dream. I think that is true for a normal sequence of events. However I just recently had a non lucid dream that felt like it lasted a half day. But it comprised of different scenes. I think your mind can trick you into feeling a longer passade of time through scene changes and implied passage of time. |
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I definitely know the feeling, it seems to me to be related to the level of lucidity. When I wake up from a dream at a point where I'm extremely lucid it tends to feel like just moving from one reality to another, when I wake up at a point where I'm not entirely lucid I experience the feeling you described of wondering whether I was lucid or not, you think you're fully conscious in the dream but when you awake and recognise normal consciousness you realise that you weren't. |
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both comments were appreciated but this one in particular I feel related to me more. |
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Glad I could be of help! I've been lucid dreaming for about 15 months. I assume you mean clarity in the sense of the visual and sensual quality of the dream, in which case I'm afraid I can't say I know of any reliable methods of improving clarity, I've had plenty of amazingly vivid and clear lucid dreams without doing anything to make them so. I should point out though that I think there is a distinction between the clarity of the dream and the amount of lucidity, though they are often related. |
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I think it's a case of maintaining awareness; if I don't become lucid with a high level of lucidity to begin with, usually because I haven't prepared adequately, I will often lose lucidity. When starting with high lucidity it's just a case of not being sucked back into the plot of the dream, if I find myself doubting whether it really is a dream then I'll make sure I do a reality check, and regular reality checks and reminding yourself that you're dreaming are a good way of preventing losing lucidity. |
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umm well all of the lucid dreams i've had some have felt more real than others, like if i become lucid but for some reason continue with the plot of the storyline un intentionally but lucid it feels a lot less real. |
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