well in all of my wilds it literally feels like I'm awake. Its just as realistic as real life. I feel, see, smell, hear, and taste everything the exact same as waking life its pretty crazy. |
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Hi, I would just like anyone that has had a super realistic lucid dream to talk about it. Tell me about the sort of detail you saw. I'm a very visually inclined person, I often spend lots of time looking at the sky at night, and taking things in for long periods of time and I have a photographic memory, however I can't say any of my dreams have been crystal clear and true to waking life. I'm sure I'll have one sometime but id just like to hear about it. Thanks |
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well in all of my wilds it literally feels like I'm awake. Its just as realistic as real life. I feel, see, smell, hear, and taste everything the exact same as waking life its pretty crazy. |
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" The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven "
I wanna hear more about your photographic memory!!! Describe it to me, in detail... is it difficult to see things or does it take effort to recall them? How long does it take to store information? |
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My first lucid dream was super realistic. What else can I say than it was amazing. All I did was fly around. It was set over yellowstone and a few corn fields, my view was distorted but it was beautifull. Greens were three times greener than in real life, same with blues and white. Everything was vibrant, It's unexplainable how great it was. |
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Yes I used to think it was impossible because usually my brain tricks me to believe it's vivid. But when I wake up I realize that it wasn't that vivid. |
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Yes I have, I sometimes just spend my time wandering around in amazement that this is even a dream. I remember looking at the texture on my jeans and I could see the texture of it very well, and I went out and looked at the chairs around the patio and they had very distinctive patterns. |
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Last edited by LucidDreamGod; 07-03-2012 at 03:33 PM.
I wanna be the very best
Like no one ever was
To lucid dream is my real test
To control them is my cause
Mine typically have areas of vividness. Whatever I'm focusing on is zoomed in high-def HD quality, but the peripheral vision is often distorted or blurry. |
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All of my lucid dreams have been as realistic as waking life. |
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I had a dream last night that was so incredibly vivid. ^^ |
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Well, the best realistic feeling i had in a lucid dream was my second one i beleve. Went from SP into a lucid dream. First it wasn't all that realistic but then i i payed attention to all my senses, did some practice in that dream to try to increase all the senses. And the result was quite amasing, like some people say it felt even more real then waking life. |
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All successful people men and women are big dreamers. They imagine what their future could be, ideal in every respect, and then they work every day toward their distant vision, that goal or purpose.
It's best to have failure happen early in life. It wakes up the Phoenix bird in you so you rise from the ashes.
Thanks for all the replies guys, makes me really excited to get lucid and have a lengthy dream. I do recall one non lucid I had last year where most of the dream was fairly hazy, but one part of the dream I found myself looking at a sort of storm cloud that was only maybe 20 feet across, but it looked so clear compared to everything else. I remember looking at it and even thinking wow, that cloud looks like its in HD. That's a missed dream sign. I then followed that up by taking out my phone to capture a picture of it and couldn't unlock the screen on my phone. The device looked as it should but just didn't do anything I was trying to get it to do. Another missed dream sign haha. That was early in my lucid journey though I never knew malfunctioning technology was a dream sign. Dream signs that crop up for me a lot include: tornado's/twisters, malfunctioning lights, a beautiful sunset, ufo's/lights in the sky, being at church, being at work. Anyway, I digress. Anyone else? |
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I got lucid on my balcony and first thought is to go flying. For a split second I was scared to jump off, because it looked like waking life. |
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Some of my LDs really seemed like waking life. I remember a LD where I just observed my surroundings and I was able to see the wooden chips on a tree trunk that was growing on the side of a narrow alley with black basalt floor. LDs and dreams in general can be very vivid since your mind which creates the world around you as you see it also creates your dreams. |
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"Dream your dreams with your eyes closed, but live your dreams with your eyes open."
My second lucid dream was as realistic as waking life. I really enjoyed that dream. |
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My first lucid dream i had in my first REM cycle so it was really short but that was crazy realistic. Looked like real life, took alot of mental power to convince myself it was a dream. I tried flying but fell the ground xD After that I went outside and started blowing stuff up. As you do |
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Just last night I had one. I realized I was dreaming and to stabilize I dropped to the asphalt I was on to focus on detail. There was a squirmy bug there that I examined in detail. It was so realistic as it squirmed in a little pudd le of water that I started to think I must be awake. This caused me to stare at it too long. According to Michael Raduga you should only focus for 5 seconds or less... I think he is right as I awoke. But it was realistic. Most are and get better as you have more. Used to notice periphal issue, but no more. |
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My lucid dreams are extremely vivid, even the most minute details can be picked up just by looking around the surroundings (creases on the shirt of a dream character, dirt stain on my kitchen floor etc). |
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When you become lucid, try to engage all your senses right away. I like to focus on listening to the sounds (laughter, chatter, music etc) and looking at the texture and patterns of objects around me. Combine this with physical actions such as spinning or jumping makes a powerful stabilization technique because it loads the sensory system so it cannot change its focus from the dream world to the waking world. When the brain is engaged in producing the experience of any dream action, it will be more difficult for it to create a contradictory sensation based on external sensory input, allowing the dreamer to anchor themselves better to their dream environment. |
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Last edited by ThePieMan; 07-05-2012 at 11:08 PM.
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