Tesseract:
But you do have thoughts; they're just a bit more global, less centered on your self and more on the world your dreaming mind has prepared for you ... But it's still all you, all your thoughts. Wait, that made like zero sense; let me try again:
Here's the bit you must remember: no matter how removed "you" are from the action in your dreams, no matter what the perspective or format, everything that's going on -- nearby or in the distance -- is a projection of your self, of your own dreaming mind.
Hold onto that, and it won't matter whether your dream story is unfolding in first or third person (and no, Sivason, there is no 2nd person, because the 2nd person is always the one the to whom tha stuff of the plot is being said or happening; the literary mirror, as it were). What matters is that you are self-aware, and know that this is a dream, your dream, and when that happens, the fun begins, regardless of perspective.
In fact, having all your dreams run in third person (watching a movie) format can be a boon to a LD'er, because he is not constrained by the weight of a dream character "body.". In other words, when you're lucid you can get right to controlling or altering the dream content without concern for what it'll do to your dream body; physics is less important too. You're actually at a great starting point for exploration, because a major constraint is missing!
And finally, be assured that your "condition" will have no impact on becoming lucid, because the real prep for successful LD'ing happens during waking life, and your dreaming perspective holds no sway there.
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