Hi, |
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Hi, |
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I normally just look around and try to get involved in the surroundings, when I start paying attention to other random things, I start waking up. My average LD time is about 5 minutes though, I would recommend checking out some tutorials this one seems to work best when I actually apply it. There are more in the wiki and here. |
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First, realize that it is easier to get lucid when you are almost partially awake, so often the first few LDs are in that verge of sleep phase. The LDs that happen in deeper sleep will be more stable, but you may need practice to get lucid in deeper sleep. |
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Well i am by no means an expert LDer, I have found success yelling "Stability now". Trust me it sounds weird but i did it multiple times in a dream and it was the longest lasting LD to date. |
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Thanks for the replies! |
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Last edited by RaurosFalls; 11-04-2012 at 04:07 PM.
Many of us have decided the term SP confuse more than it helps. The problem is pretty simple. You are experiencing your body being partially asleep, and that causes the weird sensations. However, concious awareness can break SP very easily. It is intended to keep you from moving around in a dream, but will not prevent most WILDers from moving. If you feel energy or vibrations, often moving will disrupt it, but simply relax get comfortable again, and you should be able to get to that point again quickly. In that stage I would start actively visualizing, and trying to feel a dream body. Maybe picture yourself walking and try to imagine how it should feel. |
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Wow so much information. I don't know even where to start now. Maybe I'll just go to sleep... Anyway, bookmarked |
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What works best for me, when I become aware in a dream, is to grab onto something nearby. It doesn't matter what it is, whether it be a wall, a book, or a dream character. It keeps me in the dream. |
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The sailor does not control the sea, nor does the lucid dreamer control the dream. Like a sailor, lucid dreamers manipulate or direct themselves in the larger expanse of dreaming; however, they do not control it. Lucid dreaming appears to be a co-created experience. ~Robert Waggoner
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Doing math requires brain work not conducive to dreams (as you found out) . Stabilizing and lengthening lucid dreams are both the same for me. It is a matter of calmness. Staying calm and simply observing the dreamscape has lengthened my lucids. There are some things I also avoid (if possible). Speaking to a dream character is one of them. Speaking to a DC almost always ends the LD for me. I have concluded that the act of speech, like math, requires brain functions not helpful to a LD. The hardest thing to do in a lucid dream is to stay grounded. I almost always want to fly. Some of my flights were lengthy while other more adventurous aerial acrobatics have woken me up. But, when it comes to lucid dreaming... its all good. |
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