 Originally Posted by Jabre
no, not at all... I'm saying that you could get SP more frequently if you WILD. But like I said, it's only a small chance (personally I have never woken up in SP out of my WILDs) and nothing to be concerned about. No, no nightmares
Thanks! 
 Originally Posted by Woodstock
Since you can usually control what happens in a lucid dream, it will be easier to stop nightmares. But it might also be your subconscious trying to tell you something. You can use lucid dreaming to help you. It isn't always just a fun escape from life.
In my last dreams I usually get expelled from my high school due to a triviality, no zombies, no monsters, no crazy teachers with chainsaws, I think I'll be fine, thanks 
 Originally Posted by insideout
1. Not very often. For me it seems that if a dream is going to go bad, it's not a very wonderful dream to begin with. Although it could be that I don't remember what happens before it becomes a nightmare. If you mean how often does a fun or fantastic lucid dream turn into a nightmare, hardly ever. More recently especially, if I am fully lucid in a dream then I know not to be afraid of anything that happens. I face the potentially scary thing with confidence.
2. Not as often recently as I use to. I haven't had a false awakening in...I don't know, many months.
3. The times when I have had false awakenings did sometimes become unpleasant or scary, but not nearly as bad as my regular nightmares. False awakening are a bit confusing, but not too bad.
4. In the "lucid" nightmares I've had (I'm generally not fully lucid when it's a nightmare), I didn't try to wake up.
5. Best thing I can think of is to not worry about having nightmares and don't try to avoid them. You can use them to become lucid even, as I've done a few times. Just think if something scary happens, consider that it may be a dream. And if you are lucid in a dream, remember that there's no reason to fear anything. Just face the thing with as much courage as you can muster, and usually this makes the thing change or go away. I don't mean you have to fight the thing. You could show it kindness, or treat it with disregard. If you ignore the thing and it will usually go away because you are paying no attention to it.
Thanks for all the info! 
But what's better, to treat nightmarish things with humour, with kindness or with courage? Actually I'm not very courageous but I'm trying to be emphatic and I have a strong sense of the humour, so maybe courage isn't the best way to confront nightmares... What do you think? 
 Originally Posted by Checker666
1: Don't think i have got many of what people usually call 'nightmares', possibly because as video game player i got used to many things, so seeing some weird creatures or shadows or such became actually good experience for me  . Though even if i experience sort of fear towards something, i quickly turn it onto my side in lucid dreams as it seems. 
2: 100% of my WILDS were FA's, so i guess pretty often  . Non-lucid they are rare though.
3: For lucids see 1, for non-lucids don't think i had FA's turn into nightmares.
4: See 3.
5: Well, the only thing i could advice is to not think about things that are bad for you and think about things that are good for you. 
You answer questions the same way I do the exams 
So, don't play horror videogames/films and thing about pretty and cute things, got it 
 Originally Posted by Venryx
None, though I've only had 12, and most of them were extremely short, like half a minute or something.
So far, about a fourth of my lucid dreams have started with or were followed by false awakenings.
None so far.
Well, up until recently I've had absolutely no trouble waking up when something get's scary. I had learned when I was younger, when something is scary, to concentrate on counting down from 10 to 1, and then when I get to that last number, focus on it very intensely as something that will wake me up, and then after one or two tries I'm awake. My nightmares went a way after a few months of this, so I haven't actually used it for a long time.
Curiously, I seem to have had a very intense nightmare last night, from which I apparently either didn't know I was dreaming or was unable to get out of. It was of such intensity that I was groaning and woke up my Dad, which I've never done before, and when he came in the room I was so terrified (he looked like just a black figure) that apparently I knocked over my digital alarm clock and fan that I had next to my bed, and caused my digital keyboard/piano to fall off of its stand. Dad put them back up, and I calmed down. But for the next hour or so I didn't want to fall asleep, or even think back over what happened, because of how intense my earlier fear had been. This was around 6 AM, I believe, and I don't think I even fell fully asleep after that, and so was in a half-sleeping state until I woke up a few hours later.
I'm going to start using my method of waking up, though, if I have this again, as well as trying some ways of not being frightened (of what I presume to have been an in-dream character, as I can't imagine anything else that could have scared me so much). I have a few ideas, (and I like to test things and improve techniques), so I'm not too worried, at least in the long run. (I'm going to try ignoring them, mentally conversing with them, etc.)
Experimentation, I think. Just sit down for a few minutes, in bed with the lights off, and imagine something very frightening. You won't actually be scared, but you'll be able to tell which methods would probably work to relieve potential fear when you're actually in one. For instance, one way that felt like it would help, is to imagine that as soon as you seen someone scary, rather than feeling helpless as they come closer, imagine that you have a giant magnet on, and then imagine the character being drawn towards you against their will. Even if you're scared to death, the fact that you're the one causing the coming together may very well give you a sense of power and confidence, especially if you imagine the creature getting nervous, and will certainly relieve that (potential situation) where you can't escape and they come up to you in their own leisure. So pretend that you're the one pulling them in, and keep pulling them in, almost like a super power, and hold them up against you forcefully, I think that would work. (in sleep paralysis you can't move, but you sure can imagine things and make them happen)
Good luck! I think you'll be fine, just experiment a bit and find a method that makes you feel less anxious of things.
That was quite an horrifying nightmare, right? Was it original? Mine are or plain simple or extremely original! 
Well, thanks for you awesomely2 long reply! I hope I don't have any nightmares, and about counter-nightmare weapons I think I have quite a useful one (just try to summon X real/imaginary person/character you have confidence in, won't tell you mine ).
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