Was it a dream?
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I don't think this is true. I have memories that give me pretty vivid feelings. I can remember how it felt to be there for some of them.
A person can dwell on a memory until it consumes their lives. This can happen to trauma victims, as well as offenders. For offenders though, this causes them to want to relive the act eventually. Afterward, they relive the memory over and over, taking satisfaction in it every time.
It was a joke I think:D
You nailed it, haha :cackle: .Quote:
Originally Posted by Miguelinileugim
I tend to gain and lose interest over a period of time. I will generally get into it for around a month or two, then gradually lose interest and stop putting forth any effort. Then I will pick it back up again later on.
Like, I just got interested again in this yesterday, after like a year of not doing it. I hope to stick with it this time. We will see.
I really do not understand it. I've tried to convince two of my friends to LD. But they have showed no interest in it. One even compared it the mass genocide... -_-
My parents love lucid dreaming and actually introduced me to the concept, because my mom's side of the family is pretty much all natural lucid dreamers. They don't come as easily to me, but most of my friends think of it as silly new age stuff or are just not interested. One said that they like their dreams the way they are. Most of them don't even understand the depth of knowledge you can gain from the experience about your reality and perception alone, not to talk about the creative and self exploring benefits of the practice.
I told my brother about it, and he thought it was interesting and said he wouldn't mind having one, but when I explained to him the process and the amount of work required to do such a thing he almost immediately lost interest. Some people just probably won't think its worth the amount of effort required, or will just get scared of the idea.
I realized this isn't just a hobby I can talk about with anyone, imagine someone asks you, "What do you like to do?" and you respond with, "Live in my dreams."
lucid dreaming was and most likely still is looked at as new age
Because then it'd be too mainstream :shadewink: