I have come to the conclusion that lucid dreaming is what I am experiencing. Does anyone know how to stop it? I usually experience this lucid dreaming followed by sleep paralysis with no lapse in consciousness between dream state and waking up. |
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I have come to the conclusion that lucid dreaming is what I am experiencing. Does anyone know how to stop it? I usually experience this lucid dreaming followed by sleep paralysis with no lapse in consciousness between dream state and waking up. |
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Hello. I wish to know why you don't like being aware when you are in a world where anything is possible. I am not trying to sound sarcastic, it is just a hobby of mine that I spend a lot of time on because it is more fun than any video game I have found, and it is hard for me to see why people don't like it. Also I can help if you say exactly what you don't like about it. |
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I just don't like how things seem so real, plus I don't like the transition from dream state to waking up. This usually accompanies strong body vibrations and sleep paralysis which I don't like. I just want to be able to go to bed at 10pm and wake up at 6am, like every other normal person. |
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You don't like how things are so real? Why not? |
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Lucid dreaming and sleep paralysis are not signs of a mental issue. It really would be better if you just learned to live with it. Lucid dreaming and sleep paralysis aren't harmful, but medication could have some negative effects. If the thing you don't like about the lucid dreaming part is the vividness, I bet you could use your dream control to bring it down to a reasonable level. With sleep paralysis, I'd say the best solution is to learn that it's nothing to be feared. |
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Previously known as Lucidis.
Well I am not really scared of the paralysis, its just that it seems awkward. It almost seems like my soul is reconnecting to my body. I don't know why my soul would reconnect to my body if my soul is in my body to begin with during the sleep process. It was just much better in years past when I didn't have to deal with any of this. |
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Everybody dreams every night, more than once. The only different between you and people who don't lucid dream is that when in a dream, you know that you are dreaming. Everybody else thinks it's a reality, until they wake up. And some believe, that our dream body/astral body/part of the soul leave our body every night to go to the dream/astral world to experience these adventures, we call dreams. |
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Thank you for the reply Gab. I am actually 29 years old and all this started when I was about 22. At first things started out as seeing random images before sleep but then things just have progressed from there. Its like now if I am dreaming I remember the dream but heres the twist and maybe this is what happens during lucid dreams. Once I realize I am in a dream things suddenly become 10 times more vivid I see things change right before my very eyes once I realize that its just a dream. Its like I am in this physical world only things are 10 times more vivid what they are here on Earth. Its crazy |
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Exactly, more vivid and detailed than life itself. Or should I say waking life. |
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I think this is what happened. When you started seeing first swirls, you started paying more and more attention to them, then you were able to see images and then dreams forming. Each time you were able to keep your mind awake little longer, while your body was falling asleep. |
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I bet if you read up on lucid dreaming you might have a change of heart. Its a gift you have. Takes alot of work to get to where you are for everyone else. The sleep paralysis too. Alot of people strive to reach both of these. |
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Even tho Lucid dreaming is one of the most amazing things one can get to expirience, I can completely understand that it is sometimes unwanted, because I have been in a similar situation. What I did to "stop it" was convince my mind that as long as I am wearing a ring on my finger I will be unable to be aware in dreams and I will never remember having any dreams at all. It worked for me and it gave me what I wanted at the time, many nights of just blank unaware sleep. But Lucid dreaming is something one should not avoid, but instead harness and turn into something that is enjoyable for him/her. I suggest that you take this gift you have and try to explore it, learn more of it, eliminate sp or perhaps learn to understand it better and see it with different eyes and I am sure you would actually enjoy lucid dreaming and feel blessed that you naturally developed an ability many try to develop for years. Gab gave a nice thread link where people give suggestions of what can you do in an LD that you should defenatly check out and try out some ideas or maybe get inspired to think up your own. |
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INB4 Illegal Advice... |
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Rawr!
Man, I'd be happy if I could LD every night. I don't know why anyone would want to give that up. I'd accept SP, too, if that was the only negative thing attached to LDing every night. |
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I'll never understand why people would ever give up on lucid dreaming when they have success... |
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You....You've got what many people would consider a gift lol. Don't waste it, at least experiment with it. So many people would give up hours to be able to not go back to a normal dream and sustain lucidity. Myself included lol. As with the other replies it's all down to you to learn to control what you want from the LDs and what you don't. My advice for SP has already been given but there's really nothing for it other than learning to cope with it and perhaps experimenting to minimize it; further research could help you there. |
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