Thanks for the replies everyone! I was just curious to see if meditation did take the place of all day practice because if it did, I would have wondered why we would do it all day instead. I should have known better though, because nothing comes easy right? 
 Originally Posted by Sageous
You might be asking the wrong question, Sharpshoey.
As others have already said above, and said well, meditation is a tool for self-awareness, so you will likely find yourself including meditation as a facet of your practice to gain and hold self-awareness. Also, I would suggest that you consider Samatha or Vipassana meditation, as their focus seems to mix well with lucid dreaming.
But the real question you might need to ask is: "What is self-awareness, and how do I bring it into my life?"
Though you were likely just phrasing it this way in your OP, you do not "Do" self-awareness. It is not a technique, but a state of mind -- perhaps even a state of being. The techniques that you actually do, like for instance meditation, are meant to open the door to your self-awareness, to invite it into your daily life more easily.
Self-awareness is, after all, simply a state of mind wherein you remember that you are here, that you have an effect on everything around you, and everything around you has an effect on you. And yes, if you can maintain that state of mind regularly, especially during dreams, lucidity will be much easier to achieve -- it might even be unavoidable... not to mention that powerful self-awareness will also make your LD's easier to navigate, prolong, and understand. In other words, a state of self-awareness is where you want to be, and not a thing you do.
I think I'm generally repeating what's already been said, but I just wanted to make it clear that self-awareness is not a technique.
I guess I haven't really thought of self-awareness like that before. I've been doing it as a technique where I've just been paying attention to what I was doing and what was happening in the moment. I knew what the state of mind for self-awareness is, but that was really never at the forefront of my mind. I also never really thought that self-awareness wasn't a technique. Now that you explain it though, it makes since that it isn't.
So what you're saying is, to just realize that I have an effect on everything, and it has an effect on me and that I'm here right now? Are you saying that is all I need to do...just have that state of mind? Or is paying attention like I'm doing go with that as well?
Also, from what it sounds like, meditation is supposed to help you grasp the Self-Awareness and then help you keep it for the rest of the day. So I should be doing it in the morning? And Vipassana Meditation sounds a lot like Samatha meditation from what I've looked up on Google. Is there a big difference between the 2?
(Sorry for all the questions)
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