• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




    Results 1 to 16 of 16
    Like Tree3Likes
    • 3 Post By SinisterDezz

    Thread: I'm gonna start a dream journal, but i'm scared of lucid dreaming

    1. #1
      Member
      Join Date
      Oct 2014
      Gender
      Posts
      10
      Likes
      0

      I'm gonna start a dream journal, but i'm scared of lucid dreaming

      Hey guys, i'm just worried that once I start having lucid dreams they'll be really scary and i'll hate them. Really, I just want to have a great lucid dream that isn't scary and were I can do whatever I want, such as fly, shoot energy from my hands and just explore . So really I just need someone to convince me that I wont regret trying to have a lucid dream and thanks.

      P.S. Can someone try and explain the emotions and sights they have experienced in there first lucid dreams?

    2. #2
      Returned Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Tagger First Class Populated Wall 1000 Hall Points Veteran Second Class
      SinisterDezz's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2013
      LD Count
      Irrelevant
      Gender
      Location
      Colorado
      Posts
      757
      Likes
      779
      DJ Entries
      26
      Most lucid dreams aren't scary. I don't know where you even got the idea that they were scary. It may have come from the idea that sleep paralysis is scary, and most people associate that with lucid dreaming.

      Becoming scared is the least of your worries in lucid dreaming, or rather the least of your focuses. You are going to be spending more time with awareness techniques than thinking about emotions and being frightened within dreams.

      I can't convince you to start, but I can tell you it's worth it. It's truly life changing.

      Much of lucid dreaming is expectation. Expect it to happen, and it will happen. Vice versa.
      Last edited by SinisterDezz; 10-20-2014 at 09:10 AM.
      Hilary, DarkCoffe and EarthInferno like this.
      The bird breaks free of the egg.
      The egg is the world.
      Who would to be born must first destroy a world.

    3. #3
      Member Achievements:
      1 year registered Tagger First Class Made lots of Friends on DV Vivid Dream Journal Veteran First Class 5000 Hall Points
      Verre's Avatar
      Join Date
      Aug 2010
      LD Count
      never enough!
      Location
      west of the moon
      Posts
      338
      Likes
      689
      DJ Entries
      123
      Why would you expect lucid dreams to be scary? Are you prone to nightmares normally?

      The great thing about lucid dreaming is that even if things turn creepy, since you already know you're dreaming, you can remind yourself that you're actually perfectly safe. Normal nightmares don't give you that luxury! Also, with lucidity you can develop dream control, which will let you avoid or transform any disturbing scenario that might arise. Dreams are a product of your own mind, so they respond very promptly to the mental impulses you supply. If something threatens you in a way you don't like, turn the tables by responding with friendliness, or if you can't muster a friendly attitude, at least find something else to distract your attention. In contrast to waking life, dream characters and events don't tend to last very long once you stop paying attention to them! And if worse comes to worse, you can leave the scene entirely... just levitate right up out of there. Or as a last resort, you can always decide to wake up. So lucidity offers many more options to deal with scary situations than non-lucid dreams, where you don't have so much freedom of agency!

      If you're hesitant to attempt lucidity because you think you'll have nightmares, this suggests that you don't trust your own mind. In this case, you might begin meditating in waking life before attempting lucid dreaming in earnest. Meditation will give you insights into how your mind works and can assist you in learning how to direct your attention and focus in ways that can be very helpful for dream practice.

    4. #4
      Member
      Join Date
      Oct 2014
      Gender
      Posts
      10
      Likes
      0
      Thanks so much for both comments verre and sinisterdezz and yes i am prone to nightmares and friends at school said you can see demons and other things… but besides that I will defenitely give it a try and i hope for the best!

    5. #5
      Returned Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Tagger First Class Populated Wall 1000 Hall Points Veteran Second Class
      SinisterDezz's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2013
      LD Count
      Irrelevant
      Gender
      Location
      Colorado
      Posts
      757
      Likes
      779
      DJ Entries
      26
      Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo2001 View Post
      Thanks so much for both comments verre and sinisterdezz and yes i am prone to nightmares and friends at school said you can see demons and other things… but besides that I will defenitely give it a try and i hope for the best!
      It angers me when people associate sleep paralysis with lucid dreaming, and some how make the connection that you will see demons.

      Sleep paralysis, if you are unlucky/lucky enough to have the medical condition, can be inherently bad. Our natural response is to assume something bad is going to happen.

      It doesn't have to be bad at all!

      /rant

      As far as being prone to nightmares, that seems like a blessing.

      Take that and turn it into an advantage. Nightmares are good for lucid dreaming, to an extent.
      The bird breaks free of the egg.
      The egg is the world.
      Who would to be born must first destroy a world.

    6. #6
      Banned
      Join Date
      Mar 2014
      LD Count
      40
      Location
      Sweden
      Posts
      180
      Likes
      137
      Sleep Paralysis has nothing to do with Lucid Dreaming.

      Sleep Paralysis is the state when you become conscious before your body is awake, and this can happen to anyone at any time, although it seems more common for some people.

      Lucid Dreaming is the state when you realize that you are dreaming while you are still in the dream.
      This skill can be developed by developing a questioning attitude to your surroundings in general, like using your senses more than usual, performing reality checks (with the right mindset, not just blindly performing them but actually doing them with a purpose), and in many other ways.

      A lot of beginners seem eager to go for Wake-Induced Lucid Dreaming (WILD) right away, where you try to fall asleep and become lucid without ever losing consciousness, and personally I am a bit skeptical about that.
      It might work for some people, but to me it seems kind of like trying to learn calculus before mastering geometry and trigonometry first.
      WILD requires a fine balance between being aware and letting yourself fall asleep, and this is probably more complex than most other techniques.

      I always recommend beginners to start with more simple and less "mysterious" techniques, like Mnemonic-Induced Lucid Dreaming (MILD) for example.
      That technique is very easy to understand - it simply means that you firmly decide for yourself to recognize the dreamstate then next time you are dreaming, so you basically use prospective memory to "prepare" yourself for the dreamstate - and it also tends to have a high success rate.
      It also seems to work really great if you combine it with Wake-Back-To-Bed (WBTB).

      But if you can fall asleep easily, then it's not exactly "wrong" to try WILD at once - but it is a fairly different and unusual way to enter a dream, so you need to know what you're doing.
      Last edited by Yuusha; 10-20-2014 at 01:01 PM.

    7. #7
      Member
      Join Date
      Oct 2014
      Gender
      Posts
      10
      Likes
      0
      Wow I never thought about encountering my nightmares like that before, this could really help me thank you and Yuusha I think im gonna try the MILD technique thanks

    8. #8
      Banned
      Join Date
      Mar 2014
      LD Count
      40
      Location
      Sweden
      Posts
      180
      Likes
      137
      Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo2001 View Post
      Wow I never thought about encountering my nightmares like that before, this could really help me thank you and Yuusha I think im gonna try the MILD technique thanks
      No problem.
      Yes I can recommend the MILD technique, however you should choose the one that feels most natural for you.
      But MILD is fairly simple and a good start for most novice lucid dreamers.

      Here is a chart on the number of lucid dreams that the professional lucid dreamer Stephen LaBerge had over a three-year period.
      As you can see, he managed to increase his general LD frequency with about 400% in three years, from an average of about 4 lucid dreams in the beginning until he had lucid dreams almost every day after three years - also, notice how the bars A, B and C stand out;
      that's because he needed to have lucid dreams those months for his dissertation study, so he was extra motivated those months, and this indicates how important it is to feel motivated.
      I highly recommend that technique, and then you can of course use other techniques at the same time for even better effects.
      Last edited by Yuusha; 10-20-2014 at 09:47 PM.

    9. #9
      Member
      Join Date
      Oct 2014
      Gender
      Posts
      10
      Likes
      0
      ok thanks ill check it out

    10. #10
      Member
      Join Date
      Sep 2014
      LD Count
      10 ish
      Gender
      Location
      USA
      Posts
      122
      Likes
      41
      DJ Entries
      40
      There are tons of other methods that don't induce SP. As for the Dream itself, what ever happens you have complete controll of.

    11. #11
      Returned Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Made lots of Friends on DV Referrer Bronze Tagger First Class Populated Wall 1000 Hall Points Veteran Second Class
      SinisterDezz's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2013
      LD Count
      Irrelevant
      Gender
      Location
      Colorado
      Posts
      757
      Likes
      779
      DJ Entries
      26
      Quote Originally Posted by Yuusha View Post
      Sleep Paralysis has nothing to do with Lucid Dreaming.

      Sleep Paralysis is the state when you become conscious before your body is awake, and this can happen to anyone at any time, although it seems more common for some people.

      Lucid Dreaming is the state when you realize that you are dreaming while you are still in the dream.
      This skill can be developed by developing a questioning attitude to your surroundings in general, like using your senses more than usual, performing reality checks (with the right mindset, not just blindly performing them but actually doing them with a purpose), and in many other ways.

      A lot of beginners seem eager to go for Wake-Induced Lucid Dreaming (WILD) right away, where you try to fall asleep and become lucid without ever losing consciousness, and personally I am a bit skeptical about that.
      It might work for some people, but to me it seems kind of like trying to learn calculus before mastering geometry and trigonometry first.
      WILD requires a fine balance between being aware and letting yourself fall asleep, and this is probably more complex than most other techniques.

      I always recommend beginners to start with more simple and less "mysterious" techniques, like Mnemonic-Induced Lucid Dreaming (MILD) for example.
      That technique is very easy to understand - it simply means that you firmly decide for yourself to recognize the dreamstate then next time you are dreaming, so you basically use prospective memory to "prepare" yourself for the dreamstate - and it also tends to have a high success rate.
      It also seems to work really great if you combine it with Wake-Back-To-Bed (WBTB).

      But if you can fall asleep easily, then it's not exactly "wrong" to try WILD at once - but it is a fairly different and unusual way to enter a dream, so you need to know what you're doing.
      Sleep paralysis is actually a sleeping disorder.

      REM atonia is the correct name for this.
      The bird breaks free of the egg.
      The egg is the world.
      Who would to be born must first destroy a world.

    12. #12
      Banned
      Join Date
      Mar 2014
      LD Count
      40
      Location
      Sweden
      Posts
      180
      Likes
      137
      Quote Originally Posted by SinisterDezz View Post
      Sleep paralysis is actually a sleeping disorder.

      REM atonia is the correct name for this.
      That's right, that's what I meant.
      My point was that a lot of people seem to talk about normal REM atonia when they use the term Sleep Paralysis, especially novice lucid dreamers.

      But yeah, REM atonia it is.

    13. #13
      Member Achievements:
      Populated Wall Referrer Bronze Tagger First Class Made lots of Friends on DV Huge Dream Journal Stickie King 25000 Hall Points Veteran First Class

      Join Date
      Apr 2010
      LD Count
      Gender
      Location
      The Astral Realm
      Posts
      2,710
      Likes
      2687
      DJ Entries
      759
      1- Lucid Dreaming is awesome. I naturally experience LDing. You will know you are dreaming, hence you know is not real.
      2- Sleep paralysis is awesome. Body asleep, mind awake. Simple formula. Nothing else. You can archive spiritual experiences from here... but nothing negative
      3- Demons do not exist. Just a word for religion to control people through fear. Is all energy in the end
      4- Visualizing a white bubble around you is enough to fill you up with positive energy. You raise your energetic vibes and so, bad energy -so called demons- can't affect you


      Sooooooooooooooo....

      Last edited by PercyLucid; 10-22-2014 at 12:16 PM.
      Click the door... and welcome to my dream world!

      Lucid Dreaming: Natural - Lucid Dreamer since I was a kid.
      Astral Projection ~ Farthest reached: The Pleiades Star System.

      Official Dreamviews Toty 7 Lucid Tasks Challenges

    14. #14
      Member Achievements:
      Created Dream Journal Tagger First Class 1000 Hall Points Referrer Bronze Veteran Second Class
      EamonWill's Avatar
      Join Date
      Oct 2014
      LD Count
      ~22
      Gender
      Location
      Oregon
      Posts
      85
      Likes
      81
      DJ Entries
      49
      First, you really need to relax and stay completely positive if you want good dreams, lucid or not. Dreams are based on our thoughts and if our thoughts are negative our dreams will be too.
      That being said, if you have nightmares then lucid dreaming is your best way to overcome them. To successfully end your nightmare and almost assuredly never encounter it again, you should show the nightmare figure or dream itself love. This may sound weird but it works. You are putting out positive energy, so you will get positive energy back. The best part is (like someone else pointed out) you will know that it's a dream so you don't have to be scared.
      I'll give you an example because this happened last night. I had a non-lucid dream about being attacked. Just as I lunged to stab my attacker I stopped and jumped back and said, "Wait, I'm dreaming," and became lucid. The dream character attacking me actually did "wait." We stared at each other for a while during which time I did a RC and confirmed it was a dream. Then I said, "This is a dream, which means you are a part of me, so why are you doing this?" The DC then started to ramble a bit. The point is, I stopped the nightmare and showed my nightmare figure (the attacker) love (by not attacking him and by saying he is a part of me) and that was it. No more nightmare!

    15. #15
      My lucid comeback! LDman's Avatar
      Join Date
      May 2014
      LD Count
      70
      Gender
      Location
      Belgium, Antwerp
      Posts
      215
      Likes
      156
      DJ Entries
      107
      Until now all the LDs I've had were very enjoyable, some were more fun than others but this was mainly because of a lack of vividness and not what actually happened in them.
      Talking about scary stuff in LDs.. there really isn't that much scary stuff that happens in LDs, unsettling at most. Let me give you an example of the scariest experience I've had within an LD as of now: After I became lucid in my sister's bedroom I ran downstairs and entered the toilet to use it as a teleportation-device. (I forgot where I wanted to go.) When I noticed I couldn't lock the door I got a weird eerie feeling that I was very exposed to danger, I used my own force to keep the door closed. I started hearing demonic voices in the hall just outside the toilet and actually got a bit scared at this point that my wonderfull dream would turn into a living nightmare. I decided to sing my favorite song at the time as loud as I could and after some time the music actually began playing on it's own overpowering the demons I heared. It gave me enough courage to exit the toilet and enjoy the rest of the dream.
      If you read this do a reality check, you will thank me later...

    16. #16
      Member Leol's Avatar
      Join Date
      May 2014
      LD Count
      35~ ?
      Gender
      Posts
      39
      Likes
      12
      Mostly of my lucid dream were in apocalyptic world, but I tell you: things only get worse if YOU THINK IT WILL. Example: I had a lucid dream and my family was dead in my front and "ghosts" begun to come out of them to seek me, I stopped serious and thought "this is just a dream", at the same time it all vanished and I was alone in a white space.

      You have to believe in yourself and then things will go smoothly ( at least for me it goes ).

    Similar Threads

    1. HELP!! lucid dreaming dilemma + scared to lucid dream?!? :C
      By xXxArtistxXx in forum General Lucid Discussion
      Replies: 8
      Last Post: 05-18-2013, 05:31 PM
    2. Scared to start!
      By mando00021000 in forum Introduction Zone
      Replies: 5
      Last Post: 11-07-2009, 05:16 AM
    3. Forever's Gonna Start Tonight
      By Bolero in forum Introduction Zone
      Replies: 14
      Last Post: 06-08-2009, 04:44 AM
    4. Gonna Start Dreaming Again
      By Reality_is_a_Dream in forum General Lucid Discussion
      Replies: 6
      Last Post: 10-15-2008, 04:26 AM
    5. ever been scared your never gonna wake up?
      By mylucidworld in forum Lucid Experiences
      Replies: 27
      Last Post: 02-25-2008, 09:30 PM

    Tags for this Thread

    Bookmarks

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •