There has already been a thread on this but it didn't provide enough informaiton: |
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There has already been a thread on this but it didn't provide enough informaiton: |
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Birds of the night..
Well apparently there are yogis and such that stay aware during all stages of sleep, but it's obviously not easy and would probably require many years of skilful meditation. |
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Last edited by Memm; 11-16-2014 at 09:42 AM.
As far as my understanding of WILD goes, you'd just be lying there until you eventually do fall asleep from sheer tiredness. The idea of WILD is that you pass directly into REM sleep: this is accomplished by waking up around 6 hours into sleep and then attempting it, or during an afternoon nap. I'm not totally discounting the possibility that it might be possible, but it's barely documented and hardly worth it. |
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I guess I could do something similar to this, instead of leaving my real body and entering a dream after a WILD I could just stay there, laying still. |
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If you read this do a reality check, you will thank me later...
Well I understand that you would just be lying there, but what is the difference between light/early sleep stages and WILD? Does it really matter what is going on in your head, as long as you are still? I know from personal experience that if I do WILD during the day (I almost never experience REM during the day so I don't go into a lucid dream) even for 30 minutes I wake up feeling rejuvenated. It is like taking a short nap, but without being confused and bewildered afterwards. That is what makes me think that doing WILD during a light sleep stage is the same as doing light sleep. |
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Birds of the night..
The answer to your question, I believe, is yes. |
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It seems to me like this could be a very reliable way to have a lucid dream. It would really just be only two components, WILDing skill, and patience. A lot of patience... |
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Birds of the night..
^^ A lot of patience. |
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I did it week ago. I wrote even a thread about conscious sleep. So basically its really boring. The dreaming is very small part of the sleep and you experinece constantly these weird sensations that makes you too awake and make you believe your about to dream even though you were hour away. Its too boring but i had crazy lucid dreams and it was really interesting experience. Most of the time when i attempt this i fall asleep. I experimented whole month with this. Usually you end up staying aware for 2 hours and when transinsion to dream happen you already have lost consciousness because staying aware becomes harder the closer you get to rem stage. Im still practising consciouss sleep but its really hard but deffinetly possible. |
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Last edited by Seltiez; 11-17-2014 at 03:03 AM.
I tried to WILD right when I went bed last night and I experienced sleep paralysis and some crazy body sensations and hypnagogia but I couldn't make it into a dream. I stayed in the same state for about an hour. Next time I'll just wake up 4 or 5 hours after I go to bed to WILD. Its a waste of time to do it right when you go to sleep. |
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Yeah its waste of time unless your yogi. They are used to meditare hours a day thats why they can easily be conscious entire sleep. I tried to do this again yesterday yesterday except i put alarm 2 hours ahead and fell asleep normally. Then i jus tried to stay aware i didnt manage fully stay aware but i had 1 lucid dream and 4 very vivid dreams which were really easy to remeber. |
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^^ That's a good idea, Avian. Also a good idea is giving yourself some time to learn to do this, with many failed attempts in the process. You do not have to be a dream yogi to hold on to your self-awareness all night, but you do have to invest some time in order to get your head in the right place to defy the natural order of sleep all night, and also to be open to the interesting, exciting, even occasionally transcendental experiences that can be had during that "boring" time between REM periods. |
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I communicate badly in writing. My point was thats its boring between the stages of sleep before dream starts and it is very boring for me to start consciouss sleep at night because it takes time to fall asleep and i wouldnt want go trough that every night its much better wake later at night and then stay consciouss then. I find it mentally excausting thats why i said its waste of time and refferred to yogi because of their patience. I rather be unsciounses at start of sleep because it takes time for me to fall to dream. I find it much easier to have to stay consciouss and still after you have gone trough first sleep cycle because i feel relaxed and dont get bored but thanks for correcting me. I dont want to discourage anybody. |
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Last edited by Seltiez; 11-17-2014 at 11:13 PM.
This is definitely easier said than done. I tried it and after what I think was about 30 minutes I fell asleep. I suppose it would be better to first do normal WILD and become good at sivason's awareness exercises. |
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Birds of the night..
I think this thread raises a very common misconception that WILD is 'passing straight into REM' when, I would suggest, WILD will always involve NREM stages - what differs is how long you will spend in NREM, and whether you will pass through stage 3/delta/deep sleep (depending on how many hours of prior sleep you clocked before your attempt). |
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My Lucid Dreaming Articles/Tutorials:
Mindfulness - An Alternative Approach to ADA
Intent in Lucid Dreaming; Break that Dry-Spell, Escape the Technique Rut
Always, no sometimes think it's me,
But you know I know when it's a dream
I think I know I mean a yes
But it's all wrong
That is I think I disagree
-John Lennon
I dont think there is much difference with people entering rem stage. Its not easy its really hard. When i say hard it means it requires effort. Staying conscious trough sleep requires a lot of patience. I dont have that good wilding skills even. Its all about effort patience and meditative mindset. It feels really long until you realize you are in a dream. Also the fact that you experience very weird sensations and very vivid visual images and multiple other things doesnt help it all because it doesnt mean that your close to dreaming. I felt like i went trough 5 times trough this stage which icould be entering nrem stage. I tried this all most a month until i suceeded to stay fully consciouss entire night. I still wasnt aware of everything. I can say for fact that this experimenting has helped me wild with much less effort. I this consciouss sleep can be suceeded only trough failure. Maybe some suceed in it easier but o can say it wasnt easy for me. Keep at it and i think you suceed. Im gonna keep at it since i believe this will lead me to have a lot more of lucid dreams since i create habit of staying aware in sleep. I have noticed my dream become much more vivid an easy to remeber. I dont want anybody to try this because of mesince i cant help but worry what this would do people with insomnia. |
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Last edited by Seltiez; 11-18-2014 at 04:58 PM.
So I woke up this morning thinking about this thread, God help me. |
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Well I am looking for the all-night awareness experience, but I am going to take it slowly instead. That is too big of a step for me. As for your comment about LDing before the term WILD was coined, that kind of sparked my interest. I know a good amount about how monks have used lucid dreams and current events such as new research and breakthroughs about dreaming, but I don't know much about recent history. Could you explain how lucid dreaming became so popular and widely known in the West, and when (I have always assumed it came with the explosion of "Eastern" practices in America, but I don't really know)? |
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Birds of the night..
I would say that LD'ing has not become popular or widely known in the West (or the East, for that matter), and that, in the Grand Scheme of Things, it's about as popular and practiced as it was when I was a kid back in the 1970's. |
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You'd think, but his attempts take an hour or more. |
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My Lucid Dreaming Articles/Tutorials:
Mindfulness - An Alternative Approach to ADA
Intent in Lucid Dreaming; Break that Dry-Spell, Escape the Technique Rut
Always, no sometimes think it's me,
But you know I know when it's a dream
I think I know I mean a yes
But it's all wrong
That is I think I disagree
-John Lennon
Two nights ago after a WBTB I did my WILD and succeeded in archieving a near LD (5-10 seconds), when I'm just about to go from awake to dream my whole head becomes fuzzy and I loose all feeling in my body. My question is, is this consciously falling asleep or entering REM? |
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If you read this do a reality check, you will thank me later...
If you had a dream that was a wild. If not failed wild. Falling to dream consciously is wild which means you can only wild when you enter from waking stage to rem concsiously. Conscious sleep is sleeping consciously. Being aware of whole process of sleep and dream. We dont dream the whole process of sleep its small part of it. I dont reconize which is nrem stage since trough out the sleep you exprience weird sensations which include you going to nrem sleep. Little before i enter a dream i lose sense of my body where i enter this nothingness where the dream start forming itself which probaply is the rem stage. Either the nothingness is deepest stage in nrem or the really weird sensations. Trough out the sleeping i experienced very vivid imaginary, hear voices, felt disorientation of my body, felt my self outside of my body, dream scenes, weird changes in mindset and every other things could be nrem. I do notice these changes in these sensations which could be entering different stage of nrem but i always felt like 5 times the sensations changing and i dont think there are that many nrem stages. There happens so much of these sensations thats its impossible without some brainwave monitor to tell which is nrem. |
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Last edited by Seltiez; 11-18-2014 at 11:25 PM.
Ugh, the voices... |
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If you read this do a reality check, you will thank me later...
Those are fun. |
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Last edited by Seltiez; 11-19-2014 at 12:58 AM.
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