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In this case, the terms are interchangeable: one reality check indicates me one moment of awareness; 20 reality checks indicate many more. Please don't make this a rule of thumb though: a reality check doesn't necessarily come with the "Am I dreaming?", since even an animal can be trained to - completely unrelated to awareness - do a reality check in response to a given stimulus. By this I mean: there are cues (like your phone telling you to do a reality check) that require no awareness, and while they're not necessarily bad, they leave out the part where you're actively engaging with your surroundings. In this sense, the "best" reality checks are the ones where you find the cue yourself (it tells me that you're in a state of awareness and employing critical thinking to determine whether there's a reason to determine that you're dreaming).
Ok I get it now.
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So I should be more mindful (it makes me more present in the moment and so I am focused better on what's going on), and with my trained critical thinking (my formed tendency to doubt and question my state and oddities around me and so on) makes me read some of the unusual ques as suspicious, and since I'm inclined to consider the first possible reason of suspicions is being in a dream, bam I become lucid. Which brings me to the next point:
In a general way yes (there are more refined ways to describe critical thinking, but that's the essence for the purposes of lucidity yes). The "trained" critical thinking, I'd say it's not hugely relevant: a lot of the practical stuff it's a simple matter of pattern recognition (this is impossible: lucid; this makes no sense: lucid; I don't remember coming here: lucid), so there's no need for you to go out of your way to boost "critical thinking skills", it's just a process involved in the journey for lucidity. But yes, the better you're at recognizing these patterns (critical thinking being what helps you see many of them, especially the more refined ones, a great example once again being when dream characters assure you you're not dreaming), the more chances you give yourself.
Yet another disclaimer: awareness= finding your own cues ----NOT THE SAME-----as recognizing cues (which is a point I argued once with Sageous, but imo recognizing cues, with the help of prospective memory, is the fastest way to begin lucid dreaming induction xD I agree with him though that if you want to experience lucidity in it's truest form, then finding your own cues is better, you become much less reliant and more prone to have more lucid dreams).
Critical thinking is trained by doing proper RCs, right?
I'd say leave the "train critical thinking" behind LouaiB. Like I said in the above paragraph, the main issue with lucid induction is not interpreting the oddities with your dreams, is being aware of them. You said it yourself: doesn't matter how small the suspicion is, the moment you reach it, bang, lucidity."
I didn't mean "training critical thinking" like that. I meant it more like training on becoming more suspicious and suspect it might be a dream when I notice something weird happen. You know, train to initiate our LD criticality when something suspicious happens, instead of just passing it as "oh well, the circus must be in town".