I think daydreaming about fiction, fantasy and the like work too. I imagine these things non-stop. |
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Has anyone noticed that when they read fiction before bed, they have more vivid dreams? I have a theory that since fiction forces you to visualize what is happening in the story, it would develop whatever brain area is tied to dream visualization as well. I'm going to try it soon. |
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I think daydreaming about fiction, fantasy and the like work too. I imagine these things non-stop. |
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It might be that people that don't visualize well dont have as vivid of dreams, but I don't know. I have always loved visualizing. |
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I don't know if you'd call it visualizing, but I write music so I'm always trying to hear new things in my imagination. It hasn't really helped much with hearing things in dreams though. I'll keep working on it. |
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Actually I would say the difference. When I imagine stuff too much before going to sleep it dulls my mind. The mind then somehow get used to the imagination instead of checking the feel of reality. For me better approach is to focus on reality instead of imagination to become lucid. |
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If you feel like it, please take a look at my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCof...niLAS_pFoRkqfw
If you don't, hm well have a nice day anyway ^_^
Personally, i remember dreams as i remember waking life. It's exactly the same vividness (unfortunately, mine is far below average on every modality). |
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