Okay so I'm using this app that plays a recording once it detects you're in REM to become lucid, but will I interpret the sound differently in a dream? How can I train myself to recognize it? |
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Okay so I'm using this app that plays a recording once it detects you're in REM to become lucid, but will I interpret the sound differently in a dream? How can I train myself to recognize it? |
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Perhaps by setting a prospective memory intention to recognize it, and keeping it in mind until falling asleep. For example "I hear this sound, I RC" (present tense is better). Coupling this with imagining it happening within the dream will help, too. You could also "rehearse" this during the day to reinforce the intention. |
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Last edited by Eamo24; 05-18-2016 at 03:42 PM.
No doubt due to survival hard-wiring that's been with us since we needed to be wary at all times, your hearing is pretty much online throughout most of your sleep cycle, especially during REM and late REM cycles. If you program your app to say something that you will readily recognize (i.e., your own voice, or, better yet, the voice of someone close to you saying, "This is a dream."), you should be able to hear it during your dream. However: |
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Hmm, personally I don't think so. I actually tried this exact same thing once....I used an mp3 recording (a sort of repetitive musical track) and set it to play for when I was most likely dreaming. It played during the dream and sounded just fine (like external noise that happened to run alongside the dream). Going purely by personal experience I can say it didn't sound distorted in any way. So hopefully it works out |
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Last edited by Eamo24; 05-18-2016 at 06:42 PM.
Interesting! I'm definitely going to try to use the app with my own recording over the next few nights and see what happens |
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What is the name of the app if you don't mind me asking? |
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