Hello, |
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Hello, |
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Something that helps is to stay aware of the dream itself instead of being too consumed by my thoughts or what i want to do next. Though this is merely my personal tip from my own experience, maybe it can help. |
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I noticed that more engaged and grounded I am within the dream the more stable the dream will stay and last much longer. Our sleep stage and mindset at the time matters too. Like if you were close to end of REM cycle when you become lucid, it will be short. Anyway, If there are thoughts like "it will end soon" in back of our mind then it surely will at some point. You are a co-creator. All you can do other than getting into right mind state is stabilization and engaging senses. In one of my longest dream there was a constant scent of flowers. It helped me stay aware and keep the dream stable. I sometimes go to the nearest washbasin in a dream and wet my hands as the sensation can help ground me better. Regardless of all the grounding and intention, I have had very short lucids too even after becoming somewhat initiated. ^^' |
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edit: This was meant to reply to lucidbunnie: |
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Last edited by ZAD; 08-30-2018 at 05:53 PM. Reason: I'm bad at DV :|
Dreaming Goals:
Cultivate a successful dream incubation technique
Explore high level lucids with supplements
Tune up my daily brain chemistry naturally
Go information hunting in my dreams and bring back music/art/ideas into my waking life
LD Frequency:
About 8 per month
I have the same problem |
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I'm hardly an expert, but the limited success I've had with this is when you sort of fool yourself into not noticing you are lucid, if that makes sense. It's a balance where if you are not very aware you may need to confirm you are lucid with RCs, but if you are a bit too aware you have to sort of go back a bit into almost non-lucid again. If you are too much aware of your situation, and not immersed in the dream, you will wake, at least that's my finding. I'm still not very good at it, so do have the same problem. I've been working on trying to come to being lucid slowly from the non-lucid side, trying to make each non-lucid progressively more and more vivid and real. If ever I get that "eureka!" moment I tend to wake quite quickly, so I'm trying to make very vivid non-lucids as matter-of-fact as possible to eventually drift into lucidity gently so as not to startle myself out. |
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This might be a rather extreme way of doing things, but something I found to work quite well for me was to induce a feeling of pain while lucid. This would range from scraping my hands across a rough floor to punching walls and other hard objects. These feelings could be quite intense at times and would force me to focus on the senses I was perceiving in the dream world. |
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Sounds like a good problem to have LJ! Just curious -- how long have you been at it? And what was the longest lucid you've had? |
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Dreaming Goals:
Cultivate a successful dream incubation technique
Explore high level lucids with supplements
Tune up my daily brain chemistry naturally
Go information hunting in my dreams and bring back music/art/ideas into my waking life
LD Frequency:
About 8 per month
Hmm, let's see... Well I think I started the whole thing when I was 15 and must have continued going until around 19 or 20. It was quite a while. Due to my waking life becoming too busy I stopped and have since tried to get back into it but found it hard to consistently record my dreams and in the end gave up. That was a few years ago. I've recently started my journal again and so far so good... But no lucid yet. |
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Out of interest, what kind of LDs were you guys having when they were either short or long? DILDs, WILDs, etc... |
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Singled out from some of my favourite quotes from Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: "Risks of [Planet] flowering: considerable. But rewards of godhood: who can measure? - Usurper Judaa'Maar: Courage: to question."
I think the majority of my lucids came from DEILD. I got pretty good at becoming aware of when I'd just woken up. A lot of them were pretty short but I'd consistently chain them so I'd have 2 or 3 lucids in one cycle. |
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