Just a thought- say you're in the middle of a lucid dream and consciously decide to try to lay down and go to sleep. Will you be able to fall asleep? If so, will you dream there, too?
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Just a thought- say you're in the middle of a lucid dream and consciously decide to try to lay down and go to sleep. Will you be able to fall asleep? If so, will you dream there, too?
I did that once It was a wierd dream. :P
lots of false aweakings.
Yes, this has happened to me a couple of times. I find I go to sleep instantly and find myself in another dream. What's more, I can remember deciding to go to sleep just seconds earlier so I instantly become lucid.
Sometimes going to bed in a lucid dream will cause you to awaken. Once this happened to me, and later I heard that Stephen LaBerge wrote that going to sleep is one of the best ways to wake yourself up.
However, I find that trying to do WILD in a dream will lead me to extremely impressive "hypnogogia" and some very interesting LDs.
Some years ago I read about an LD technique called "the double fixation", in which, while in a lucid dream, you lay down in the same position as your sleeping body, close your eyes, and go to sleep in the dream. The result is that you will re-awaken in the dream with much stronger control. You can do it over and over again and greatly increase your lucidity.Quote:
Originally posted by Theresa
Just a thought- say you're in the middle of a lucid dream and consciously decide to try to lay down and go to sleep. Will you be able to fall asleep? If so, will you dream there, too?
I heard the exact same thing as "Oneiro" about the double fixation from several individuals(including some of Carlos Castaneda's books). I tried it myself and it resulted in two different ways. When I started having lucid dreams again, I tried lying down and trying to go to sleep in the lucid dream, the first couple times I just woke up. After around three tries, I thought I had just awakened, but in fact I just had a false awkening. One particular night, I had three false awakenings in a row after trying to go to sleep in the first lucid dream. When I first started lucid dreaming, false awakenings would always get the best of me, when I would finally wake up it felt like I wasted my sleep on a non-lucid dreaming when the whole time I thought I was awake, I had just falsed awakened. The whole thing about double fixation is something I believe should be practiced after keeping a consistent diary of every dream, or after the expectation of every dream is going to be a lucid dream settles in. I find the double fixation technique of increasing vividness requires great focus, and the ability of recognizing the "feeling" of a dream to notice the difference in a false awakening, and a true awakening. If you can handle spinning in a Lucid Dream to start a new dream, you most likely can handle double fixation.
-J