• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




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    1. #1
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      I hate dream journals

      i have been in a dryspell for almost 3 weeks now. I have been looking for an answer to why i am in one but i just cant find one. When i went to read The Lucid Dreaming Manual i encountered a section in the book where it said that lack of use of Dream Journals usually ends up in no LDs! well it has been about five days since my last entry but i have great recall, i always have (i naturally have good dream recall) but im worried i wont have any LDs until i start writing things down every day again. To honest i hate writing things down in my journal, i mean i love recalling my dreams in the morning and meditating on them befor school or whatever but i cant write them down cuz i just have no friggin time! what should i do?????
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    2. #2
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      Do you have a laptop that you can quickly type things into? Someone here also talked about using a voice recorder. I do understand though.. sometimes I'm just too lazy to sit there and write or I don't have time.

    3. #3
      !DIREKTOR! Adam's Avatar
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      I don't think not recording dreams in a journal can be 100% attributed to you not having LDs. I don't have a journal and have a couple of LDs a week... I think, you thinking it is might have an effect though..

    4. #4
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      yeah i 've thought that too. I just dont know man, i am a noob ya know? i dont know anything i have too many questions about LDs but if a Journal is the only thing holding me back then WHY????!!!! i just dont know wether to keep spending my time writing and being late for things or just wait for summer to have time. i just dont know what to do
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    5. #5
      dsr
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      SEBSTER, a dream journal helps for certain things, predominately improving dream recall and recognizing dream signs in order to increase your frequency of DILDs, but it is not strictly necessary. Your health comes before recreation, so I don't recommend practicing aspects of lucid dreaming that interfere with your sleep (and ultimately your concentration during the day). If your dream recall is naturally good, a dream journal doesn't seem necessary. Besides, the fifteen minutes or so that you would spend filling in your dream journal might be better spent sleeping. The longer you sleep, the greater the chance for a lucid dream ...

      Quote Originally Posted by AdamA View Post
      you thinking it is might have an effect though..
      So true. The placebo effect really applies to lucid dreaming. If you think you won't have an LD, it will most likely be a self-fulfilling prophesy.

    6. #6
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      I say try and start writing in any way. If you have time to make this thread, complaining about dream-journals, then you also have time to write in your dream-journal. Try and start an online version. It feels a bit more rewarding, when other people are reading it

      We have a dream-journal subforum, if you haven't noticed hehe.

      edit: DSR, I disagree. Without all (or as many as possible) dreams written down, it's difficult to find a dreamsign, since you often forget the small details after a few days, unless you write it down. Everytime you write a dream into your dream-journal, you get to know your dreams better, and the better you can recognize them, while deaming, the more lucid-dreams you get.
      Last edited by Marvo; 05-28-2007 at 08:18 PM.

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      Lost count of how many lucid dreams I've had
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    7. #7
      dsr
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      Marvo, I don't believe that that extra sleep would really raise his frequency of LDs, but the dream journal is detrimental to his health if he doesn't get enough sleep (and it is evident that he does not because he feels exhausted when he wakes up to record his dreams). Besides, even if you value recreation over health, he would only be getting one benefit of the dream journal -- help with recognizing dream signs -- since his dream recall is naturally good. Would recognizing his dream signs cause his frequency of DILDs to increase? Probably. However, if the journal conflicts with his sleep requirements, SEBSTER has plenty of other options. He could just allow himself to have DILDs when they occur (maybe once a week), or he could master one of the more difficult induction techniques, such as WBTB+MILD or WILD. Granted, he would have to go to bed earlier to make up for the loss of sleep in either case, but WILDs are much more rewarding than DILDs. With all that being said, if SEBSTER uses daily critical state testing as his means to induce LDs, I agree that a dream journal would be beneficial. Perhaps, the solution for him is just to go to bed a half hour earlier.

    8. #8
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      well i have been thinking about getting off the journal until summer, i mean its not that i dont like to write down for 15 minutes its just that waking up and thinking "oh man i gotta write this shit down" is kinda hard to get used to. I love sacrifice for something i want but that whole early journal thing is kinda bothering school times and stuff.....
      I mean haven't you guys ever thought of it this way?
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    9. #9
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      No one says that you have to write a "book" about the dreams you had in your journal. For me, if I'm too tired (or lazy), simply writing down the main topic/subject, and a word or two or a feeling is enough for me to recall a dream.

      .

    10. #10
      dsr
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      Yeah. Besides, SEBSTER said that he doesn't even have trouble with dream recollection. Therefore, the only real purpose of the dream journal for him is to help him recognize dream signs, but he has yet to state what induction techniques he uses, so I can't help him with his decision to keep or not to keep a journal any more than I have in my last two posts.

    11. #11
      Member thedogsmeow's Avatar
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      I for one don't keep a dream journal, and have been lucid dreaming for years. I used to keep a dream journal when I started getting into dreaming, but it wasn't to help with lucids- I just found it interesting to write them down and analyze them.

    12. #12
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      yeah, i write down my most craziest and unimaginable dreams. like when i dreamt i was in pulp fiction (that was trippy) i didnt even have to write it down to remember it but i did anyways. I dont know i think that the person who figured that writing a journal about dreams was the best thing to do had way too much time on his hands
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    13. #13
      Veteran member CrazyInSane's Avatar
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      Yeah dream journals really f***ing suck haha... every time I wake up and remember a good dream I'm just too lazy to write it down or think it's too "incomplete" to actually be worth writing or recording, and it's just so annoying the whole lot of it.
      Stay lucid, stay WILD!

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    14. #14
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      i totally agree
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    15. #15
      Member cyzzl's Avatar
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      I started a dream journal so organized and i highlighted a bunch of stuff, but after a while the novelty wore off and now I just write my lucids in the dream journal. every now and then I will write something I feel is kind of interesting though. I have been just trying to recall as many dreams as I can when I wake up, and I think doing that is just as good as keeping a dream journal. I feel the point of the DJ is to increase recall, and just practicing recall is fine even if you dont write every damn thing down
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      dreamsex

    16. #16
      Bending Unit tiddlywink101's Avatar
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      Keeping a dream jounal without a doubt increases your recall, and this is essential for lucid dreaming so just jot the odd keypoint down in a notebook and expand upon it on the computer
      Ninjas killed my family, need money for kung-fu lessons

    17. #17
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      Yeah, I don't write in the morning. I eventually write 2 or 3 words on a paper and go to school. When I get home, I start writing in my real dream-journal.

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    18. #18
      fantasy addict EmilySian's Avatar
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      I know what you mean, I have only been keeping a dream journal for a little while, but its still a real test of my willpower to force myself to write a few things down, because I just want to go back to to sleep. What I do is just write down a few key words from my dreams, and then later on I can look at the words, and my memory would be jogged enough to write them down in more detail in my online dream journal. Always helps when you havent got much time in the morning.....


      http://www.dreamviews.com/community/...ad.php?t=37077
      My dream journal

    19. #19
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      hmm thats a good strategy!
      man you guys are really helpin out!
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

    20. #20
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      Get a microphone for your computer and relay a descrption of your dreams into it. It's easier, faster, and perhaps creates more of a "visual" than writing.

    21. #21
      per aspera ad astra TommyDubbin's Avatar
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      The microphone/voice recorder idea is more convenient, but it may not be for everyone. My mp3 player has a little mic and I tried doing that but gave up on it after the first time. I find there is a huge difference between your internal voice, and your recorded voice as heard during playback...and that internal voice that comes with writing and reading in a journal can be pretty important in helping to visualize everything and mull over it all.

      So I've just gone back to a written journal.

      To each his/her own.
      "Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere."
      -Carl Sagan [1934-1996]

    22. #22
      Member SEBSTER's Avatar
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      WELL IM OPENING A NEW THREAD ABOUT MY NEW LD (yes!!!!!!!) i have seriously learned that if you're a natural recaller DJs might not be much necessary! well just read the new one it will be called Great News Natural Recallers!
      "..it's bad anough that you sell your waking life for minimum wage but no they get your dreams for free."

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