My experiences with spinning is that it increased my lucidity and my clarity. Trying to stay lucid was like fighting to stay awake, but upon spinning, everything sharpened, like a haze lifting. |
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The only thing I ever use spinning for is to retain lucidity the instant I feel it starting to fade away. I think some people are trying to use it for things it's not so well-suited for. It can be used for transformation of the dream scenery but I think that's best to be considered a side-effect and a potential failure of the intended usage, preventing the loss of lucidity. |
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My experiences with spinning is that it increased my lucidity and my clarity. Trying to stay lucid was like fighting to stay awake, but upon spinning, everything sharpened, like a haze lifting. |
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Yeah.
Spinning relaxes your body in real life and gets rid of muscle tension that arises from lucidity. Muscle tension makes you wake up. |
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No, no. You've got it all wrong. Spinning gives you the sensation of motion. |
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I've tried spinning a couple of times when my dreams have begun to fade, and it *almost* seems like it's going to work, the world sort of seems to become a little more real. Both times I've tried though, I've woken up. Maybe by the time I start spinning, it's too late and I'm going to wake up anyways... |
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I've tried spinning probably 5 times and it has helped dream clarity and longevity every time. its about focusing on your sensory inputs. |
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