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    1. #1
      Aye =] Elite's Avatar
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      Quote Originally Posted by DreamingGhost View Post
      Hello,
      I was wondering how some of you get in the habit of writing down all your dreams in the middle of the night before going back to bed or in the morning before you got up.

      I find that I become lazy when it comes to writing down my dreams, because I normally get three pages out of one dream and most nights I can remember at least two to three dreams. It becomes too stressful on my wrist to keep writing so I have to take breaks when I remember this much. I have also found that (I have tired the last few times) using a recorder to talk my dreams out is to impersonal to me and I forget most of the dream this way. So needless to say I deiced to stop using the recording method.

      Anna
      what you should do is try to write slow and steady and deal with the pain =[ It will be worth it to remember your dreams and will help you to have more LD's =].

      Elite
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    2. #2
      The avatarless one
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      I simply write down keywords to help me remember when I wake up, and I don't always do it. Writing down everything made me too awake to go back to sleep.
      http://i25.tinypic.com/4g19w9.jpg

    3. #3
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      <span class='glow_9400D3'>LucidDreamGod</span>'s Avatar
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      Yeah I write down the basic words involved, such as the people and place, a few words to describe a feeling I had, maybe a few words to sum up events.

      Then in order to get into the habbit I had to develope a disopline, I thought that if I was going to have to do homework, I might as well have to record my dreams. At least I get something out of that.



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    4. #4
      i'm super duper cereal kaeraz's Avatar
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      Discipline is Key

      You really have to school yourself to remember. I just started keeping a dream journal about a week ago and it really is hard to remember the dream you just woke up from let alone other dreams throughout the night. You get better though - trust me. Just start from what you can remember, which is generally the last dream you have before waking. After awhile, the rest will start to come to you, or if you happen to wake up in the middle of the night, you'll find that what you were dreaming about is the first thing on your mind.

      Good luck!
      "You know, I'm sick of following my dreams, man. I'm just going to ask where they're going and hook up with 'em later."
      -Mitch Hedberg

      Kaeli's Dream Journal

    5. #5
      Yay Avatar working Dizko's Avatar
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      I seriously recommend using a voice recorder instead.

      So much faster and little to no effort required.

      Just whisper your dreams into it when you wake in the night, and write them out later.

      Sorted ;p
      Free DreamJournal Program ~ Thanks Banhurt

    6. #6
      Member Robot_Butler's Avatar
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      For mid-night awakenings, I will just jot down a couple notes. If it was a remarkable dream, I will take the time to fully record it. In the morning, I start with the dream I just had, and start scribbling down everything I can remember, in the order I remember it. After I have recorded everything, I go back and try to remember the mid-night dreams using the key words and notes as reminders. I will then write down these dreams fully. I usually end up remembering and recording backwards, so the timelines of the dreams is all screwball.

      I write on the right hand page of my journal only. Not front and back of each page. I use the opposite page of my journal to re-write the dream in a way that makes sense. Piece it back together in the order it happened in as opposed to the order I remembered it in. I will also use these opposite pages for notes and sketches. I will write interpretations of the dreams, clarifications, notes about when I was lucid/ non lucid, emotions, sketches, ect.

      Doing this, I fill up a paper journal pretty fast. After I finish a journal, I will go through the whole thing and organize it, note it, categorize it, hilight it, ect. I have a pretty complicated system I've been using for about 10 years. I find that really seriously getting into the journaling keeps me motivated.

    7. #7
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      You should also...

      First off, you shouldn't have to record the whole dream in detail, unless you want to because it was a particularly remarkable dream. Just write enough so that if you read it a month or so later your mind will get enough info to recall the dream "footage" in full.

      Also, something that I haven't seen mentioned on this site very often, you should name your dreams and write a response. The name doesn't have to be creative, and the response can be as simple as "I Liked It" or "I Didn't Like It" to the detailed emotional, psychological, even physical impact the dream had on you (I prefer the more detailed response).

    8. #8
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      How long does that take you Robot Butler!?

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