wow i had atleast 12 dreams last night and they were all very clear and interesting.. i think my dream recall is getting alot better =)
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wow i had atleast 12 dreams last night and they were all very clear and interesting.. i think my dream recall is getting alot better =)
Lucky. Have you been using a dream journal?
Haha, thats insane. Good Job :) What were they?
WOW, grats, my record for one night is 9 dreams
How do you decide when the last dream ended and the next one started?
Dreaming is kind of continuous... I personally can't tell where the ends\starts are, only if there's a gap in the memory and there was a change of environment, then it seems that there are two different dreams. But the plot is kind of a continuation of the same or an off-shoot, so it's hard to say!
Damn, congrats deepsleep! I'll say your recall is improving. I've gotta get my numbers back up that high! :tongue:
I have no trouble doing this. For me it's almost exactly like remembering specific books in a series. You know they all happened in an order, and you can just remember and distinguish which series of events occurred with which other ones, and even if you can't remember how they started (usually it's not hard for me to remember how a dream ends), you have a notion of whether or not it was the continuation of another dream memory, or if it was another dream altoghether. I'd say that yea, that means you could be misinterpreting a lot of your dreams as multiples, except that sometimes a memory from the beginning of the dream or the end will come to me later in the day, and I'll be able to reconcile the memories with the help of a dream journal and figure out how many I am actually able to remember.
Plus if you wake up after each, run through it in your mind, and go back to sleep it's pretty easy to keep them segregated.
So do you wake up between every dream and go through them every time you wake up, or do remember more than one at the same time?
Well that's what DEILD'ing is all about isn't it?
Hm, I don't have a notion, every time I'm remembering a dream it's like it's the only one continuous dream.
But I'd like to read some description of a few dreams without gaps of memory in-between, to see how you separate them. You have a dream diary online with such a description maybe?
That's the problem! If new characters walked into your room and you started socializing, would it make it a totally new dream... I don't know. If you went out of your house into the street, would it be a new one... No idea. I guess no. The boundaries are blurry, if they even exist, no definite "plot" to come to end. Except probably dreams of death, but luckily I didn't have any.Quote:
I'd say that yea, that means you could be misinterpreting a lot of your dreams as multiples
The only ones I see really being difficult are false awakenings, because they seem like two separate dreams but are really just one. Otherwise I don't think I've ever had a problem. For the dreams that I remember, I usually wake up after each dream, so there is a definite end to them and therefore a beginning. I don't have an online DJ but here's an example of a good day (a ton of dreams! :D)
Spoiler for 04-26-2008:
No no, a DEILD works under the theory that if you wake up from a dream, but don't move, your body will fall back asleep and you will remain in/return to REM sleep nearly immediately, allowing you to WILD with ease. So the idea is that you naturally wake up after each dream, and that if you can remember to keep your body still you can WILD easier. I have heard all over the place that you 'wake up naturally after each dream', and that REM can be continued in such a manner, but for all I know this is complete BS. It's a nice theory to keep you motivated and thinking a DEILD can happen, though.
This thread basically proves that useing a dream journal really does help for all you newbs,
Before my dream journal, I didn't remember any dreams only a little.
Hey Shift,
Thanx for the excerpt, that was a good day for dreams, indeed. :)
But I wonder, what happened between them? Your excerpt has not many details, it's more of an outline (and I understand that, writing each dream in details is a chore!). E.g. here:
Spoiler for 04-26-2008:
Do you remember what happened between them, how the dream got transformed into another one?
Come to think of it, I heard it somewhere, too. But didn't they mean that you wake up after each REM briefly, not after each dream?Quote:
So the idea is that you naturally wake up after each dream, and that if you can remember to keep your body still you can WILD easier. I have heard all over the place that you 'wake up naturally after each dream', and that REM can be continued in such a manner, but for all I know this is complete BS.
Yea, that's what I'm saying. I don't remember the specific details (it has been quite a while since then). last night I didn't record any of my dreams except for a lucid, but I woke up between each one so those I remember are definitely very segmented. Usually it's just a brief awakening, and that I've taught myself to wake up consciously a bit between dreams to review them quickly before I go back to sleep. I'm going to really start keeping a dream journal again and see if I can give you some more detailed examples. Like I said though, it's mostly "and the pink elephants blew out their birthday candles. I woke up. In another dream..." so literally just waking up, reviewing a dream, then going back to sleep. Just as though I recorded them between each dream during the night, but mentally.
Yea, I'm wondering now... so many people use REM and dream interchangeably, I wonder what the truth is.... In two weeks, if we haven't figured it out I shall try to determine the answer. I hate to realize I've been contributing to confusion :(
I still don't get the idea. How do you wake up consciously between dreams?! I can wake up consciously only if I decided that an LD has been lasting long enough to pose a danger of losing lucidity and forgetting it, then the best way is waking up to replay it in memory. But how can you "choose" to wake up after normal dreams if you aren't lucid? How is it trainable? I don't understand.
Okay, if so, then you can give me a link to your journal or to an excerpt later, via PM or anything ;)Quote:
I'm going to really start keeping a dream journal again and see if I can give you some more detailed examples.
Hm, but the question is, if you somehow trained yourself to wake up, then what would happen if you didn't wake up? Maybe the dream wouldn't end. I know it sounds like I'm not making much sense here, but to me it sounds as if you've managed to program yourself to wake up once a definite amount of time has passed and not at the end of a dream, at least I cannot fathom how you'd know inside of an unconscious dream that it's coming to an end.Quote:
Like I said though, it's mostly "and the pink elephants blew out their birthday candles. I woke up. In another dream..." so literally just waking up, reviewing a dream, then going back to sleep.
If I'm not mistaken, REM is quite long... 90 or more minutes. One dream is bound to be shorter than one REM!Quote:
Yea, I'm wondering now... so many people use REM and dream interchangeably, I wonder what the truth is....
Well, does it matter if I wake up 'prematurely'? I mean, what does that mean anyway. The fact that I woke up and the dream no longer continued means it was the end of the dream.
I will post here or PM you :D
I didn't really train myself to wake up. I trained myself that, when I woke up, I should review a dream if I was aware and remembered that I had just woken up from one.
sometime si wake up between dreams but the first dream will be hazy the next dream will be clear.. coincidence?