• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




    Results 1 to 25 of 36

    Hybrid View

    1. #1
      The Anti-Member spockman's Avatar
      Join Date
      Aug 2008
      Gender
      Location
      Colorado
      Posts
      2,500
      Likes
      134
      There is no standard level, actually. But be assured that 4 minutes is actually quite good! Most people seem to have short lucids the majority of the time.
      Paul is Dead




    2. #2
      Member
      Join Date
      May 2009
      Posts
      47
      Likes
      0
      My first Lucid was around 15 minutes.

      My second was a whopping 45 seconds

    3. #3
      Motion Personified Alpha Achievements:
      Referrer Bronze 1000 Hall Points Veteran First Class
      mrdeano's Avatar
      Join Date
      Apr 2009
      Gender
      Location
      United Kingdom
      Posts
      1,053
      Likes
      58
      DJ Entries
      1
      The highest I have heard it like a hour.

      But only like 5 minutes for myself.

    4. #4
      ex-redhat ClouD's Avatar
      Join Date
      Sep 2007
      Posts
      4,760
      Likes
      129
      DJ Entries
      1
      You can really build it up, and given the right circumstances you can drag it on for a long time.

      TBH I think it's more important to have steady lucidity over quality, because it's easier to work up quality that way than vice versa.

      If you want to experience long lucids as a beginner lucid dreamer, then I'd suggest you try waking yourself up a couple of hours before you'd feel rested in the morning, and then going back to sleep. You can easily ride the lucidity if you keep it low level.
      Last edited by ClouD; 06-26-2009 at 03:17 PM.
      You merely have to change your point of view slightly, and then that glass will sparkle when it reflects the light.

    5. #5
      Moonshine moonshine's Avatar
      Join Date
      Aug 2008
      Gender
      Location
      UK
      Posts
      1,109
      Likes
      5
      Your longest REM period is 45mins to an hour.
      So theoretically you could achieve that.
      Lucid Dreams:-
      MILD/DILD: 79
      WILD: 13
      DEILD:13
      (TOTAL: 108 )

    6. #6
      ex-redhat ClouD's Avatar
      Join Date
      Sep 2007
      Posts
      4,760
      Likes
      129
      DJ Entries
      1
      Quote Originally Posted by Arutad View Post
      What do you do for steady lucidity?
      You change your waking perspective, be more aware.
      You can let the feeling of "is this a dream" easily become an undercurrent (though personally, I don't think that is necessary).
      If you are more habitually aware, simply it carries over into dream.
      For steady lucidity while dreaming, you have to keep a balance between detachment and involvement. Too detached and you could wake up or enter a void state, too involved and you could lose the heightened lucidity.

      Quote Originally Posted by moonshine View Post
      Your longest REM period is 45mins to an hour.
      So theoretically you could achieve that.
      Technically, lucidity is knowing that you are dreaming, I'm assuming you mean that. You dream outside of REM, so theoretically you could achieve that if self-aware enough to pose the question, or trained enough to automatically ask it.
      You merely have to change your point of view slightly, and then that glass will sparkle when it reflects the light.

    7. #7
      Looking for you Arutad's Avatar
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Gender
      Posts
      775
      Likes
      6
      Quote Originally Posted by ClouD View Post
      You change your waking perspective, be more aware.
      You can let the feeling of "is this a dream" easily become an undercurrent (though personally, I don't think that is necessary).
      How do you do each of these things?

      For steady lucidity while dreaming, you have to keep a balance between detachment and involvement. Too detached and you could wake up or enter a void state, too involved and you could lose the heightened lucidity.
      I'm never emotionally involved once lucidity arrives. Unfortunately, it doesn't influence the length of lucidity for me.

    8. #8
      Looking for you Arutad's Avatar
      Join Date
      Dec 2008
      Gender
      Posts
      775
      Likes
      6
      Quote Originally Posted by ClouD View Post
      TBH I think it's more important to have steady lucidity over quality, because it's easier to work up quality that way than vice versa.
      What do you do for steady lucidity?

    9. #9
      Member Denny22's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jun 2008
      Gender
      Location
      Ireland
      Posts
      206
      Likes
      1
      My longest lucid was a WILD and it lasted around 7 minutes. Maybe a bit less.
      DILDs- 14 (January 1810)
      WILD- 9 - (December16 2009 20)

    10. #10
      Gentlemen. Ladies. slayer's Avatar
      Join Date
      Mar 2007
      Gender
      Location
      Right here... Reputation: 9999
      Posts
      4,902
      Likes
      473
      DJ Entries
      4
      Lucid Dreams can feel like seconds, days, even years.

      Then again...so can normal dreams. It's kind of like a TV show when they switch over to a different scene or jump forward to a future scene, so you're not always acting out every day in your dream, but you get that "feeling" that days have gone by.

    Bookmarks

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •