I read this on an astral travel forum:- |
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I read this on an astral travel forum:- |
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Lucid Dreams:-
MILD/DILD: 79
WILD: 13
DEILD:13
(TOTAL: 108)
"Surfacing" -- that's a good way to describe it. |
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Lose Your Dreams And
You Will Lose Your Mind
In Life Unkind...
[B]
For me, it feels like I'm gradually becoming more and more aware of the real world. I don't normally feel any motion or sense of movement. I might notice something small, like the feel of the sheets against my feet, or the sound of my own breathing. From there, I might get some overlapping dual-vision of both the dream world and the real world. Once I notice something real, I have a hard time dismissing it. It grabs my attention, and I then become aware of my real surroundings. |
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Sometimes it does feel like I am being sucked into my bed, but most of the time surfacing describes it. I gradually feel like I am rising and feel my body, until I am in it. |
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if you can read this then you are about to be punched
When I exit my dreams, it usually feels like I'm floating in the air, able to feel my physical body. Then, I feel a huge "jolt" in my entire body, but the biggest impact it has on me is my head. I don't know if that's a good way to describe it, but....yeah, that's how it feels. |
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Lucid dreaming makes for a wonderful night's play.
For me, my vision blurs and dream objects start to lose focus. Everything fades to black, and the remnants of the dream become abstract thought. All the while, I'm becoming more and more aware of my real body. However, no real physical sensations ensue. Soon enough, the dream, and the abstract thoughts that accompanied its closure, fall into nothingness. My consciousness becomes entangled in the confines of waking life, and it is then that I am awake. |
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Last edited by Mzzkc; 08-04-2009 at 09:23 AM.
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