WILD does not require an alarm. It means to pass directly from waking consciousness into a dream. However, people often set an alarm because we sleep in stages. At the beginning of the night, very little dreaming occurs but later in the night dreams are longer and time between them shorter.

WILDs can be done during daytime naps.
You want to experiment, but setting an alarm to go off after about 5 or 6 hours of sleep is a good place to start.
Check out Seeker's “The Five Phases of WILD” tutorial here for some info about sleep paralysis and hynagogic hallucinations (the ipod thing): http://www.dreamviews.com/community/...ead.php?t=9806
Read some more about reality checks. Your method of doing them “every so often” can be improved upon. You can also RC when you experience strong emotions, see/reminded of a dream sign, see something weird, just think about dreams, etc...
From Naiya's tutorial (http://www.dreamviews.com/community/....php?t=61802):
Reality Check Addendum
The problem with RCs is that a lot of times, people just mindlessly go “am I dreaming?” and without even considering it, they think “no,” and then totally forget about it. This does absolutely nothing to help you get lucid.
When you do a reality check, don't ask if you're dreaming. Assume that you ARE dreaming. Now ask, “why do I think this is real?”
Example of a GOOD answer: “I think this is real because I remember waking up, getting dressed and driving here. I can remember in detail what I had for breakfast. When I toss a pen into the air and try to make it float, I can't do it.” This works because you are testing you surroundings and memories against LOGIC. Not only that, but you're physically testing reality. If you want, you can try the classics such as looking at your hands or holding your nose to test reality.
Example of a BAD answer: “This feels real.” While you'll never confuse your waking life with a dream, ALL of your non-lucids will always “feel real.”
Lastly, it seems like the DV community has more success with DILD.
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