 Originally Posted by Pistols
So I'm still really new to the site but i've been doing my research...
I started my dream journal about 5 days ago and have been remembering between 1-4 dreams per night with an average of 2/3.
My problem is that my dreams are not particularly long, they are like 3-5 minute scenes and that is it... some have cohesion and lead on with gaps in between.
This has led to ask the following questions before changing my mantra's from "I will remember my dreams" to "I will have a lucid dream and realise when I am dreaming"
1. How long should I just focus on recording my dreams before I try and start to DILD? (I already have one dream sign)
2. Do my dream have to be of a certain length or detail to be sufficient enough to attempt becoming lucid?
My dreams are very vivid but have been very short...
Any advice would be appreciated as I can't wait to start trying to have my first lucid dream
Many thanks.
Pistols.
1. You should start trying to DILD immediately; there is really no prep-work for this. DILD basically means you became aware in your dream, which honestly is the definition of lucid dreaming. You don't need dream signs, you just need vivid dreams and solid recall. 2-3 dreams a night that are vivid is a VERY solid position to be in; I admire your commitment.
Start doing WBTB after getting 5-6 hours of sleep. This is plenty of sleep for the brain to almost fully function, but your body can still go to sleep. This will help TREMENDOUSLY. I believe the statistic is ~60% increased chance to lucid dream if you do a wake-back-to-bed.
2. Your dreams don't need to be a certain length; lucid dreaming is all based on REM periods. However, vividness and recall are two big things, but it sounds like you are already exceling in that section.
My suggestion to you is to start practicing awareness in your daily life routine. Take 5-10 times a day to just stop for 2 minutes, look around you, examine everything around you as is, ask yourself "am I dreaming, is this a dream?" and do a reality check. Then take 30 seconds to try and imagine if what you would do if this were a lucid dream.
These visualization techniques become WAY easier once you know what a lucid dream feels / looks like, since you'd then have a basis for comparison. But until then, just really become aware of your surroundings when you do these short awareness checks.
Also, start doing wake back to bed. Basically, set your alarm for 5.5 hours from when you get into bed. Get up when the alarm goes off, write in your dream journal any dreams you had, and stay awake until the grogginess fades from you. During this time, exercise your brain by doing something logical / requires thinking. Something where being tired would hinder performance, like solving sudoku puzzles.
After the grogginess fades, get back into bed and go to sleep. I bet you after only a couple days of this (maybe even on the first!) you'll be lucid dreaming.
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