Hey all, |
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Hey all, |
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Of course you could! The only problem is in a lucid dream, you may be writing something down and then realise it's turned into a drawing of a cat. |
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"Don't kill me. I'm in a dream right now, and if you kill me I'll die in real life too!" -Me, age 5-8, talking to a dinosaur.
Some things you of course couldn't study in a dream. You couldn't study new information, but you might be able to sort through old information, to test yourself on things you've already memorized to strengthen the memories, or practice problem solving. The problem is, as I undersatnd it, people usually have a difficult time remaining in their dreams if they aren't immersing their senses in the dream world. So studying in a dream might prove difficult unless you can come up with some creative way to visually represent what you're trying to study. |
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One thing I've learned is that your subconscious mind has much better access to your memory |
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Join our Lucid Dreaming video game project!
Lucid Dreams: 6 ---- WILD: 0
---------------------- MILD: 2
---------------------- EILD: 0
---------------------- DILD: 4
---------------------- DEILD: 0
You totally could, man. The trick is having a good grasp on the info before you go into the lucid. Once in you could go over it all and maybe even get creative with the dream to reaffirm info you already know. But you couldn't, like, read a book or something. |
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As children we believe anything is possible. As adults, we need to remember it.
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