Last night I had lots of coffe and stayed up till 4:30 watching movies and chilling out with friends. And two wierd things happened. |
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Last night I had lots of coffe and stayed up till 4:30 watching movies and chilling out with friends. And two wierd things happened. |
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REM Rebound. Basically this just means that if you are prevented from getting enough REM sleep, are sleep deprived, or taking medications that suppress REM etc. then you will experience REM rebound, where the next time you do sleep, your REM periods are longer, more frequent, and more quickly entered. Which is why some people like to use sleep deprivation as a means to achieve a lucid dream. There's no doubt it is effective, but probably not worth purposefully sacrificing sleep over. |
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Nina, you pretty much said everything that I was going to say except one thing about hallucinating when you are sleep deprived. I am an HSC student in Australia i.e. chronically sleep deprived :p and I find that I often hallucinate at random times during the day, particularly when I have lost more sleep than usual. Anyway, I am not an experienced lucid dreamer and have not been able to induce lucid dreams but when I hallucinate I can control it in a similar way to lucid dreams. The only problem is stopping the hallucinations from dissolving. Say I am standing in a park. Out of the corner of my eye I see a puma. I look over and I, being a rational man, know that it is not really there but just a figment of my imagination. At this point I can make it move around or change form as I please BUT if I think about this too much, I reason that it can not rely be there and it vanishes :/ . Can anyone do this and does anyone have tips for stopping hallucinations from dematerialising? |
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