Welcome to DreamViews, Brandon! |
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Hello my fellow lucid dreamers! This is my first post ever on this site, and probably my 3rd ever in my life! I've always lurked around forums for ages and have read thousands upon thousands of posts. I believe my title of lurker is very appropriate |
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Welcome to DreamViews, Brandon! |
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I believe I have excellent dream recall, but only if I write it down right after I wake up. I'm able to recall at least two or three every night so the next step for me is to start working towards that LD right? But my problem is that I do RC's often during the day, but once I fall asleep I never think to RC in my dreams and the thought of LD'ing completely disappears. Its as if the idea of a LD is gone in my sleep even though I spend hours thinking about it during the day and reading the forums. How can I spark the idea of LD in my sleep without using outside sources ie: music, lights? |
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Hi Brandon! To answer your question -- Here's a bit of what I do to 'spark' a lucid dream. In the mornings when I wake up for school, I notice that my alarm clock is incorporated into my dreams for a few seconds. A few weeks ago, I was dreaming of sitting in class (shitty right) and the teachers phone started ringing. He walked over to it, looked at me and told me I was dreaming. I woke up. The ring on the phone was my alarm clock. So I decided to download a soft melody or something to play after a certain amount of time. Luckily there is an android application that has helped me achieve this =) So whenever that plays I know I'm dreaming. Another thing you could do before bed is listen to lucid dream induction videos on youtube. They will play relaxing beats (or creepy. Which helps better strangely) with different variations of a voice saying "You are dreaming" "Are you dreaming" "Tonight I am going to have a lucid dream" basically hypnotic. They're strange but they work as well =). |
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Last edited by Castles; 01-21-2012 at 12:29 AM.
Daily reality checks are helping to train your prospective memory. You are building your ability to remember to remember to do something. This skill needs to be totally maxed out to be able to transfer it into your sleep. Performing reality checks, cataloging dream signs, and working on your awareness are all helping to build this skill. |
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Last edited by Semisubzero; 01-21-2012 at 12:47 AM.
It is recommended that you are able to recall at least one dream per night before attempting to induce lucid dreams. Since you can recall two or three dreams per night, I suggest you try out different induction techniques and find out which one works best for you. |
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Thanks Enjyu! I tried to read up on all the different induction techniques so any question I asked would need experience instead of a link to another part of the site. I guess all of my questions are answered for now. The only thing I need now is more dreams for more opportunities. And holy crap. I never noticed how many smileys I actually used until the forum converted them all into images. I'll need to cut down D= *There's another* |
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All shall be revealed through the almighty smiley! |
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ME TRANSMITTE SURSUM, CALEDONI!
Hi Brandon. I'm new here as well (and also a lurker by nature, as evidenced by my two posts in two months). |
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I have the same problem. I'm slowly building up my dream journal. I've had 1 controllable LD and the rest were LD semi/LD. I'm trying to identify common themes (dream signs) and once I have those identified I'm intending to repeat the mantra "If I experience [whatever] I'll do a RC" during the relaxation stage before sleep. This is a meditative form of auto-suggestion so if I come across any dream signs I'll do a RC. I've read that this is what you're supposed to do. Whether it works for me or not I'm yet to see. Perhaps it will for you. |
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"Not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine." -Sir Arthur Eddington
Welcome to Dreamviews, Brandon! Good luck with achieving all your lucid goals! |
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