|
|
|
|
Well the best piece of advice that I've heard is: Say to yourself that you're going to wake up after dreaming and that you'll remember your dreams completely. Also write every dream you do (partially) remember in a journal/diary. This should also help your dream recall. |
|
|
|
Need Help? Have Questions? PM me so I can help you out
"Dreams are as portals. Flat visions of misty places. But I can write dreams!" - Myst Uru
I also heard from someone on this site that the more you move after you wake up the less likely you will remember the dream. This is not the case with me, since i can remember dreams from couple of nights ago and tell them to my friends during the day. After you wake up, try to just lay there and remember what just happened. Search through your memories. It will take some practice, but dont give up. And welcome to the forums! |
|
Another thing to add to what Josh said, when you're laying in bed, try to recall anything such as a color, person, place, object, etc. Usually, when you can think of one thing it will lead you to recalling much more. Then it's a "thinking backwards" process. |
|
"If there was one thing the lucid dreaming ninja writer could not stand, it was used car salesmen."
thanks for the advice. but don't you ever wonder that... ok you know when u die? i believe in reincarnation, so your born into another body, but u forget everything. just like baby's do! and the same with our dreams. it just facinates me that while i'm dreaming i could be lucid and i could be an expert or something, but i would never know. i would be able to create and entirely different world. i would never know! heck! i could even be harry potter and make magic real and all that but.. i would never know!!! |
|
|
|
One large problem facing many people is recall. The reason you forget your dreams is simple: When your mind leaves REM sleep (the dreaming stage of sleep), your mind is wiped of short term memory, to a certain degree. Because of this, most everyone has several dreams each night that they can't remember, but there's a way to recall at least a few more dreams each night. Set your alarm clock for about five hours after you go to bed. This should wake you up in the middle of an REM cycle, so you should be able to remember your dreams. If not, try adding or subtracting a half an hour from that time, and wake up a little sooner or a little later. Everybody's REM cycles are different, so it's impossible to pinpoint one, but there's a good chance that most people are in an REM phase five hours after they hit the sack. Anyway, provided you DO remember a dream after you wake up, then IMMEDIATELY write it down in a Dream Journal. If you go back to sleep, you may forget it by morning. Then, after you've written it down, you can just go back to sleep like normal! Or, if you feel like it, you can try a WILD (There's information about those in the tutorial section if you're interested.) |
|
[23:17:23] <+Kaniaz> "You think I want to look like Leo Volont? Don't you dare"
thxs again i'll try that! |
|
Hey, Andrew, and welcome! |
|
Wayne
Mynd you, møøse bites Kan be pretty nasti...
Bookmarks