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New / School prob?
Hiya!
Just wondering if there are any students out there like me. I'm 15 and im totally into the whole idea of lucid dreaming it's just . . . to do recall i need to get up at night. Do any students have trouble with this does it affect their school work and stuff like that.
Oh and also! what is WILD and MILD and all these other thing ending in ILD????
P.S im new aint it great lol
P.S.S ->:banana: DANCING BANANA I LOVE IT
Peace out!
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Hi, Hera! Like in that one Disney movie about the strong dude.
Anywho, welcome to Dream Views! Peanut Butter Jelly Time!
And apparently, some people do just fine without waking up after every dream to record them... When you're just starting out, like I am, it may help to set an alarm that wakes you up during the longer REM cycles--you'll have a greater chance of remembering your dreams. However, doing this will cause you to lose valuable deep sleep, so you might feel sleepier the following day and find it harder to concentrate... but there's supposed to be a stage where you can fall asleep and remember all of your dreams (or some of them, at least) when you wake up the next morning. I'm not there yet xD
Good luck on your lucid journey! :hug: *cuddles*
Your friendly neighborhood ground squirrel
~tamias
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I'm a student, but I don't wake up in the middle of the night to recall my dreams. One; cause I can't afford to lose sleep, and two; because I don't want to interrupt my REM cycle. Others say doing that helps recall, but I like mine to go uninterrupted all night.
:welcome: to DV. :)
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Hey, welcome :) I've gotten to the point where i wake up after every dream, so I just naturally wake up and take a few minutes to jot down dreams. Then I just go right back to sleep. I am a student, but it doesn't interfere much. My own laziness is really the only problem I have :shock:
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Gee thanks guys I feel so loved!
=D
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Ah well, I'm just saying, it's a process, and your hard work will pay off and you won't lose sleep soon ;)
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:welcome:
Lots of members here are students in both high school and college. Check out the tutorials section to help you on your way. There is a tutorial called Induction techniques that explains what each *ILD stands for and how to do them.