I've had, on more than one occasion, a dream where I lost lucidity. I became lucid, started using a super power to escape from my dream situation, and then -in the struggle to survive- lost lucidity, but kept the super power. |
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I've had, on more than one occasion, a dream where I lost lucidity. I became lucid, started using a super power to escape from my dream situation, and then -in the struggle to survive- lost lucidity, but kept the super power. |
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Things I'd like to do in a dream
vita ex somno venit
lo sevzi sanji senva cu melbi (thank you to Alex Rozenshteyn for helping me with this translation)
Before you start using superpowers and all that try to anchor yourself, just stand there and decide what you want to do and make sure that you are completely 100% lucid. |
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that's worked for me with mixed results. Lately, trying to calmly get a grip of my dream makes me lose lucidity, because it's sort of like trying to fight the dream head-on, where it still feels real. I've found that actively controlling the dream to get a hold over it before stabilizing is working better. I think I'm just weird though; your method seems to work well for most people, and it works decently for me. |
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Things I'd like to do in a dream
vita ex somno venit
lo sevzi sanji senva cu melbi (thank you to Alex Rozenshteyn for helping me with this translation)
Hi RobotGymnast, it's possibly that you lose lucidity because you go more or less with the "flow" of the dream. This is what the mind usually does when it is dreaming normal dreams, so it is very easy to lose lucidity that way. I usually never go with the flow of my dream when I am lucid, because I know this pitfall. I always try to keep thinking on the fact "hey, this is still a dream", and meanwhile I expore around a bit or do whatever it was that I set my mind to (I usually have a task set for myself for when I become lucid). All I can otherwise think of is that with more expereince it should be more easy not to lose it. |
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I'm a BUG. Beyond Uber God.
yes, I AM going with the flow of the dream. This is because, as stated before, I can't oppose the flow of the dream because it still seems real. And I can't shake the feeling that it's real without first gaining control. If I start trying to calm myself down, I tend to wake up, because I lose hold on the reality of the dream. However, circumventing the reality and just modifying it bit-by-bit rather than trying to stop it all at once has proven easier for me. |
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Things I'd like to do in a dream
vita ex somno venit
lo sevzi sanji senva cu melbi (thank you to Alex Rozenshteyn for helping me with this translation)
I find that this is very common. Here is what I do to keep myself lucid - |
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Last edited by mrdeano; 08-30-2009 at 08:33 PM.
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