well if any of you have answered my posts i seemed pretty interested in lucid dreaming |
|
well if any of you have answered my posts i seemed pretty interested in lucid dreaming |
|
Nope. No one can tell you how to lucid dream but you, unfortunately. The amount of work being worth it is relative to the person. If it's something you truly, really want to experience, then you will. You've just got to keep going with it. |
|
Maybe you should just put lucid dreaming aside for a while. If you don't think about it too hard, you might find that you start to LD occasionally. Kind of like when you're trying to remember some obscure fact, and it just comes to you out of the blue. Now, this works for me, but I can't guarantee that it'll work for you. Also, one thing that helped me was doing RCs in waking life every once in a while. Not too often, just when you see something that reminds you of a dream, or something that seems weird. I don't think lucid dreaming should be so much work that it interferes with your life or the amount of sleep you're getting. |
|
Lucid Tasks: 14
When faith runs out it means you have been doing it for too long...take a break. Come back to LDing when you feel up to it. As for tips for LDing....RCing is not the best way and definately not the only way. The most effective way is usually mentally draining at least for me to be honest. Because techniques that require you do RC and do stuff during the day (little mental effort) isn't going to make much of an effect on the subconcious. So far the most effective way for me to date is to control your thoughts while you are in bed and use some kind of visual activation like switching on a light at spaced intervals of say few minutes apart with the light switch in your hand and thinking of what you'd do to be lucid and then turn of the light. You can do this with your eyes closed and still see the light and think the idea until such point you don't need the light and the lucid idea runs on it's own in place of randome thoughts and the thoughts will menifest into an LD that you want. This technique is effective but mentally draining because thinking in sleep means you are not resting the brain. |
|
Last edited by imj; 01-03-2010 at 06:02 AM.
ok i got the part about controlling your thoughts i feel up to lucid dreaming now but what was the thing about the light switch im a little confused |
|
ooh hey is it possible to do a WILD while just regularly falling asleep at bed time?? and how scary is it i heard about hallucinations and i really don't want to scare $#@! out of myslef so....................... |
|
It's possible, but WILDs are easier to achieve after you've been asleep for a few hours. If I were you, though, I'd work on other methods before trying WILD, because it takes a lot of practice, i.e. failed attempts. DILD is probably the way to go for a beginner. |
|
Lucid Tasks: 14
ya im a student so i dont really want a loss of sleep, um so besides the DILD like i said i lost my watch any other good techniques??????????? |
|
You don't need a watch that beeps every hour to lucid dream or RC's. If it's that hard to remember, leave yourself notes. Place them around your bedroom, in the bathroom, on the fridge etc. Notes are a good start, however don't rely on them forever. You have to want to do RC's and want to lucid dream, otherwise it probably won't just happen on it's own. |
|
Bookmarks