• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




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    1. #1
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      Introduction 2.0

      Placeholder for repost of the Intro.

      Quote Originally Posted by ThreeLetterSyndrom View Post
      I don't mind at all, those are some great ideas. Just let me get started on them
      However, I do think that the reader needs to be told about the acronyms beforehand. It's an important part of the community and helps the dreamer to get started quickly.
      Thanks for the compliments, I appreciate it.

      EDIT: It automatically republishes when I edit it. As of now, I've made some small changes. Maybe we should explain the really scientific concept of dreaming more?
      http://docs.google.com/View?id=ddm75ss6_29d5r3n7d4
      I very much like this so far. Please let me know if you get permission to use that comic, too.


      If there are more comments, questions, additions to this, please post them here.
      Last edited by Naiya; 07-10-2009 at 09:11 PM.

    2. #2
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      i think it's a great start. The opening is has got a solid feel to it so far. my concern is that the parts about dream recall and techniques come to early and should not be part of the intro.i feel that overviewing the lucid dream process should come in it's own chapter, perhaps after the intro and a few more introductory topics, before each part of the process is discussed in greater detail. to be sure, it's important to have that overview before the reader delves in to the in-depth material (so they know how the different topics fit into the process as a whole), but it doesn't fit in the intro because the mode of these paragraphs is different. You start out in an eye-opening mode, like your trying to get the reader to get STOKED, and excited and make them open their minds to the great possibilities of dreaming, but then in the following paragraphs (beginning with "first things first: dream recall") the reader is thrown into a manual or how-to mode too soon. the intro should be elaborated and not deviated from the original feel.

      edit: also, along the lines of elaborating on the discussion of the intro. we should brainstorm and come up with more ideas or things to say in the intro that tie into the feel established by the first paragraph. once we have alot of ideas, enough to fill a chapter. we should make a sub-outline (that being, an outline for this chapter or section only) or organize them into a cohesive narrative.

      *gasps for air* that was a mouthful
      Last edited by adrift; 07-11-2009 at 10:14 PM.

    3. #3
      Ehh..Well..Uhm...HUGS!
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      Well then, anyone's got good ideas on how to get the reader STOKED, because I don't think it's a good idea to fill the introduction up with stories about how great everything is. As Shift already has said, it shouldn't be like EWOLD, which has this layer of self-growth clichés and stuff all over it.
      http://i96.photobucket.com/albums/l199/ablativus/spidermansig2.png

    4. #4
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      well i think it would be safe to move from elaborating on the dream inspiration opening to a secondary part describing what lucid dreams are or how they are able to make the first part possible,

    5. #5
      Ehh..Well..Uhm...HUGS!
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      Does that mean that we should explain a little more about the nature of dreams? Give more examples on how dreams feel? More lucid examples?

      Just some ideas.

      Spoiler for Introduction, Version #3.1:


      You never put a comma before 'and'. The comma is used as a replacement for the word.
      This is the latest version, 3.1. My editings were too minor to make it #4.0. Please take this version and edit it.
      Last edited by ThreeLetterSyndrom; 07-13-2009 at 11:42 AM.
      http://i96.photobucket.com/albums/l199/ablativus/spidermansig2.png

    6. #6
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      Actually, that is only half correct. I'm not sure where in the introduction commas and the word 'and' were used incorrectly but if you don't separate the word 'and', in a list, the two objects before and after 'and' count as one object.
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