Many ideas here invovle making reference to something which makes it "possible" to fly, such as a jetpack. You could also try thinking of another situation in which the laws of phsyics are different: Video Games. I remember playing Quake back in the day and discovering a "noclip" cheat which turned off gravity. You would just go wherever you were pointing, be it up, down, or along the ground. I'm sure many other first person shooter-type games have a similar cheat if you look it up -- they are needed for level design and are often left in the engine.
Now that I think about it, I have never had trouble flying in dreams, and it has always worked exactly like noclip. You can see it as a kind of virtual reality dream training.
This would give your brain some idea of what the rules are. It is not enough to say that flying is the absence of gravity -- you need to give your mind something positive to work with.
Too often in our lucid dream work, we beat ourselves up by repeating that there are no rules. But this gives our minds no traction. Rather, we should think of a dream as a situation in which we can make up any rules we want. No rules means no dream, though.
It reminds me of my favorite quotes in philosophy, which Immanuel Kant wrote in the Critique of Pure Reason. By coincidence, he was also talking about flying, this time about the fact that with no resistance, there is no lift:
"The light dove, cleaving the air in her free flight, and feeling its resistance, might imagine that its flight would still be easier in empty space. It was thus that Plato left the world of the senses, as setting too narrow limits to the understanding, and ventured out beyond it on the wings of the ideas, in the empty space of the pure understanding. He did not observe that with all his efforts he made no advance - meeting no resistance that might, as it were, serve as a support upon which he could take a stand, to which he could apply his powers, and so set his understanding in motion."
|
|
Bookmarks