I've always avidly defended lucid dreaming and claimed that it cannot harm a person in any way. I though anyone who said otherwise was just freaking out for nothing, maybe ethnocentric and just close-minded. |
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I've always avidly defended lucid dreaming and claimed that it cannot harm a person in any way. I though anyone who said otherwise was just freaking out for nothing, maybe ethnocentric and just close-minded. |
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The one-eyed man is king in the land of the blind.
In my own personal opinion I am and an avid lucid dreamer. |
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i believe that if you have the ability to lucid dreams then your dreams no longer mean anything.... your mind knows that you can lucid dream so why should it leave messages in 'videos' (dreams) instead of confronting you directly, because through direct confrontation the message can be passed through quickly and efficiently... and if it is bad for your brain then why does your brain allow it, doesnt it have a choice whether you lucid dream or not, afterall its through it that you can do it anyway... the incapacity to create nightmares is also a good thing because it shows that you know what your up against and that you believe in yourself to such an extent that your are able to face your fears and defeat them... i have attained lucidity through many nightmares and i have felt more revitalised than 'injured' on awakening... |
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"Your unsuited for the rage of war so pack up, go home, your through.
How could I, make a man, out of you!"
I liken dreams to a Story or an RPG game. Some RPG games you can go off an do whatever you want, hack and slash all the characters, but then the Game means nothing but what you make it. However, there is then the RPG game experience of playing the Story and learning from the Characters. The Subconcious has lessons and a Story to teach and tell. |
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"The Universe is a dream dreamed by a single dreamer where all the dream characters dream too." - Arthur Schopenhauer
Raised by Amethyst Star
I agree with Howetzer. For me the fun and value of a LD is to be aware whilst allowing the dream to unfold from your subconscious. Perhaps, next time you are lucid, ask for a nightmare, go back to a nightmare you have preiously 'controlled', seek the monster, go into the basement... Then rather than zapping the monster, allow it to do its worst - the 'monster' will usually resolve into something else (e.g. turn into your father or whatever) that will usually be very helpful in understanding your fears/ regrets etc. If it doesn't automatically do this the Senoi recommend that you demand from the monster a present which can then be 'taken out of the dream' for interpretation at your leisure with your conscious waking mind. Or you can simply ask the monster why it is there or what its doing in your dream. The answer may not be immediately understandable especially if its a deep fear that you don't want to face - hence the importance of researching/ analysing it afterwards when awake. For example I was once given a stick with four runes on it - I had to google them to find their meaning and the results were astonishing - a real insight - and I never had that particular type of nightmare again. The subconscious mind supposedly has access to ALL your memories, (and possibly other archetypal/ morphic resonnant information) so although I didn't know the runes by heart I had read about them some years before. |
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Research: VAK (Visual, Auditory, Kinesthetic) Learning Modes, RCs and Lucid Dreaming
Research: Do Lucid Dreamers Have a Particular Personality Trait In Common?
When I say 'I see!' - I've opened not my eyes, but my mouth.
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