Quote Originally Posted by mcwillis View Post
Im not interested in OBE's either. My lucid dreams just happen as described in my experience at the start of this thread. The phantom wiggling technique that you cppied into your post says, "one momentarily finds oneself somehow in the phase". That means that you may find yourself in a lucid dream or an OBE.



I may be wrong about this but it seems from what you have said that you haven't read up to page 40 as that is where the instructions for not moving upon awakening are. If you haven't read the textbook yet I would strongly suggest not skipping through the book to page 40 as you will miss vital information that will save you from making mistakes that will arrest your progress.
First of all let me thank you for opening a thread about this. After seeing your post in "CrazyInsane's WILD Tutorial" I immediately downloaded the guide and began reading. I've been practicing and have come across an interesting fact: my most common form of 'phasing' is the movement one. I feel like I'm spinning or (as was the case last-night) swinging in a hammock. I've had this seemingly random phenomenon affect me variously throughout my life, mostly when I am about to go to sleep.
My question, however, is this: how do you keep from losing consciousness? In the instance last night, where I was swinging in an imaginary hammock, I was able to make it swing farther and farther out, but woke up later when my alarm went off. Is there a section of the book that explains this? (I do not wish to read ahead if I don't have to, as I'm only in the part about the different indirect techniques.)
Anyhow, you can imagine my excitement but it seems too tricky and I am simply of the belief that I don't understand it fully, so any help would be greatly appreciated, thanks.