I managed to chain 4 or 5 lucid dreams one after another this morning. Whenever I came out of one I didn't move (other than to twitch my fingers to see if I was really awake) or open my eyes, just tried to get back to dreaming. I had the sensation of slowly falling up and backwards into the wall, and then I was in the dream. I did this each time.

I started off having woken up, then going to the bathroom to brush my teeth, back to bed, lay on my back for a while just thinking to myself until I felt my arms and legs start to go to sleep, rolled over to a more comfortable position on my front, babbled to myself in my head until I was a little dreamy, then felt myself fall back. I had a youtube channel on which plays the sound of waves lapping against the sea-shore to aid me in getting back to sleep - there was no bleed-through of the wave-sound into my dreams. I wasn't conscious of any sleep-paralysis signposting in any of my entries into dream, nor vibrations; I remember thinking going into my first dream in the sequence that I had just heard an audio-
hallucination, but whatever I thought I heard it obviously wasn't very memorable.

Lying on my back first without moving until my body starts getting that numb feeling, then rolling over to a comfortable position, is something that has worked for me in the past. Minor movements and even rolling over doesn't seem to damage the process much. I don't think you should get too worried if you need to swallow or itch yourself, if you don't make a big deal about it I think it won't matter much.

The dreams themselves only seemed to be about five minutes long at a time, and none of them were particularly sharp. Two of them ended as I tried to leave my house and have an adventure, which is a standard problem for me - I think I get excited and it boots me out of the dream.

I hope this might help anybody still trying to get their lucid dreams going. I'm still not adept enough to have lucid dreams every week, let alone every day. Very few of the lucid dreams I do have are of the same quality of my first 'break-through' lucid dream, and most are disappointingly short.