^^ Hmm...
 Originally Posted by FryingMan
In short, some guy in a car practically side-swipes me, a pedestrian, I get angry and slap his car as it goes by. The driver gets mad at me, stops, gets out of his car, and pursues me (I think to fight).
I get scared, evade him, and run away.
So on the surface, I was "affecting" my "local reality", and by my reaction I caused a reaction in a DC, "affecting" him.
The angry DC then came at me, and "affected me" by my becoming scared and running away.
Since it was a non-lucid dream I thought this situation was "real."
I guess that is correct logically, but you are omitting the point that the entire dream is your local reality, while at the same time it is all a representation of you. So no, during a NLD, you are not affecting your local reality, nor it, you; it is all happening at once, in a single schema. Thinking it was real is a symptom of NLD's, and there is no reality going on at all (of course, that doesn't mean it won't sure seem real).
The RRC, to build self-awareness, is founded on this consideration of affecting one's "local reality." But in a dream, it seems to be "reality" and DCs can react just like a waking person would, and you to them!
The RRC is meant to give you a vehicle for understanding that, in a dream there is no interaction with an outside reality; it is all you. The wondering you are doing during a RRC in waking life will translate to realization in a dream that there really is no interaction, nothing existed a few minutes ago in this reality, and what you do in the next five minutes is infinitely variable and dependent only on your imagination and not on any given reality -- because you know that all of this is you, here & now. Now, this realization can only come after you know you are dreaming (aka, you are lucid), so the RRC really is not meant to be a technique for inducing lucidity from a NLD. I suppose, though, that, like the RC, it could have the mechanical side-effect of inducing LD's because it is causing you to look around and perhaps to remember, but that, just like the original RC, was not its purpose.
Be reminded also that I introduced the RRC as part a tool for WILD, and WILD by its nature means that you never lose lucidity throughout the dive; why would you need it (the RRC) to induce anything?
So, where in there would a heightened self-awareness kick in to result in lucidity? I mean, on the surface, I was "affecting others" and those others were in turn responding to me and "affecting me."
Nowhere. As I just said, with WILD lucidity is "kicked in" from the get-go. The RRC simply helps you to keep that lucidity strong by helping you to understand the nature of the dream as it forms around you, no matter how real, complex, or "not of you" it appears to be. It is not meant to create lucidity; only to refine and maintain it.
But obviously, since it was a dream, there was only me, but it didn't feel like only me, it felt like a waking life scenario with independent actors.
As it would. But if you were doing a successful WILD, you would not be in a NLD, so you would have a conscious foundation for understanding that this is not a waking-life scenario with independent actors. The difference is significant, and may be the reason we all attempt WILD's in the first place.
Would a heightened self-awareness result in me questioning my motives in hitting the car, and instead of running away, attempting to either apologize or engage with the angry DC?
It sure would, in waking-life as well!
And would I judge by his reaction to my own reaction whether or not this would be a dream?
Probably not, because any reaction DC-you or he makes during a NLD will seem just fine, but (again) I suppose that if you did a RRC during a NLD, there is a chance that you might find enough inconsistencies (i.e., a few minutes ago you were in bed, and not on this street) to become lucid, but you can also count on your dreaming mind to provide a full complement of non-lucid answers to your questions.
Or would it be a more subtle/elusive less intellectual "feeling" that this seems to be a dream?
Yes, that sounds good, though I would use emotional or visceral in place of intellectual.
I realize that the RRC is not meant to be an "in dream" state check. But I started thinking about this action/reaction/reaction sequence and got confused since it seems that this happens in dreams as well as in waking life, and wondered about the implications, if any, on the RRC.
It has no implication on the RRC, because the whole point of the RRC was to allow you a moment to step away from the action and wonder about it. and its implications. When you do this during a dream, lucidly, the implications are very different than they are in waking life.
Would the difference be that a developed self-awareness would bring mental attention to the action/reaction sequence, while undeveloped self-awareness just lets it occur without reflection? I can see that.
Sure.
But what I'm less clear about is just how the self-awareness reaches the conclusion that "this is all from me" (the dream) vs. "this is from outside of me" (waking).
Well, again, that is the point of the RRC, and the point of doing it when you are already lucid. When you are self-aware in a dream, the conclusion that "this is all from me" is self-evident, just as "I am but a participant in a greater reality" is self-evident during an RRC in waking-life.
tl;dr: The RRC was meant to be a self-awareness enhancing exercise, and not a self-awareness inducing exercise. Hence its introduction in a WILD class, because with WILD you theoretically never lose self-awareness. And though a RRC done non-lucidly during a NLD might induce lucidity just through expectation or accident, that is not its purpose.
I hope this made some sense, FryingMan, and advance apologies for the massive parsing!
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