 Originally Posted by InvisibleO
- I just have a small epiphany: Yesterday when I had the 3 dreams, 2 of them occurred **at the beginning** of the morning core. I know this because I always look on the clock after waking and recording a few bits. So You are absolutely right, these are most likely no natural awakenings in the sense that the sleep is over, I am waking up myself. I think it is a combination of wanting to record them + getting excited + being not fully relaxed when I go into sleep (I feel pretty relaxed in the moment of going to sleep, but i think subconsciously it is as if I expect difficulty attaining and then keeping lucidity, I guess) - also i dont set a strong intention of LDing consciously, i only suggest to myself to remember my dreams and am looking forward to them, but probably during the day subconsciously I set a pretty strong intention to LD because I think about it so often).
I have grown convinced that there's something about the way we learn about and practice lucid dreaming that inherently creates this subconscious expectation because of the lucid dream police trend I've seen from so many people. What I call the "lucid dream police" is when someone becomes lucid, and the dream characters start to oppose it, and stop them from doing this or that.
I think it's because we treat lucid dreaming as abnormal, as unnatural, for the elite, for the rare interested person. I like to think that all dreams are conscious dreams: even in non-lucid dreams, we are conscious enough to be aware of the dream. If we were unconscious during dreams, we wouldn't be seeing and feeling things, making decisions, thinking, and remembering. Lucid dreaming only means we recognize the experience as a dream, which honestly, doesn't require much more awareness. We've dreamed every day of our life, and we easily recognize it subconsciously, I think.
I dreamed last night that I got caught by an enemy and they injected me with my own blood, and then my corporal experience was weird, so I started narrating over the dream and saying I was now a spiritual being, that my gravity was opposite everyone else's and that I couldn't exist in water. And then as I said those things, I would experience them. I wasn't "lucid", but I was deciding the dream at this point. Doing this, then, thinking, wow, that's crazy, what if someone pulls me underwater, I will die!" I was simply engaged, but subconsciously, I clearly recognized I was dreaming or else I wouldn't be narrating and deciding the dream.
In that sense, lucid dreaming is not abnormal or unnatural. It is anything but. Nonlucid and lucid dreams are natural dreams. Our awareness belongs to dreams.
We shouldn't have a sense, as we become lucid, that we've woken up from unconscious slumber, that we are now in the unknown territory of lucid dreaming. It's a continuous experience. We've been dreaming all our life. No reason to wake up now all of a sudden.
 Originally Posted by InvisibleO
Could You please elaborate on what you mean with I could be [too alert, too awake]?
I don't even know. But in sleeping, although we are evidently conscious, our brain has been numbed for sleep. Much of our cognition has been dimmed. I'm not sure how it is, but I imagine if your cognition is too highly activated, the brain might begin to wake up. For example, if you have an anxiety dream, you're likely to be nearly awake. And don't take what I am saying too seriously because I am only speaking from intuition. I don't know the facts. But I do think "lucid dreaming" requires a balance of cognition (higher than in the dream, lower than awake). But nothing that I would consciously think about.
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