Hello everyone! It's me again lol |
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Hello everyone! It's me again lol |
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This is unfortunately one of the things I particularly struggle with myself; although I know what it's like to either be dreaming or be in a trance/visualisation, trying to simply imagine it in some way never feels the same and isn't something that really seems to work for me. |
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Check out the Tasks of the Season - Autumn 2022
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Singled out from some of my favourite quotes from Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: "Risks of [Planet] flowering: considerable. But rewards of godhood: who can measure? - Usurper Judaa'Maar: Courage: to question."
It can be tricky at first. I find the best way is to keep an open-mind and remember that the dream will feel completely real when you’re experiencing it so you could actually be dreaming right now, no matter how convinced you are. Feel that childlike excitement at the idea that maybe, just maybe none of this is actually real. It gets easier to believe the more lucid dreams you have as you learn just how easily you can be fooled and how magical it is to realise and become lucid. |
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It's just a little hack to help boost critical reflective attitude and make your reality checks more mindful. That's all it is. It's not the most important aspect of learning how to lucid dream. You can certainly learn to lucid dream without it. |
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Last edited by Hilary; 04-11-2022 at 11:46 PM.
Check out what's happening on Dream Views:
Tasks of the Season: Autumn '22
Tasks of the Year: 2022
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Check out my RC prompt background images. Build your prospective memory & critical reflective attitude.
Alright so I want to thank y'all for your advice, it is greatly appreciated! |
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There are a lot of techniques you can do for memory building that specifically aid lucid dreaming. My favorite is where you select certain reality check triggers beforehand and attempt to RC every time you see/hear/feel/etc the trigger. This builds prospective memory - a very useful type of memory for lucid dreaming. The difference between this activity and building critical reflective attitude is that CRA uses dreamlike/weird events in reality, which can have an unpredictable frequency. You'd be lucky to have 1 a day, generally speaking. This, however, is intended to give you many opportunities to RC every day, with the downside that the triggers are not particularly dreamlike or weird. It's not for CRA as much. |
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Check out what's happening on Dream Views:
Tasks of the Season: Autumn '22
Tasks of the Year: 2022
Read Along
Check out my RC prompt background images. Build your prospective memory & critical reflective attitude.
Thanks for sharing! Although I don't think I'll be performing that technique either, why? In the past few days I've been thinking about creating my own approach to attaining lucidity. It's still in the works but so far I've come up with my own little "lucid mindset" which involves frequently questioning reality with a little bit of awareness on top, and a hardcore reality check routine. What do you think? |
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Whatever floats your boat. Just so you're aware, most of the things that I posted as advice are not coming from me - they come from either Stephen Laberge's book Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming, or Robert Waggoner's books (Lucid Dreaming Plain & Simple; Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self). |
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Last edited by Hilary; 04-16-2022 at 01:16 PM.
Check out what's happening on Dream Views:
Tasks of the Season: Autumn '22
Tasks of the Year: 2022
Read Along
Check out my RC prompt background images. Build your prospective memory & critical reflective attitude.
Just because we physically wake up from a dream doesn't necessarily mean that we have realized that we have woken up from a dream. In a way, physically waking up from a dream and mentally waking up from a dream are different concepts. But, we don't necessarily have to physically wake up from a dream before mentally waking up from a dream. I've had dreams where I've become lucid due to non-lucidly thinking about why I haven't woken up from the dream yet. I mentally woke up from these dreams before physically waking up from them. This is because I anticipated waking up from these dreams. Maybe a way to motivate ourselves to anticipate waking up from a dream is to try to do a reality check as soon as possible after waking up from a dream. It would be practice for awareness and memory and if we could realize more quickly that we have woken up from a dream, then it would make DEILD easier, opening up another possible way to become lucid. |
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Sorry if I seem annoying but I really hope y'all's advice will finally get me going with my LD practice. |
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Last edited by WildWolf1; 04-20-2022 at 08:32 PM.
Merging to the other thread. |
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With Dreaming you need to start small and work hard grow your lucid dreaming lifestyle...
I'm not just a lucid dream, I'm a Somnonauts!!
“It’s... your conscience. We don’t talk a lot these days.”
How familiar are you with your own dreams? Have you recalled a good amount and got a feel for how your dreams behave and play out? This is important because when you become more familiar with what your dreams look like you can better recognise when you’re having one. The more dream signs and recurring themes you can identify the more trained your detective mind will be at spotting dreamlike subtleties in dreams and waking life to RC to. |
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This is the problem, I can't tap into critical awareness. It's like I can't get out of "auto-pilot" mode and enter "detective" mode. idk if there's a solution to this, but I thought that perhaps faking criticality will over a period of time lead me to being genuinely critical/lucid/observant. |
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You are your own obstacle here. You need to open your mind to that fact that right now, this very moment while you read this post, you could be dreaming. I could be a dream character right now. Whose to say I'm not? Let go of your assumptions. Start thinking, maybe I could be wrong. It's a sort of humility - develop this humility. It is very helpful to have the experience happen to you in a dream, because you realize just how silly and stupid we humans can be. We are absolutely certain we are awake, and are completely dumbfounded when we find out we're actually dreaming. The experience is unforgettable, and teaches a very strong lesson: you really don't know. You really don't. |
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Last edited by Hilary; 04-23-2022 at 02:59 AM. Reason: fixed- *feeling with thinking
Check out what's happening on Dream Views:
Tasks of the Season: Autumn '22
Tasks of the Year: 2022
Read Along
Check out my RC prompt background images. Build your prospective memory & critical reflective attitude.
Have you invested in books about critical thinking? I'm sure there are helpful hints there. It's a skill that you can not be lazy on as a lucid dreamer. No one said that lucid dreaming is easy. Also important is resilience!! It is an underrated thing in lucid dreaming because you really need to do that when things go wrong. For most people that are starting out, it isn't easy... Even if you are an experienced lucid dreamer, you can run into problems. Get back up and dust yourself off and try again. |
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With Dreaming you need to start small and work hard grow your lucid dreaming lifestyle...
I'm not just a lucid dream, I'm a Somnonauts!!
“It’s... your conscience. We don’t talk a lot these days.”
When you get that trigger to question reality, stop everything. Stop what you’re doing, stop what you’re thinking about and bring yourself fully into the present moment, into the NOW, almost like you’re stepping back from reality, choosing no longer to participate in it but to observe it instead. Now you’re detached and aware, start observing reality as it is in real time and examine your situation and look for clues that you could be dreaming. Don’t dismiss it quickly, linger in the NOW for a short time and look upon reality like it could actually be a dream. That’s the best way I can sum up the “feeling” of getting into that reality check mindset. |
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I'm not a Zen master, I can't just stop thinking and become detached from reality on command. I was thinking that instead of becoming aware of the present moment I could try to frequently ask several critical questions such as "What was I doing just now?". If so, what other questions should I ask myself? |
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As Tiktaalik said above, it's not about being a Zen master; it's really more about letting go of your focus on whatever you're doing, to give room for asking those very same critical questions. I sometimes handle it not by completely stopping what I'm doing but by paying close attention to a few things, such as what I'm thinking, paying attention to what's around me, or to what has changed/hasn't changed in the last few moments, and to how/if the environment changes with my thoughts. |
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Check out the Tasks of the Season - Autumn 2022
Suggest new tasks
Singled out from some of my favourite quotes from Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: "Risks of [Planet] flowering: considerable. But rewards of godhood: who can measure? - Usurper Judaa'Maar: Courage: to question."
Check out what's happening on Dream Views:
Tasks of the Season: Autumn '22
Tasks of the Year: 2022
Read Along
Check out my RC prompt background images. Build your prospective memory & critical reflective attitude.
You don’t have to be a zen master to be able to become aware and lucid in dreams, I’m certainly not! What I described above is just how it feels but to become aware of your present moment you only really need to stop what you’re doing and bring your full attention to your surroundings and observe them, you’re then viewing the world in the present moment. It’s a little trickier to do when you’re at work or watching TV as your mind is heavily distracted, so it can take a bit of willpower to pull yourself away and become fully aware, but it gets easier with practice. In a dream you’ll be heavily distracted by an engaging dream plot so you have to be able to pull yourself out of auto-pilot to become aware that you’re actually dreaming. |
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Aight y'all, I've considered all of your advice and I think I can finally get going with my practice. So far I'll be going with periodically stopping what I'm doing to become aware of my surroundings (the mindfulness part) and look for clues that I'm dreaming while asking critical questions (the reflection part). Is this a good interpretation? |
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Last edited by WildWolf1; 05-02-2022 at 08:17 PM.
Yes WildWolf1, that seems fine. Just remember to be patient and to take it lightly too, putting in a lot of effort does not necessarily return an equal amount of reward, if that makes sense. Taking things easy also helps with reducing any frustrations or specific obstacles that may come up, too. |
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Check out the Tasks of the Season - Autumn 2022
Suggest new tasks
Singled out from some of my favourite quotes from Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: "Risks of [Planet] flowering: considerable. But rewards of godhood: who can measure? - Usurper Judaa'Maar: Courage: to question."
It will also help if Practice regularly, but not doggedly. Do not set a deadline and be patient instead. The first lucid dream will definitely come! |
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With Dreaming you need to start small and work hard grow your lucid dreaming lifestyle...
I'm not just a lucid dream, I'm a Somnonauts!!
“It’s... your conscience. We don’t talk a lot these days.”
Also, remember to set the intention to do the check before you fall asleep, as if you’re setting a mental alarm clock that will go off during the dream. Good luck. |
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Okay so first I want to thank y'all for your continued support. Now I'm tuning into this thread again to look for some additional tips on effectively examining my state, since I thought I had everything in place, but now that I've tried the method y'all told me about new questions have arised. |
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