 Originally Posted by Elaol
I had the best dream recall last night. 4 dreams, but each half page long. They were so vivid, first time I felt warmth and touch during non-lucid sex dreams. That made me thinking, last night I was pretty good at company GRC. I was walking with my friend and I stayed focused on GRC 50% of the time. I think that is pretty good. I also meditated two times, so I definitely worked on awareness.
That made me thinking of FryingMan's unified theory. Perhaps I should really pay attention to the fundamentals. So, here is the plan:
1. Work towards two half-hours sessions of mindfulness of breath
2. At least once every hour reflect on the current state
3. About recall, idk, maybe I should every night try to relive that day
What do you guys think? Is this OK?
Excellent, great news on the recall! That says your dreaming ("dream awareness" ala Sensei) is in a good place, keep it up!
My "unified" theory has two parts: describing (my framing of) the fundamentals, and doing it both day and night. Don't try to be "different" at night to get lucid, instead, try to be lucid 24x7 so that the night is not really much different than the day in terms of your mindset.
I think seated mindfulness sessions are very good, they contribute towards all the wonderful benefits including growth of the pre-frontal cortex (as I understand it). Then try to maintain that attention during your "normal" experiences. That's the attention I'm talking about: attention and reflection and recall of your life's experiences, every day. The more continuously you can do them, the better. But ease into it so that it's not overwhelming.
For recall, think about, at least some times during the day, maintaining a connection with your memory. Like, when you're going somewhere, keep in mind both where you have just been and where you're going. Try to "see" or "feel" the places you have moved through in the last (15 minutes, for example). Also what you said or did or experienced. Then a "day review" at bedtime is also very valuable to open up that access to memory going into the dreaming portions of your night. Something I do from time to time is pick out particular memories from the day that I resolve I will include in my evening review, then in that review see if I can remember them all. Using a mnemonic approach like the "peg system" is extremely helpful in doing this.
Ultimately, I think the goal is to maintain a continuous blend of all 3. It's not that "ok, this is the attention hour, then this is the reflection hour, then this is the recall time," but try to keep all of them active. I certainly don't do this all the time every day, it usually ends up in sections as I remember to do them. But I think that's the ultimate goal. Being able to keep a portion of your access to memory alive while in the dream state is very challenging but will yield lots of lucid fruit as you remember your goal of being lucid in the dream state.
Do what you can. Be confident that if you're working on the fundamentals, maintaining strong intent/desire/excitement about dreaming, the LDs will come when they do. Feel free to emphasize portions you feel you need to work on more. For me, I know I'm strong in attention and recall, but weak in reflection and [night-time]intention, goal-setting and night work/WBTB. LDing needs them all coming together. We each need to be our own analyst and honest evaluator since only we can see into our dreaming experiences.
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