A lot of people on this forum have reported that they have experienced the feeling that they can't move their body when they try to WILD. I'm pretty sure the majority of them have Isolated Sleep Paralysis (Body won't move while in NREM either waking or going to sleep, and if a person tries to move it's going to take everything in that persons will to break out of it. Also, that person DOES NOT have any other sleep disorders) which is true SP. When this happens, HH and HI can occur, but doesn't define it, and that's where a lot of people get things mixed up.
A WILD is a very hard technique for the great majority because of the discipline involved. However, people with isolated sleep paralysis (the population who have had the feeling where they can't move at all when they're going to sleep or waking up numerous times in their lives without attempting a WILD) tend to have an advantage. They know exactly how far they are in a transition because ISP acts as a good indicator to where they are in their phase, because it generally carries over and becomes REM Atonia.
The moderators can try to all limit the amount of inaccurate information out there, but it's best that the knowledgeable people who care about this subject take a stand. I'm going to address the people who've actually gone through it (paralysis), and make sure that what they know has happened to them wasn't something that's all in their heads. The bottom line is that a handful of people actually experience the inability to move while trying to WILD. They also experience it while trying to go to sleep and wake up.
Tutorials that mention SP often do not say, "hey is this is a WILD guide for people who suffer from isolated sleep paralysis" No...most of the time they generalize that "SP" is the next step. So that part has to be taken out or rewritten. It's the very reason why this thread was created in the first place. To address false information, and have it corrected and deleted. So the misinformed people who look at things will be enlightened along with the people who haven't read a single tutorial.
When I initially started out, I would wait solely for the onset of ISP to kick in because I could feel it. Like I said...it's a great indicator of when it's go time. I would just ride it out, and when it stopped. I would get out of my bed and literally be in the dream. Unfortunately, it doesn't work all the time. Over time, I noticed some of my WILDs didn't involve ISP whatsoever. That's when I began to differentiate the two. It could also the reason why a lot of people get caught up in talking about "waiting for sp". There have been many instances where I've gone through the transitional phase and sat there in darkness, because I was waiting for ISP. What I should have been doing is getting up out of bed and RCing.
more SP - Dream Journals - Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views
Lets find Kaomea...or not. - Dream Journals - Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views
I get true paralysis (ISP) all the time...there's a "sp*" tag in my DJ...sometimes HH/HI happen with them. I've been getting it all my life, and the basic thing that happens is I'm either falling asleep, or waking up and suddenly I can't move. I can open my eyes, but that's about it. My heart feels like it speeds up, and I feel like I can't breathe. Anxiety, caffeine and bad sleeping habits increase my frequency of having them. I have turned SP into WILDs, sometimes SP shows up randomly when attempting a WILD, and rarely I'll have a normal WILD without SP.
I have turned random SP episodes into WILDs by simply relaxing through it, and visualizing the scene or simply getting out of bed, when everything is over. The visualization part helps relieve some of the crazy things that go on during the 2-3 minute time frame that it happens, and it also, helps start a scene in a different location. Since everyone's eyes can open during SP the dreamer is more likely to have the dream start out in there room.
http://www.dreamviews.com/f41/verdic...0/#post1942590
I don't know how much of my success is dependent on SP itself. All I generally endorse when people ask me about WILDs (that doesn't seem to be mentioned in guides) is to have a consistent sleep schedule...IE if a person wakes up at 7AM during work/school, they need to do that every day including their days off so their sleep phases are close to textbook as possible for WBTBs. That and practice DILDs as a backup (roughly I have a 50/50 DILD/WILD ratio in over 300 lucids)
In closing I think the "sp" stuff people normally bring up, is just a transitional phase (HI, HH bells and whistles) before the dream starts. However, some people are really experiencing ISP during that occurrence, and that needs to be addressed.
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