 Originally Posted by paigeyemps
Sure! I do something like this every night. I would recall my goals in my head over and over and try to memorize them and think about my excitement to actually do them. It just helps remind you what to do in the event that you get lucid, since it's the last thing on your mind. Furthermore, using your goals as mantras even forces your subconscious to actually get lucid in the first place just because you wish to do those goals and it gives it a drive to get lucid in order to accomplish them.
To be honest, my sleep schedule is so whacked as well. Fortunately, i manage to get lucids every few days or so despite this. But i think part of the reason is that i am so used to this already that my body might have found a way around it something. Although a decent sleep schedule is not ABSOLUTELY necessary to get lucid, i highly recommend having a decent one since it not only keeps you well-rested and in pristine condition to achieve lucids, but it is also the best way to make the most out of your attempts. What i mean to say is, if you have a decent sleep schedule, you are in a far better position to evaluate your attempts and to tweak it around without having to worry if it was the quality of sleep that affected the attempt in a certain way. You know what i mean?
First I think you have to prioritize what you want and what you are willing to do with regards to lucid dreaming. If you have much effort left to spare, i would definitely suggest getting into ADA. In a nutshell, ADA helps you actually practice lucidity in waking life. And once you learn to be lucid in waking life, you will be so much better at being lucid in dreams. However, if you feel that it might be too mentally stressing, you can practice sporadic awareness as well: Puffin's DILD Guide - Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views (just scroll down to the SAT part)
¯\_(°‿°)_/¯ If you have any concerns, ask away or pm me. Seeya!
That answers a lot, to be honest. When I first started lucid dreaming, I read many lucid dreaming guides, but not in depths ones, and none gave in depth information on reality checking. They usually said no more than to question reality regularly, and gave me a few ways to reality check. Now that I've actually found more detailed guides, I'm only now realizing there are many individual methods to reality check, and this has thrown me off just a bit. I will try ADA sometime, because I've heard almost only great things about it, thought the tutorial you gave me sounds like a great method for me, and sounds like a medium between what I always did up until this last month or two and ADA. That helps quite a bit, thank you very much, that sounds like something that'd be pretty good for me.
Also, I was wondering something. I think about a month and a half ago, I had some pretty intense nightmares, the first in a long, long time. Going into lucid dreaming, I figured nightmares would be no big deal, since, by my logic, being in a nightmare would not only help me become lucid, but being lucid would help me eliminate the threat of the nightmare. So when these nightmares hit, one of them being pretty bad, I wasn't prepared. Although I personally am not sure that that could be why about a month ago my motivation suddenly staggered and my awareness fogged up, do you think maybe that could be the reason? I suppose it's absolutely more than possible, and maybe my own initial blind determination to LD has caused me to think that nightmares could never be an obstacle for me. Until about that month and a half ago, my determination was an absolute train, which was great, since, being new at lucid dreaming, I had the benefit of knowing I would LD no matter what. I've had a few LD's by now, but once that time period hit a month ago, I feel like my progress slammed straight into a wall and knocked itself out cold, which forced me to take a break. Of course, maybe I'm just making a big deal out of nothing, and I'm just going through a dry spell or something of that nature. If those nightmares were really the reason I've been feeling like that, is there any kind of remedy? It sure is disappointing when after being unerringly motivated for 6 or so months I suddenly feel unsure of how I'll do with lucid dreaming. Since the beginning, I've had one goal for lucid dreaming, and that goal still stands, but I just cannot, for the life of me, understand why I feel like I'm no longer near as motivated. And, of course, there doesn't really seem to be a way to "gain" motivation or determination, since those are the basic mental elements that go towards lucid dreaming. What I do have is a strong desire to get to my lucid dreaming goal - but I can't truthfully call it determination, so, funny as it sounds, I'm in reality determined to be determined. If that makes sense.
Sorry I'm asking so many questions, it just feels like after all this time I'm only now discovering the true amount of knowledge that lucid dreaming expands across. It seems like lately I just can't figure out what to do, whats going on with my progress in lucid dreaming, and when to ask for help. Although, for what its worth, that SAT tutorial sounds quite promising to me, and now I actually understand what a mantra exactly is. I see what you mean with making a sleep schedule, I think that while it may be a long time before I can actually seriously make a grounded schedule, I will be sure to at least narrow my schedule more. I suppose for now, going back into lucid dreaming, I'll probably work with SAT for a while, make a personal mantra, keep up with my journal, keep up my recall, and see if I can figure out why I suffered such a motivation hit. Thanks a ton, seriously, since I've joined this forum you've answered most of my questions, it helps to know that I'm not just throwing guesses at LD'ing myself.
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