I don't blame you at all for feeling this way - in fact, I think you're incredibly justified in this. Lucid dreaming practice is not for the faint of heart. I should know - my first 6 months of practice were incredibly fruitless, with me desperately trying every method I could find with little to no progress. So I definitely feel your pain, but 5 years and probably 400+ lucids later, I can definitely assure you that it gets better.
 Originally Posted by Skipper1100
My first reason starting out this avalanche effect of ranting that is about to ensue on this entry, is that people are having such a wonderful time with lucid dreaming. They try a method once and instantly they get 10 times better what they expected and it works for them like a charm.
While this is true, that there are people who get immediate amazing success without any effort, I assure you that they are in the minority. In fact, in this thread over here, you can see that not many of our users got lucid in the first week of effort, with the largest group falling in the "3 months or more" category. I've even seen threads of people who spent a year or more before they finally had a breakthrough, and still believed it was worth it when they did. The truth is that everything when it comes to lucidity is different for everyone, but trust me when I say that you are not alone in not having success immediately. Which brings me to my next point:
 Originally Posted by Skipper1100
Third reason, and oh man this one is a big one. The information surrounding these techniques, are so unclear and so confusing that I'd probably have a better chance of being a rocket science professor.
I can tell you exactly why this is - it's because lucidity is so different for everyone. People trying to make tutorials for these are trying to make sense of a completely sensory experience and put it into words, which is darn near impossible to do fully. It's like trying to describe the color red to a blind person - sure, you might be able to draw comparisons to give an idea of the concept, but you'll never be able to clarify it in a way that's the same as experiencing it. On top of this, lucidity is also different each time for each person. So tutorial writers are trying to generalize all of their experiences (with no two ever being exactly the same) and summarize it into some kind of consistent method, which is again darn near impossible.
But here's the beauty in this: because it's impossible to fully boil lucidity down to a single method or multiple methods, you don't have to constrain yourself to a single method or multiple methods. Although the tutorials you find can be a good starting place, the majority of lucid practice is experimentation - finding the way that works best for you. In fact, sticking to the method to a tee is probably one of the worst things you can do, because then you get the anger from feeling like "I did everything right by the book, why did it not work?" With experimentation, you have the freedom to say "Okay, that didn't work last night, let's try something different tonight," in a Thomas Edison-esque "1000 ways not to make a lightbulb" scenario. So if 30-minute WBTBs make you unable to fall asleep, try doing 10 or 15 minutes instead. If you wanna try internal awareness instead of external during your reality checks, you can do that. Think of tutorials less like a concrete recipe to be followed, and more like a "serving suggestion" you might see pictured on the front of the box.
 Originally Posted by Skipper1100
A method like WILD, where I attempted painfully for weeks on end to stay the HECK still as calmly as possible to get into sleep paralysis. I woke up in sleep paralysis one day, and I found that every thing was super vivid, but I didn't turn it into a lucid dream, I just went the hell back to sleep. In the sleep paralysis however, I didn't see all this film flam like "shadow people" and "a dark figure hovering over your body". I saw my dirty clothes written room in it's fullest, just as bland as it is when I go to sleep in it. People definitely over hyped sleep paralysis. They really want people to sit up here and believe that when you enter sleep paralysis that you are preparing for hell it's self. Maybe some people have actually been abducted by aliens in a sleep paralysis episode, and are scarred because of that, I can understand that, but people always seem to expect that the worst of the worst is going to happen to them, when all they have to do is try it and face that fear.
The whole "lying completely still" and "having to enter sleep paralysis for WILD" are both common misconceptions that we've been trying to break for the past few years, but are unfortunately still perpetuated by places like Nick Newport's Lucidology*. In truth, sleep paralysis is not only not required for WILD, but it's rare to actually have it occur while you're consciously aware of it, and even rarer to have a scary experience with it. (I've personally had about 60 WILDs, where 3 involved SP and only 1 was scary - that is, until I realized it was just a dream and overcame the fear). I'd encourage you to read these two threads below, and try your best to forget the notion that you need SP for WILD:
http://www.dreamviews.com/general-lu...alysis-sp.html
http://www.dreamviews.com/wake-initi...explained.html
 Originally Posted by Skipper1100
Fourth reason is motivation. I have lots of motivation, I managed to stay here and attempt no matter how many times I failed, and I won't quit if anything, I won't give up no matter what happens.
This makes me incredibly hopeful for your chances, that you've still stuck with it after 8 months. But at the same time, bottling up 8 months of anger at the way your practice is going can be harmful to your chances. Obviously, venting your frustrations in this thread is good to get it off your chest, but you still may have that ingrained negative schema towards going through the motions like you have. My advice would be to take a step back from it for a couple days/weeks, and just focus on releasing your stress and getting a good night's rest that entire time. Get back to seeing sleep and dreams as a positive experience, instead of a chore that you have to manipulate to what you want.
 Originally Posted by Skipper1100
Second reason, 99% of my dreams are just so unclear, so blurry to the point where it would be comparable to me strapping on a blindfold, and another blindfold on top of that, trying to look at a slightly less black, very small dot in my peripheral vision.
Once you've decided you've had a long enough break and feel ready to try lucidity again, this is what I would suggest working on next, before even trying to actually get lucid. You're honestly at a bit of an advantage, since you said you're remembering 5+ dreams a night - recall is often the hard part for most people. Obviously getting a dream journal helps, but there's more you can do to help with the vividness of your dream. One is to pick a dream that you'd like to have, and either during the day or before bed (or both), do your best to visualize that dream in your head in as much detail as possible, engaging as many senses as possible. So if I wanted to have a dream on a beach, I would picture the sun and clouds overhead, imagine the sounds of waves crashing and seagulls flying above, imaging the feeling of my feet pressing into the sand, etc. While doing this, reaffirm to yourself repeatedly that you will have this vivid dream tonight (similar to how you would reaffirm that you will become lucid tonight, but for now we wanna start small - gotta learn to walk before you learn to run). Do this for a couple minutes each day, and/or a couple minutes before you go to bed. Don't expect anything magic to happen right away, but over time you'll notice your visualizations (and therefore, your dreams) get more vivid. I would also recommend reading this thread for more info on visualization practice.
So my recommendation for how to proceed would be this:
1) Take a break and focus on getting good, restful, stress-free sleep.
2) After the break, use visualization to focus on making your dreams more vivid, before focusing on lucidity.
3) Once you are happy with your vividness, try experimenting with different techniques (not necessarily by the book, though).
If you ever want to talk about anything lucid dreaming, we do have an IRC chat that you can join by following the instructions here (don't use the Chat button at the top, it's broken at the moment).
*Side note: In my opinion, don't follow ANYTHING from from Nick Newport - he's the main reason my first lucid took 6 months. All of his methods seem to revolve more around making you feel like you're getting close to lucidity, so that you're more willing to fork out the extra cash for "Part 2" to take it that last step. All of our main methods in our Induction Techniques forum are tried and true over years of experience from forum members, and the best part is that they're free - the way they should be. Just my personal opinion, anyway.
|
|
Bookmarks