 Originally Posted by Silence11
Well, in making a memory accessible you are, by definition, making memory accessible, don't you think? This is why I emphasize that the thing you choose to remember is irrelevant. Any memory you decide to recover is enough to bridge that gap between your consciousness within the dream and your storehouse of memories. It's not that my decision to remember the location of my physical body is of particular significance, it was only the easiest way for me to work back in my mind to retrieve a single memory. By that token, I could've attempted to remember the location of my car keys, or the name, breed and color of my dog, or the last known appearance of one of my relatives, etc. The content of the memory isn't the focus as much as the path to recovery of that memory, the process of remembering. In that sense, the only requisite to retrieval is that the process should be successful.
That makes total sense!
 Originally Posted by Silence11
Doubt shouldn't be an issue, if the process of retrieval resulted in success. The idea is to work backwards from your mind to your specific memory, any memory, but a true memory. Creating a false memory is proof that the link hasn't been established. You must be sure that the memory you've retrieved is a real memory you have, and only you can know that. When I work to remember the location of my physical body in a dream, the answer I come up with must be one obtained with careful thought. The process doesn't stop at the words spoken, but in the meaning behind them. In remembering, I use known images or the feeling of my body to give a validity and ensure the memory retrieved is real. I even trace my steps further back, not only stopping at a superficial location of my body, but about the place as well, whether it is my bedroom or not, in my house or someplace else, in what state (I'd been traveling lately, which is why I went that far back).
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
I think being doubtful about your memories while lucid may be a bit counter-productive if you are applying that logic to everything. If you are becoming lucid at a low-level for example, you may simply apply this logic without second thought on the logic itself, and doubt everything about your memories and never come to accept that some of them are indeed real/correct.
Yes, given the length of (my) dreams, it's true I don't want to spend much time focusing on doubt... and probably prioritize an "yes, and" attitude instead. Yet, lucid dreaming seems to depend greatly on skepticism... on the ability to be critical of our experience, especially our feeling that we are engaged with the physical world. From that dream, I did interpret my skepticism as an indicator of lucidity in the mist of sleep. To compare, I would find it lucid to be skeptical and critical of my attitudes and behaviours were I drunk (ex. This feels fun, but am I missing cues that others are finding my behavior inappropriate?"). Concretely, when I am drunk, I do check in with myself to make sure I am being polite and agreeable, because I realize I might be under false impressions. But, I agree that I don't want to be stuck on the "I can know nothing" infinity loop. But honestly, Silence, I'm not sure I believe I could ever be sure a memory is true or false within a dream. The thing is both true and false memories are constructed by our brain and the feeling that they are authentic is equally constructed by our mind. It generally works in our favor but in dreams, I experience a lot of false memories and beliefs within the dream and I barely have enough time to consider every factor that could help me disprove or support a memory. When, in waking life, I was the primary witness for a fight, when the other witnesses' reports created a false memory in my mind, it was incredibly difficult (and disturbing) to know the truth of what I had truly witnessed (to this day, my memory is messed up, and I have to rely on the surrounding facts to believe my original side of the story).
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
But this also has a flaw for me because I do have false memories, probably a fair bit more often than others do, and I often rely on my partner to correct these false memories, which has its own issues within the dreaming context. And for me, these are usually mid or long-term memories that have been distorted without my conscious realisation.
Exactly! In waking life, we have time to get to the bottom of things but I guess in dreams, we have to choose our battles. Anyway, there's no need to remember everything, or to remember everything factually in a dream. Only just improving our access to our memory should be beneficial. Anyway, I find that what I learn in previous dreams is more easily accessible in future dreams. Concretely, in dreams, I find it easier to remember dream memories than waking life memories, lucid or not. As it turns out, in non-lucid dreams, I am even likely to remember strategies I used in lucid dreams.
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
Without going too much into this, for me personally, even the thought of doubting that anything is real feels like it's not appropriate, in good part because I do consider dreams to be real; they are real experiences to me. For me it's more about, does reality conform to what it should during waking life? That's what I assess usually, the "consistency" of these fundamental laws. If I remember to notice that they don't seem to be functioning or have been altered within a given situation, then it's cause for me to question what's going on.
Sure, it's real like the experience of reading a book is real. It's real like my thoughts are real. But if there's a cat in a dream, in a book or in my thoughts, there's not a physical cat. With a physical cat, there are implications:
- The cat has "real" needs (it must be fed, must have water, shelter, a place to pee, environmental enrichment).
- The cat is permanent (not only persistent) and bound to space and time: it will be there even when I don't think about it and it won't appear when I do think about it if it is elsewhere. It will be there from it's birth until it's death and disintegration. And that's it.
- There are consequences and considerations. If I hit the cat, I have to accept that I am going to hurt it and it will possibly experience that hurt.
In a dream, in a book, in my thoughts, it's real and true that I can experience a cat, but that cat doesn't need me to do anything, it won't be affected by what I do, and it simply won't exist when I stop thinking about it. In those scenarios, what is affected is me. My experience is real so I am affected by it.
Real kind of has those implications. But I agree that I prefer using the word "material" or "physical" to denote the difference (though in dreams, there is an illusion of interacting with physical and material objects) so it does get confusing to try to maintain that illusion whilst being aware that it is an illusion (without the illusion breaking down).
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
...always finding that I either ramble or don't go into enough detail
Same 
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
but I was also unsure about whether you did want advice or not, since it seemed to me like you might be happy to simply celebrate your successes more than focusing on any specific issues. 
Advice are for sure welcome. I just like discussing these things. I think my writing style gives a "definitive" impression, like my mind is made up and I am just stating facts that are not to be questioned (haha, well, that's what I fear I come across as). My intention rather is to express where my thoughts are at at the moment. Writing helps me make sense of my thoughts and these discussion help me develop my understanding. So, here, I wasn't just celebrating but really just saying how I feel, see what others have to say, see what I have to say after and so on, haha 
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
What I wanted to go over on my scrapped replies, at least about the dream being "fickle"... This is all purely my opinion at this time; anyone is free to simply disregard/disagree with it of course.
There's no reason for us (me) to disregard your opinions. Don't apologize for participating 
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
And I personally think that, within dreams, we are often already in the middle of this type of associative chain, so in a way we also become deprived of the context that exists outside of that chain, i.e. outside of the dream's reality. But then when we get very clear dream signs this chain breaks up a bit and goes off into something else that may or may not lead to lucidity. Maybe I should refocus my own efforts on reshaping my associative memory, now that I'm thinking about it.
I agree with the associative chain. I agree that in the context of this associative chain, it might be more difficult to "associate" or "link" to waking life memory: If you are in your house, it's easy to make the connections to other memories: oh, yes, earlier I was right there in the kitchen making chicken tikka masala and earlier still I went to the garage, took, the car, and went to the nearby grocery store to buy the ingredients for said chicken tikka masala. If I am now fighting a diplomatic war with dolphins in a space desert, it might be more difficult to remember the tikka masala (via the associative chain). So, completely agreeing with you here.
About the dream sign, I wouldn't say it breaks anything off... because I would say the chain was already a complex tree with many branching chains (multiple different chains relevant at many moment: in one scene, there might be a family member, an dinosaur, a birthday cake and a baby. So it's really a mosaic. A dream sign will simply be such a piece of the mosaic. I wonder what you mean by reshaping your associative memory? I guess for me, I want my association with the lucid "aha" moment to not lead to a fickle dream. So, I'm adjusting this association by having this discussion and strengthening a different association: that the dream is persistent (because ideas can be persistent, because my mind is expert at creating continuous experience, because the associative chain can give structure to the dream). Is that the sort of thing you mean?
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
I think we could consider that dream reality isn't necessarily inconsistent, fickle or indecisive. Specific dream signs work because of association and therefore because of a less-conscious inner working of memory, I'd say.
Agreed!
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
We may associate a dream sign with, well, dreaming. So we have the association even while dreaming(!) that we may be dreaming if we see this sign... After some time this works just like reactive memory or muscle memory and we need to think less consciously about it, but it still leads to conscious thoughts! As a brief example, yesterday I had a few very specific RC moments to which I automatically knew to start doing my RC, and this lead me to consciously analyse what was going on and how "real" things were then.
Because of this "auto" or muscle-memory-like thing, when I've had lucid dreams my actions have often been pretty "random" in the sense that they weren't what I'd really want to do if I could stop and think about it and had I actually been awake and imbued with all the facilities of dream-reality anyway. What happened in most of those lucids for me was that I went along with a context that was semi-relevant to the dream or that was entirely relevant to the context of reality checking in itself; what I mean by this is that once I realised I was dreaming, my mind often still wanted to continue checking reality, which ends up leading down a path of actions that are in a sense, irrelevant, at least for the purpose of fulfilling waking desires related to lucid-dreaming.
There's something interesting here... Hmmm. Why did I drink before tackling this discussion haha, I was only supposed to watch Terrace House (a japanese reality TV show) but it's definitely made a challenge for me to respond haha. Hmm, if I understand, you're saying your associations to "lucid dreaming" lead to "dream stabilization" and "reality checking" and lead you away from other endeavours? Interesting.
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
In the end I had the same issue of not remembering "outside" of the dream, i.e. my long-term waking intents, but to less so than in the past and most of my lucid actions ended up being the result of thinking "well, I can't remember what I wanted to do, so I'll try some stuff", which in itself was a good step forward for me.
Right here with you on this!
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