I think it took me a good two months or so. The time it takes just depends on your motivation and where you were, in terms of ability to relax/stay still, before you learned about WILD. |
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Today is my first actual night trying WBTB in order to induce WILD, I woke up having about 5-6 hours of sleep then decided to go back to sleep and I couldn't seem to turn my mind off so I just thought forget it I'll just fall asleep naturally then in the middle of it I start feeling vibrations but didn't get past this step. |
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†NËM˧I§†-νείμειν
I think it took me a good two months or so. The time it takes just depends on your motivation and where you were, in terms of ability to relax/stay still, before you learned about WILD. |
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We all live in a kind of continuous dream. When we wake, it is because something,
some event, some pinprick even, disturbs the edges of what we have taken as reality.
Vandermeer
SAT (Sporadic Awareness Technique) Guide
Have questions about lucid dreaming? DM me.
It is hard for me to say. I approached it in a roundabout way. I always had spontaneous sleep paralysis that would lead to lucid dreams. I also did a lot of meditation. The two sort of intersected at some point, where I learned I could meditate into that familiar state that could lead me to lucid dreams. |
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I started getting them more when i gave up trying so hard. After 2 months of straight trying hard almots every day, I relaxed with the attempts and sure enough, one time when I least expected it to occur, it happened, and for the next coup;le of weeks I had WILD's or almost WILD's (meaning I got to the point of vibrations and transition but failed there). Now its been about a coup;e weeks since I've truly WILD'ed, pretty sad actually |
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Current goal: Learning pyrokinesis and FUS RO DAH
WILDs have always been elusive to me, mainly because I spend a lot of time experimenting than really perfecting a perfect method. I'm currently logging experiments in a journal that I hope to one day make into a PDF document for people to take my research and use it for their own training purposes. LDing is a really scattered ability, as everyone is different. So by gathering the most suggested techniques, supplements, etc and testing reactions it might help people gauge what's best for their own success. |
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My first WILDs were accidental; I didn't know what they were at the time. I had SP several times a week in my teens and I figured out that WILD was one way to get out of the annoying SP I hated so much. |
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DV Buddy: BlueKat
I got it after two weeks of trying! WOOT! |
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I followed CrazyInsane's CANWILD tutorial last week and got a very vivid lucid dream that following week (probably an OBE because everything was just freaking vivid). Still using his technique, just have to sleep for 5-6 hours instead of 4-5 hours xP |
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My first lucid dream was an accidental WILD.. good ol' alcohol |
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Well I was trying to WILD on and off for about a year, and honestly can't remember when I really got into it. I would say a good two months (most likely longer) in order to have a successful WILD. It usually doesn't take that long for most people, though. You just need to stick to it and stay confident! Good luck |
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For me, about 6 - 7 days - but please don't fall into the trap where you're comparing your progress in relation to others. Lucid dreaming is a journey of inward discovery and self exploration. It can be a very personal thing because you're learning about your body, your mind and sleep cycles. Lucid dreaming, in my opinion, is simply a by-product reward of this inward journey. So enjoy getting to know yourself from the inside out. |
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