I am by no means an expert but as far as i know: |
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I've read a few times that a common mistake is that people ought to try WILD when going to bed, while it's only/more useful when combining with WBTB. That being said, how come people are succeeding with inducing lucid dreams while staying awake when taking a nap? I suppose that REM cycles when napping don't differ from when being asleep in bed for 7-8 hours. When napping, you just wake up much faster. |
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I am by no means an expert but as far as i know: |
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That does explain it a bit, but I still don't understand why you skip the deep sleep when taking a nap. Does it have something to do with the amount of light shining through when taking a nap? Or is it because of the mindset you have when 'only' taking a nap? |
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I just think the body is wired to do it. |
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Could you tell me more about your naps, and how you manage to get lucid dreams during naps? I only had 1 LD so far, but after realizing it was a dream I instantly had a 2 sec transition to being awake, so no time to even think about stabilizing. |
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I'll tell you anything you want. I just need to get home from work. x'D I'll send you a message in 2-3 hours. |
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It is because the brain skims past the deep sleep since it has already had prior sleep (as many have already said that, I just feel like participating because participation is fun |
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Nice explanations there, buhl. |
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Thank you for your reply and that other thread you shared. That completely answers my question. I feel a little bit dumb now, I've should've searched before I posted this thread! |
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I didn't send you a message as promised, but i shall be excused! I was having a nap. xD |
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Atta boy! |
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Last edited by gab; 04-03-2013 at 09:32 PM.
Gives a great sense of accomplishment to have the great Gab evaluate my responses! |
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Last edited by Buhl; 04-03-2013 at 09:55 PM.
It probably also has something to do with the lighting conditions and the pineal gland being suppressed in regards to melatonin production and release. Melatonin suppresses REM sleep. See, the presence or absence of light naturally controls whether or not the pineal gland secretes melatonin, so at night melatonin is secreted and during the day it isn't. Thus, if you sleep during the day, you are more likely to sleep very lightly and there will probably some sort of REM activity. |
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Wow, thanks for your explaination. It seems you've got a fine method there, making lucid dreaming somekind of event to look forward to and spend that particular day with a full focus on what's about to happen in your dreams. |
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No problem! |
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Hey Buhl, |
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As someone who experimented with polyphasic sleep for about a month, I actually don't think it's totally necessary to use naps or WBTB for WILDs. It will definitely help, but my one and only WILD was actually done when going to bed normally for the night. That's probably because I trained my body to enter into REM sleep immediately upon falling asleep, and anyone could do that. Of course, I'm not as good at that as I was when I was sleeping polyphasically, but it still helps a lot, I think. |
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I also had my only WILD after going to bed normally. However, i didn't get more than 4 hours of sleep a night for an entire week leading up to it. So i am guessing it was possible because of some kind of REM rebound. |
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