 Originally Posted by Pavischan
...Now, I can't remember exactly how the whole thing went from this point but the feeling I got immediately thereafter was that I found myself straight in the dream scene from a moment to another without me being able to acknowledge it. Even the room I woke up in in my dream was pretty much the same as its real counterpart, took me a few moments to realize what'd happened lol.
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Sometimes it's not easy to realize you are already in a dream, dreaming, since your mind is still awake and you have same thoughts you had just moments ago while you were awake. It's easy to lose awareness here, thinking it didn't work and that you are still awake, give up and "go to sleep". But you seem to have realized that you are dreaming. It sounds like a WILD to me. Even if you dozed off for a few seconds just before you realized you are dreaming, it's still a WILD. That's because losing awareness for a few seconds, just to regain it again, and dipping down into a dream again, only to come up and realize you are dreaming, it's common way for a WILD to go. And being in your dream room is another tip off for this to be a WILD. They often start in your bedroom.
I agree that it's good practice not to focus too much on any one kind of hypnagogic hallucinations. They could be simple visuals, more evolved images and videos, sounds, sensation of your body moving, sinking, floating, flying, or vibrations. I do love to experience them, but it's best to just observe them passively and not get excited when they happen. The reason why it's best to not expect them is, that they may not happen. Or they will happen, but very differently than last time. And if we wait for something to happen and it doesn't, it may give us false impression that we have failed. Not focusing on it is good, but HH provide great mile post to let us know where in the transition process we are.
Transition to a lucid dream via WILD can be full of sensations. And that's why I would definitely not call it "dead zone". I have experienced sensations here far more intense than any other waking life sensation ever.
Or it can be so subtle, that it's hard to realize it. I had missed a lots of opportunities to enter a lucid dream, even though I was already there. Only I didn't realize it. To help me with this, I'm using a mantra "I am dreaming". If I hear myself say this later on when I'm already dreaming, but I perhaps forgot what I'm doing, haha, this reminds me and I "realize" I am lucid. At that point I can just stand up into a dream scene which I can already see in front of me.
There are other ways to enter a lucid dream, as you can see in this post http://www.dreamviews.com/wake-initi...into-wild.html
Good luck and have some awesome transitions and lucids!
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