Showing posts with label lucid dream stabilisation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lucid dream stabilisation. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 August 2019

Experiencing a Lucid Dream

If you have never experienced a lucid dream before, your first question is likely to be 'what does a lucid dream feel like?' Becoming consciously aware that you are dreaming is akin to entering a portal to a completely different world, where your ultimate fantasies can materialise and become 'true'. The laws of physics can break down or be manipulated in ways your waking mind may not be able to comprehend, but in a lucid dream, you experience it as if it is your actual reality. The lucid dream world is responsive to your thoughts, feelings, wishes and desires. I would liken it to a movie plotline where you are writing the script while simultaneously experiencing and observing it unfold before you. 


The clarity, stability and intensity of the lucid dream experience is variable and dependent on the dreamer maintaining peak levels of conscious awareness during the lucid dream experience. 

Our waking reality is shaped by our sensory interpretation of our environment, receiving stimulus via sight, sound, touch, smell and taste which our brain processes, to put it very simply. Our dreams 'sythentise' or artificially create these sensory experiences, using our memories and imaginations as their source material. 

I will give you one dream example of my own to illustrate an oddity here. Dreamers tend to achieve successful flight in a dream by moving their arms in a swimming motion (and often the front crawl/butterfly movement) rather than flapping their extended arms, like a bird would. This is because humans have never experienced the true feeling of achieving organic flight (using only their own body) in reality. Very few humans have experienced the sensation of being weightless, or suspended above solid ground with no support to hold them up other than their own body, as would be the case if in mid-air. The most similar physical sensation a human is likely to have in their memory is being in water - and keeping afloat by swimming. Therefore, our dream self is able to use that real life memory of a similar or analogous physical sensation to 'create' that 'reality' in the dream world. 

Sometimes the synthesised physical sensations of the lucid dream world are especially intense, pleasurable and stimulating. Sensations may be far more heightened than the dreamer experiences them in reality. This is why some people liken lucid dreaming to a psychedelic drug trip - but unlike recreational substances, lucid dreaming presents absolutely no physical risk and is much safer for your mental health and wellbeing! 


Many lucid dreamers (or 'oneironauts' to use the proper term) pursue lucid dream scenarios in which they can indulge and satisfy their primal instincts and urges, due to the intensified, yet often highly realistic physical sensations of the lucid dream. 

One of the most common physical sensations of a lucid dream is heightened colour - everything might appear more vivid. I have also noticed the malleable nature of vision in a lucid dream - people (dream characters) and objects/environment appear solid and realistic when looking at them directly, but can also shift and transform into other things - sometimes because I consciously will them to (dream control) and sometimes because the dream (i.e. my subconscious) is itself creating and recreating the fabric of the dream around me. 


When first entering or waking up from a lucid dream, my vision goes blurry or darkened. Sometimes my field of vision shrinks from full-screen to a letter-box, framed in black. If I have just entered the lucid dream and I am finding it hard to focus my vision and stabilise the lucid dream so that I can enjoy it, I order myself to have clarity - and this does improve the clarity of my vision and other physical sensory experiences so that I can begin a lucid adventure.


The taste of food in lucid dreams is often an incredibly heightened experience - with the added bonus of having no effect on our nutrition or health. When eating a familiar food in a lucid dream, the flavour and sensation is maximised based on our memory of what that food tastes like in reality. If trying a new food for the first time in the lucid dream, the taste of that food is shaped by our waking expectations of what that food might taste like. As your 'dream taste buds' won't become accustomed to the flavour of the food in a lucid dream, each bite or swallow will be just like your very first experience. 

When I hear the voices of familiar real life people - or real life fictional characters - in a lucid dream, their voices are typically extremely close to my waking knowledge of how they sound - even down to slight intonation and vocal patterns.

I use the physical sensation of touch in a lucid dream to stabilise it. It is essential for lucid dreamers to learn lucid dream stabilisation techniques as soon as they are beginning to induce lucid dreams. Lucid dreams are often very precarious and transient experiences - they are difficult to maintain (often due to increased arousal, which wakes you up) and short in terms of time spend lucid. The REM (Rapid Eye Movement) stage in the sleep cycle is when all dreams take place - this stage of sleep is characterised by increased brain activity and is very close to wakefulness. 

A lucid dream is even closer to the waking state, as we have even more increase in brain activity - including activation of some parts of the brain which are not routinely active in normal, non-lucid dreams. Stabilisation techniques help you calm down and lower your arousal so that you can maintain the lucid state and prolong it. One of the best stabilisation techniques relies on the physical sensation of touch. When lucid, I often experience some vague, shadowy sense of what is happening in my real life reality - typically, this will be the feeling of the weight of my real life duvet on my body, sometimes over part of my face. This is because the lucid dream is on the borderlines of sleep and wakefulness and real life sensory input is competing with that synthesised in the dream world.

To stabilise the lucid dream, and distract myself from the real world stimulus which is penetrating my dream and threatening to wake me up, I either rub my hands together, or rub my hands on my thighs. Another highly effective technique is to touch something in the lucid dream environment, such as a wall or a tree. 

Another thing which can lead to premature waking from a lucid dream is heightened arousal - in other words, too much excitement at the realisation (conscious awareness) you are experiencing a lucid dream. Remaining calm in addition to stabilising the dream using other techniques as described above can help you to combat premature waking from a lucid dream.


You can feel pain or unpleasant physical sensations in a lucid dream. In a normal, non-lucid dream, your subconscious is responsible for controlling all of the physical sensations of the dream. In a lucid dream, even if you haven't mastered dream recall, your conscious mind begins to intervene, tweaking the dream and your experience of it. 

Unless you have chosen to actively seek out pain or unpleasant physical sensations, any pain in a lucid dream is likely to be the product of your subconscious. You might have a strong expectation or preconception that pain will result from a certain scenario, and therefore your dream reflects this expectation by giving you the physical sensation of pain. You will have established neural pathways for pain, based on real life experiences. So dreams can replicate the physical sensation of pain in highly realistic ways. In a lucid dream you can command or will yourself to stop feeling the pain, and focus your attention on something else, which is often effective. In the lucid dream state, while your physical experience of pain may be extremely uncomfortable, it is not accompanied by the psychological fear that you have sustained some form of tangible physical damage or harm - the experience of pain is consequence-free. 

I see a lucid dream as an opportunity to have a conversation with my subconscious mind. You can ask the lucid dream to show you something - such as 'show me what I want most in life' or 'show me my deepest fear' etc - whatever the lucid dream shows you could be a 'truth' which your real life waking mind has not been able to communicate to you as clearly as your subconscious can in the lucid dream state. 

Another way I attempt to communicate with my subconscious in a lucid dream is via dream characters. When I meet dream characters in lucid dreams, depending on the scenario, I may attempt to exert lucid dream control over the dream character, but at other times I allow them to have full autonomy. Having a conversation with an 'autonomous' dream character is essentially a conversation with your subconscious, as the dream character is a projection of your subconscious, as is the very fabric of the dream itself. All dreams are reflections or projections of our subconscious, but if we are not lucid, we are only aware of what our subconscious might have been trying to tell us after we wake up and analyse/interpret our dream. This becomes difficult when we do not necessarily have perfect dream recall. 


The beauty of a lucid dream is the fact that your conscious brain is 'awake' or active and therefore you can not only remember your lucid dream almost as well as any waking life experience (at least this is my experience of lucid dreaming), but you have access to at least some of your logical, fact-checking mental abilities, so you can engage with and question what is happening in the lucid dream and manipulate events to suit your own agenda, which is not possible in a normal, non-lucid dream.

Due to the fluidity of the lucid dream experience, our perception of the space we inhabit is not grounded in the same way it is in waking reality. In a lucid dream our location awareness is limited to whatever we are focusing on at that particular moment. You are so absorbed in your immediate space and time that you almost forget the wider world which exists beyond it. If I become lucid in my bedroom, I am only aware of my direct vicinity (and what lies just beyond it) if I am specifically focused on that. If my focus shifts, purposefully or otherwise, my location is not solid or reliable - and therefore it can shift and transform. 


Once you have mastered lucid dream control, you can use the malleable nature of the lucid dream world to your advantage - you can command/will your lucid dream environment to change using lucid dream visualisation techniques, or you can use doors to portals into new lucid dream locations.

Memory in dreams works differently to memory in waking reality, because certain parts of the brain are inactive, even in a lucid dream. In normal, non-lucid dreams it is common to have little to no access to your real life waking memories - you may even experience false memories which link to the particular dream scenario you are experiencing. Additionally, it is often very difficult for the memory of the dream itself to consolidate in the short-term memory, due to the fact that our brains do not need to remember our dreams - the dream process itself is psychologically significant, but upon waking, there is no necessity for us to remember exactly what happened in our subconscious minds while asleep - the dreamwork has already done it's 'magic', so to speak. The fact dream memories are so flimsy and transient is why it is essential to record dreams immediately upon waking before the dream memories fade and slip away forever.


In a lucid dream, memory functions are slightly improved - at least in my experience, my memory of the dream itself is pretty accurate and clear, and I tend to have decent access to my real life waking memories while in the lucid dream. However, I only tend to have memories of things I am actively focusing on or thinking about in the dream - unless I am specifically attempting to access a particular waking memory, it is simply absence or out of reach. This may vary for other dreamers. One way to improve memory in the lucid dream state is to set yourself a lucid dream intention - while awake set yourself a goal for your lucid dream and then when you find yourself in that lucid dream state, recall your set lucid dream intention and attempt to will it into existence. For example, you might set a lucid dream intention to travel to a specific location, meet a specific dream character or ask your subconscious a specific question. Some people refer to these lucid dream intentions as 'lucid dream goals'. Managing to achieve a lucid dream goal is immensely rewarding and a sign that your lucid dreaming skills are improving. 

Dream control is a cognitive i.e. a mental process which requires intention and will-power to achieve. Many beginner lucid dreamers conflate lucidity with dream control, but the 2 things are not synonymous. A lucid dream without any dream control at all is still a lucid dream. Sometimes letting go of the desire to actively manipulate a dream and letting your subconscious desires shape the lucid dream narrative can be very illuminating and insightful, as well as exciting. There are many techniques which can help you improve dream control and manipulation. The only limits to what you can achieve in a lucid dream are your preconceptions, expectations and powers of imagination. 


Once you are able to induce lucid dreams (or if you naturally, spontaneously experience them, but want to explore dreamwork further), you can develop a lucid dream skill set which will intensify, enhance and enrich your lucid dream experiences. This lucid dream skill set includes:
  • Experience a fully lucid dream
  • Improve the clarity and stability of a lucid dream
  • Prolong the lucid dream
  • Accurately control physical movements within a lucid dream
  • Learn lucid dream visualisation techniques
  • Learn to change the lucid dream location/environment and travel to a desired place/time
  • Meaningfully interact with lucid dream characters
  • Enter a dialogue with your subconscious from within a lucid dream
If you are new to lucid dream induction or dreamwork, there are some indicators as to whether you might be particularly receptive or predisposed to lucid dreaming. That said, anyone can learn how to induce lucid dreams, it just takes more time and effort for some people. If any of the following apply to you, you might want to consider learning how to induce lucid dreams and improve your lucid dream skill set:
  • You experience vivid and intense daydreams - are you able to visually create a fantasy scenario in a day dream? This skill makes it easier to induce lucid dreams using both the DILD (Dream-Initiated Lucid Dream) or WILD (Wake-Initiated Lucid Dream) induction techniques
  • You have strong dream recall - do you recall a dream most nights? Dream recall is essential for all dreamwork
  • You wake up naturally (without an alarm) often - waking up naturally from REM sleep (the longest, most fruitful stage of REM sleep occurs right at the end of the sleep cycle, just before you would naturally wake up) aids dream recall - waking up from an alarm is intrusive and interrupts your dreaming, causing you to potentially lose your dream memories
  • You experience vivid and intense dreams - this is the perfect set up for progressing onto lucid dream induction. Vivid and intense dreams are a signal that you are getting sufficient, good quality REM sleep and have good dream recall/memory - both essential for lucid dream induction!
  • You have intentionally woken yourself up from a nightmare or night terror in the past - this is a sign that you possessed clarity of thought in the dream state at a time when you needed to exert some control or manipulation over your dream
  • You have previously experienced lucid dreams - not only are you more likely to be able to identify the lucid dream state (or semi-lucid state), but you will already have a firm belief in the possibility of lucid dreaming. Remember preconceptions and expectations are often what hold us back, so knowing you have experienced a lucid dream in the past can increase your confidence that it is possible again in the future
  • You experience false awakenings, out-of-body experiences (OBEs) and/or sleep paralysis - these provide excellent gateways into a lucid dream and therefore are perfect for lucid dreamers to harness and use to their advantage in lucid dream induction
  • You practice meditation or mindfulness - meditation aims to increase conscious self-awareness which is also key to lucid dreaming. Many aspects of lucid dream induction require increasing conscious self-awareness, reflection, visualisation and critical thinking. Some lucid dream induction techniques incorporate methods which are based around meditation
  • You have a strong desire to lucid dream - our dreams are created from not only our subconscious, but also our real life waking experiences, thoughts, emotions and memories. Consolidating or cementing a desire or intention to experience a lucid dream while awake can enable this desire or intention to penetrate or infiltrate our dreams, so it is beneficial to regularly and actively remind yourself of your desire to lucid dream
  • You are enthusiastic about dreaming - the most interest you have in dreaming and lucid dreaming, and the more attention you pay to your dreams in your waking reality, the more likely you are to be successful in inducing a lucid dream. This is why keeping a dream journal and discussing your dreams regularly are key to lucid dreaming success
  • You play first-person video games - in a video game you are immersed in a synthesised, simulated reality. Research has shown that regular video game players experience superior spatial awareness and control in lucid dreams, mirroring the cognitive skills they use when gaming

Wednesday, 10 July 2019

The Dreamhacker Series

I have relaunched The Dreamhacker Series - a beginner level, back to basics, foundational series of tutorials which aim to teach you all aspects of dreamwork, including dream recall, dream incubation, lucid dream induction, dream control and much much more! You can find the Dreamhacker Series of videos on the Tallulah La Ghash Youtube channel (linked below) - I have also posted my first video here on this Blog post for ease of access - please do watch it, like it and share it, as well as subscribing to my channel and turning notifications on. Also note that I will be doing more live broadcasts where you can come and chat to me in real time. I am planning to do regular 'Tallulah's Dream Palace' broadcasts where we can discuss dreaming and lucid dreaming and I can give you live tips, techniques, help, advice and guidance on how you can enrich and improve your own dream experiences. Remember, you can ask me anything - leave me a question (or comment/suggestion/feedback) in the comments sections of my Youtube videos or on social media (linked below).
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Subscribe to the Tallulah La Ghash Youtube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/user/LaGhash
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Saturday, 18 June 2016

Dream 655 (LUCID DREAM)

'Drug Rehab School' (LUCID DREAM)
Date: 17 June 2016
Time: 22:00 - 08:45 (I woke up from this dream naturally)
Type of dream: Vivid non-lucid dream with lucid dream
Lucidity: Dream-Initiated Lucid Dream (DILD) with no induction techniques & no Reality Check
Lucid dream control: No control attempted
Lucid dream clarity: Good
Lucid dream stability: Good - hand rubbing technique used
Period of lucidity: Approximately 3 minutes 
Dream recall: Strong recall

Scene 1: Drug Rehab School, Sheringham - Time Unknown
I was in a drug rehab school for heroin addicted young people, which seemed to be located where the train station is in Sheringham. It was dark, but still daytime and I cannot recall much about the location. The school was run by a middle-aged woman, with black hair in a bun at the back of her head. She was white, and tall and skinny. She didn't seem to like me much, and told me that I did not belong at the drug rehab school, because I was not a drug addict. All the students/junkies in the school appeared to be young women or girls. I wanted to stay, but was forced to leave. I decided to go home to my Nan's house in Sheringham, annoyed that I had been forced out of the school. While still in the school, I saw a screen - a TV screen or laptop screen, which had a silvery sparkly image on it - I cannot recall what this image was of, but I wanted to stay to find out what it was, because I was mesmerised by it. I recall sitting outside the school at this point, near the shelters where passengers wait for the train to arrive, so the screen may have been outside. This scene is a little vague, but it seemed significant when I dreamed it. 

Scene 2: A Bedroom (Location Unknown) - Time Unknown
I was then in a bedroom, which was not my own in real life, or one I recognise from real life, but was mine in the dream. There was a double bed in the room, with white sheets and a TV screen. I received a message from EG - someone I had a short, unsatisfying relationship with in the past. I was surprised that EG messaged me out of the blue (on Whatsapp) and explained that he had not been in touch recently because he had been busy. He asked if he could come over to my house and I said he could. When EG arrived, he was no longer a tall black man, but instead looked like a Chinese version of Harry Potter. He looked young and seemed very shy. He sat next to me on the bed. I noticed that the TV screen was now a mirror. 

I instantly became lucid with no need for a reality check - by using EG's altered appearance and the change to the TV screen as dreamsigns.  The lucid dream was clear and fairly stable. EG and I were sitting on the bed, sideways, but leaning back on our elbows, so that our faces were close. I said to EG (consciously, intentionally): 'This is a lucid dream, and you are a dream character!' I was expecting him to deny this, since many dream characters will not accept that they are dream characters within a dream. EG said: 'I don't understand'. I said to him, 'Look!' and poked my finger (index finger) through his forehead - it went through the skin and bone of his skull without problem, like it was made with clay. I said: 'You are a dream character in my lucid dream. I can control what happens to you if I want. You don't even look like EG'. EG then accepted the situation, agreeing with me. He said: 'What should we do in the lucid dream'. I actually wanted to leave the bedroom and EG and go off and have a more interesting lucid dream adventure, but I started losing my clarity at this point, I think because it was taking me a while to decide what to do, just sitting on the bed. I decided to do some lucid dream stabilisation techniques, and decided to get EG to perform some as well. I started rubbing my hand together quickly (my preferred method to stabilise the dream) and instructed EG to do the same, telling him that this was a stabilisation technique. He started copying me. The lucid dream temporarily stabilised, and EG started laughing, telling me that he 'had never had to stabilise someone else's dream before'. I said: 'Most lucid dream characters deny they are in a lucid dream' to which EG responded: 'But you showed me your dreamsigns, so I believe it'. His eyes were very dark and large behind the Harry Potter glasses he was wearing - abnormally so. I just stared at him for a while, wondering what to do next and trying not to get too excited by the fact I was lucid. The lucidity was then lost, and I went back into a normal non-lucid dream.

Scene 3: My Nan's House, Sheringham - Day & Evening

I was at my Nan's house in Sheringham and my Mum and Nan were also present, in the living-room. The doorbell sounded and I came down the stairs to open the door. It looked to be a bright sunny day outside, but I was aware it was nearly Christmas time. On the doorstep was a fat white woman, with shoulder-length black hair. I did not know her. She said she was 'Mandy' and was my cousin HM's aunt (I assumed that she must be HM's aunt on her father's side of the family - a person I may not have met, such as the wife of her father's brother; or perhaps an aunt of her husband). I said I was HM's cousin. My Mum came through then, and seemed to know 'Mandy' (my Mum's best female friend is actually called Mandy). She invited her through to the living-room. There was conversation and time passed. I was sitting on the floor of the living-room, beside the TV, which was on. There was conversation about ice cream and limbs - prosthetic limbs.

I was trying to hum a tune to my Mum, hoping she would be able to recognise the song and tell me what it was called and which band performed it. I kept humming(well saying 'der der der' in what I thought was the right tune) what I thought was an obviously accurate version of the well-known song, but no-one could guess it. My Mum said: 'That sounds like a country and western tune', but I was arguing, saying it didn't - it sounded like a classic song she should know. As I was waking from this dream, I became 'aware' that the track I was thinking of was 'A Whiter Shade of Pale' by a band called 'Knights in White Satin' - of course, it is a composite of 2 different songs - 'A Whiter Shade of Pale' on the album Procol Harum (1967) by Procol Harum and 'Nights in White Satin' on the album of the same name (1967) by Giorgio Moroder. It is completely coincidental that both of these tracks were in my mind, and happened to be chart hits released in the same year, as I was unaware of the release date of either, and would have guessed they were written and released in the 1970s. I am not sure what prompted me to think of either. I had wrongly thought of 'Knights in White Satin' as the band name, maybe because I associated it with sounding more like a band name. I have listened to the instrumentals of each song now I am fully awake, and it seems that I was thinking of 'A Whiter Shade of Pale'. 

I then thought I had lost some emerald and diamond earrings - which in the dream were of great value to me. I feared that I had accidentally sold them. I cannot quite remember what else happened at this point in the dream, as I was waking up and feeling the dream fragment. I found the earrings, and started thinking about the song (see writing in blue text above) that I had not been able to get my Mum to recognise.

Extra Information: Possible REM Rebound Effect from recent cannabis use

Recurrent Dream Themes: 

  • My Mum & Nan as dream scene characters

Dreamsigns: 
  • The drug rehab school in Sheringham
  • EG was a different age, ethnicity and personality - recognised as a dreamsign within the dream and used as a lucidity trigger
  • The TV screen in Scene 2 became a mirror - recognised as a dreamsign within the dream and used as a lucidity trigger

Day Residue: 
  • I am in the process of moving into temporary accommodation while renovations are done to my current home - the first option for the temporary housing was awful - a tiny space I was expected to share with a male colleague, the kitchen being so small you could only fit one person in it, with no storage facilities. My colleagues and I complained, and got a better deal. I had described the first, inappropriate accommodation to one the staff in the office where I work as 'smaller than a council bedsit given to a junkie on housing benefit'
  • My colleagues had been using Whatsapp to communicate about the problems with the temporary accommodation
  • I saw that EG is still on my social media - I noticed this the day before the dream
  • The day of this dream, I saw a reference to the Harry Potter movies on the thumbnails of the CinemaSins Youtube account. I also watched an episode of Peep Show (S08E02 - Episode 44 'Business Secrets of the Pharaohs') in which Jeremy describes Mark as JK Rowling and himself as Sigmund Freud
  • The day before this dream I made 2 new Youtube videos about dream characters and the dream self/dream ego - and about how to use dream characters and perception of self in the dream to trigger lucidity
  • The day before this dream I read a news article about a university student who was appealing for a prosthetic arm she had lost while out clubbing - she uses it for aesthetic reasons when going out at night, so didn't realise she had forgotten to put it back on after using the bathrooms. I also read a news article about paralympian, Oscar Pistorius, who has been back in court 
  • The day before this dream, I was packing my belongings and I dropped my (fake, cheap) emerald/diamond earrings while trying to put my jewellery somewhere safe

Waking Reactions: 
I love being able to record a lucid dream experience, even when the lucid dream is quite short or dull. I think if I had tried to exert control earlier in the dream, it may have lasted longer, but I sat around on the bed talking to EG for too long and lost lucidity, even after performing lucid dream stabilisation techniques successfully.

Sunday, 29 November 2015

Dream 517 (LUCID DREAM)

'Confronting Racism'
Dream date: 24 November 2015

Scene 1: My Nan's House, Sheringham - Time Unknown
I think I was in my nan's house, as later, I was with the same dream characters and it was very clear that this was the location. However, at the start of this dream, I could only really see the dream characters and a sofa, so it was not possible to ascertain the exact location. 

I was with my mum, nan, cousin HM and other members of my family. I was accusing my cousin of letting her husband post Islamophobic content on their shared Facebook profile. I was screaming angrily, stating that this was having an indirect effect on me, as the paternal side of my family are Middle Eastern Muslims and my cousin should have been more sensitive to this fact. I was appealing to my nan to resolve the problem, but she was saying that there was nothing she could do. HM slumped down on the sofa (which was to my left side) and started crying. Her face was very red. She was not saying anything. I had the impression that she looked like her younger, childhood self. I continued to scream at my cousin, telling her that she should be more sensitive to her family. I had an image in my head of a pile of dead bodies, which I 'knew' had been posted by her husband and this sickened me.

I then stepped away and found myself standing beside the armchair which is next to the kitchen door in my nan's living-room. Suddenly, I became spontaneously lucid, without a reality check. The feeling was overwhelming. I was aware that my family members were still nearby, but I did not look in their direction for fear of becoming distracted. I started rubbing my hands together, to stablise the lucid dream. Everything was very bright and very clear. 

I decided to bring my friend RBA into the dream and visualised this. I saw that there was a larger than usual gap between the armchair and the wall and RBA was crouched down in this space. I said his name and he said something (I cannot recall what). I noticed that he did not have a Scottish accent and when he looked at me, he looked different - I cannot say what, as his skin/hair colour was same as usual, but there was just something different about his face. He was wearing a white tracksuit. As soon as I noticed he looked and sounded different, he changed - and began to look exactly as he does in real-life. I said: 'Get up' and he said: 'I can't' (in a Scottish accent - his real-life voice). I said: 'You can, because this is my lucid dream and I control it' to which he replied: 'It's out of control now'. I lost lucidity instantly as he said this.

Scene 2: A Random Bedroom - Time Unknown
I was in a random bedroom which I do not recognise from real-life. EB was there, with two other adult male dream characters - his friends in the dream, who I did not recognise or know. They were sitting cross-legged on a bed, looking at A4-sized photographs of a pregnant woman. They were discussing abortion. I cannot recall exactly what they were saying, but I was repulsed by their insensitive comments and I wanted to get away from them as quickly as possible. I cannot recall what else happened in this scene, although I am aware that there was more interaction with EB. He had a smiling, creepy look on his face and was turning his neck to face me, which indicated I was standing to his side or behind him.

Scene 3: My Bedroom in Norwich - Time Unknown
I was looking at my laptop and was aware that the right hinge which connects the screen to the keyboard had broken and the screen was partly hanging off. I was annoyed as this meant that I had to pay to get my laptop fixed and I did not want to.

TIME: 03:00 - 10:00 hours (I am not sure when this dream took place)
LUCIDITY: YES 
LUCIDITY: Fully Lucid via DILD (Dream Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream)
  • Spontaneous DILD, no induction technique/method used
  • No dreamsign to trigger
  • No reality check performed
  • Moderate to strong lucidity/clarity
  • Good stability at the start as a result of dream stabilisation techniques (hand rubbing)
  • Good control at the start (bringing specific dream character into the dream; recognising that there were discrepancies between dream character and real-life person and altering the dream version to match my real-life knowledge/expectations)
  • Lucidity lasted approximately 1 - 2 minutes
SPECIAL NOTES: NONE OF NOTE

Dream Information:

  • HM's husband is in the British Army and I know that he posts about disliking Islam as a result of the current terror threat and his service in Afghanistan. I do not like calling out my family members for behaviour which I would term racist or discriminatory, but (1) There is extremely little possibility either HM or her husband are reading this Blog as they are not particularly interested in my dream work; and (2) If he does not stand by his comments when confronted with opposition then he should not make them publicly. I am the only mixed-race person in my family and I find it highly offensive that various members have expressed views which are hostile to Muslims/persons of colour, given I am their relative, the paternal side of my family are Muslims living in the Middle East and my own father was an immigrant. I have expressed my upset about these issues to my mum and my nan, who are sympathetic, but cannot (and should not) try to censor other family members. This is not a political rant, but I need to set the context for this dream
  • EB is my former best friend, but I no longer speak to him as a result of a personal grievance I have with him

Dreamsigns:
  • My cousin appeared to be her childhood self, despite the fact that she was married in the dream

Recurrent Dream Themes:

  • My family as dream characters
  • Broken laptop

Potential Day/Dream Residue:

  • There is a lot of Islamophobia on social media as a result of ISIS and the current terror threat/immigration issue/war in the Middle East
  • I randomly saw EB in the city about a week prior to this dream and purposefully avoided him so as not to have to engage in an awkward conversation
  • The day before this dream I saw a Facebook friend posting a status asking where they could get a replacement screen for their broken laptop

Waking Thoughts & Emotions:

This dream was so frustrating to me, like my last lucid dream (Dream 515), but actually more so, as on this occasion not only did I properly stabilise the dream, but I was also able to control it, which was very encouraging. I was so annoyed that the lucidity faded as soon as I began to communicate with RBA, as it had been so easy to bring him into the dream that I had hopes that this would have led to an exciting dream experience. I feel that this dream was so political in nature as a result of being exposed to various debates and hot topics posted in both the traditional media and social media i.e. immigration/terrorism/attitudes towards Islam; and also the pro-life v pro-choice issue. Therefore, this dream seemed quite significant to me upon waking.

* I have forgotten various elements of this dream - in particular from Scene 2 onwards. If I recall them, I will record them below.

Thursday, 23 July 2015

Dream 460 (DOUBLE LUCID DREAM)

'Killing a Junkie with a Pitchfork through the Throat (then Bringing him Back to Life Again)'
Dream date: 20 June 2015
I was with LF and NN in Sheringham - near the train station, beside the little row of businesses (one of which was the hairdressers where NN used to work). It was daylight and I was aware that it was the afternoon. The sun was shining. I was aware that I had to go somewhere with members of my family, including my cousin, HM. I had a satchel-type bag which was decorated with many rainbow colours. Inside the bag was my purse, phone and keys, some cannabis and a grinder. I put the bag on the ground (as indicated in the Google Maps image). I was distracted by a dream character and walked a short distance away. 

Something then prompted me to turn around and look at the traffic on the road behind me. There was a mature white woman with dark hair (an unknown dream character) riding a bicycle in the middle of the road. I had an urge to approach her. I pulled back her head and looked at her forehead (which was very large) closely. I could see the pattern on her skin, which looked like a fractal design. This made me become fully lucid, suddenly

In order to stabilise the dream, I decided to rub my left thigh with my hand, as this technique had worked in a recent lucid dream. I realised I was wearing a red mini-skirt. The dream was clear and stable. I then decided to explore the lucid dream world. I had to get my bag (from behind me on the ground) again. I turned and saw it - it was surrounded by milk chocolate buttons, just where I left it. Again, I was distracted by a dream character, and when I looked at the ground again, my bag was gone. I knew it had been stolen, and I could see a white male dream character (wearing a dark hooded top) running away (in the direction indicated on the image, below). I decided to chase him, and soon lost sight, although I knew which direction to run in. 

Soon, I entered an area which I knew was not in Sheringham. I wondered where I was, but could find no clues. The area is shown in the diagram below. I was standing on a concrete path. To my right and in front of me were some tall apartment buildings - with blue doors. To my left were some parking spaces for cars, which were separated with green hedgerows. This gave the impression of allotments/gardens. There were bright, pretty flowers in the grass. I could hear a noise which sounded distinctly like a police radio and I was sure that the police must be close by. I decided to investigate - and looked at the parked cars in the parking space. The police radio noise was coming from the third parked car, which was red. It was not a radio, but the sound of the car alarm going off. 

I decided to enter the first apartment block on my right. I went to the doorway, which opened for me, and entered the front entrance, then decided that as I was going to confront a criminal (the bag snatcher), I needed a weapon. I looked in front of me for a weapon, and saw a pitchfork on the concrete path. I picked this up and then re-entered the apartment block. Standing in the entrance, by a flight of stairs, was a white female dream character - a junkie/drug addict. I pushed past her, telling her I was visiting a tenant of the apartments. I went up one flight of stairs to the doorway of a flat, which was opened by the bag snatcher. I realised he was also a junkie/drug addict. My first thought was that he looked like 'Kurtis Stryker' a character from Mortal Kombat 3 (the 1995 video game, not the movie adaptation). I then tried to think which actor 'Stryker' used to remind me of - at first I though (in error) 'Sean Bean' - and the dream character morphed to look more like Sean Bean; and then I remembered that I meant 'Woody Harrelson' and the dream character morphed to look just like him instead. I realised that this was happening because I was in a lucid dream, but the fact that every time I had a new thought the dream imagery changed to reflect it was frustrating. It was as if my thoughts were being visually projected immediately as they arose. The male dream character was wearing a red plaid lumberjack shirt and his hair was very blonde. He started to say something to me and I thrust the pitchfork straight through his throat, which skewered him to the wall outside his flat. Blood gushed and he was making grunting/moaning noises, obviously dying. I wanted to go into his flat, and felt I had been needlessly violent too early on, so I pulled the pitchfork out of the junkie's neck, to free him. He ran into the flat, clutching his severed throat and I followed him. The junkie was still dying. I asked him: 'Where is my bag?' and he pointed to the bed, where it was laying. The room was dark and quite messy. The junkie had a lot of possessions, including books and clothes - and other items commonly found in a bedsit flat.

I looked into my bag and saw that all of my possessions were seemingly in place. I said: 'Why did you steal my bag?' The junkie denied he had stolen it. He could not speak properly because he was dying, but I could still understand him - almost telepathically. I looked for my phone and found it. I said: 'You could have flipped [sold/exchanged] this for at least £30 - why would a junkie not try and sell this stuff for drugs?' (or smoke the cannabis which was in the bag). I could not work out why he still had my bag as I assumed he had stolen it to make money for drugs. The junkie gestured to the chest of drawers. I opened the top drawer and pulled out a huge airtight clear plastic bag of cannabis - there was at least half a kilo in the bag. I realised the junkie was actually a drug dealer and had not stolen my bag to make money off it, but instead to lure me to his bedsit (although there was no threat of danger). I wished I had not physically harmed him with the pitchfork - and was horrified to see he was now laying on the floor, clutching his neck as a pool of blood formed around him. He was about to die. I exercised dream control (I closed my eyes and focused my mind intensely) to bring him back to life. I was amazed to see this worked. 

The junkie and I sat on his bed and we started to roll cannabis joints to smoke together. The junkie told me he had no prospects or hopes in life and I decided to change this, using dream control. I told him to look on the shelving unit which was at the foot of the bed and suddenly, both he and I noticed that this shelf was filled with pink qualification certificates. I said to the junkie: 'See, you trained as a teacher in prison and now you have a job!' I was pleased to see that the junkie agreed with me. I knew he and I were friends and I had made things right. 

I then woke up. I think I was only awake for a few minutes, or less. I wished that I could return to my lucid dream. 

I found myself in a dream again - semi-lucid. This felt like a vague notion I was dreaming right from the outset of the dream. I entered the semi-lucid dream state directly from the waking state. I found myself outside on a path which was long and straight, with bushes on either side. It was night and the stars were shining brightly in the sky. Everything was very vivid. I thought: 'This is probably a dream because I was just in a lucid dream' and 'If I look at my hands, I'll definitely be lucid'. I looked at the palms of my hands and saw the same fractal skin patterns I had seen on the forehead of the female cyclist dream character in the first lucid dream. I was then absolutely sure I was in a lucid dream. I decided to walk down the path and see where it led to. I assumed it would lead back to the junkie's apartment building, as I was 'aware' that I had re-entered the same dream in a different scene (or at least this was what it felt like in the second lucid dream). At the bottom of the road was the junkie's apartment building, but as I entered and climbed up the staircase to where his flat had been, the door was opened and my friend SVF appeared in the doorway. She invited me inside and told me that she was hosting a dinner party and I was one of the guests. She lived in this flat with her boyfriend. At first I thought her boyfriend was my boss (who is actually gay), but then realised it was a completely different person (and unknown dream character - I did not know him in the dream either, as this was the first time I had ever met him). She told me that we would study astrology together. I then saw that Ted Danson - looking really old (I did not know he actually does look old now in real-life until I found the image used below) sitting in a rocking-chair. I did not want SVF's boyfriend to hang around while I chatted with SVF and thought the dinner party might be boring, so decided to change the dream scene. I did this by closing my eyes, rubbing my left thigh with my hand and thinking that I wanted to be somewhere else.

When I opened my eyes I was in a classroom with PS and an elderly white male professor. PS was seated to my right. The classroom had glass walls and I could see an outside covered walkway (with students walking along it) through the glass. It reminded me of Langwith College at the University of York. The professor was trying to give me an assignment. This assignment was to find a bright green lizard - an image of which he was showing me on a playing card-sized screen. I was aware that if I accepted the assignment I would not be able to spend any time with PS, so I said to the professor: 'I'm not here to study, this is my lucid dream!' The professor said: 'I'll end the lucid dream if you don't complete the assignment!' I wasn't sure if this was a threat which could come true (i.e. I would prematurely wake up) so I said: 'I'll find the lizard in a book then!' trying to compromise and appease the professor, but remain with PS in the glass classroom. The professor said: 'You're failing History and Science, so you have to do it properly or wake up from the dream!' I knew this meant that I had to travel somewhere to find the lizard, but I really did not want to go. Although I kept reminding myself that this was my lucid dream and I could control it if I wanted, I could not help but feel anxious about the idea of failing exams/classes. I kept trying to remind myself I didn't really have to sit any exams or pass any classes, but at the same time, I could not change the dream scene I was currently in, or convince the professor dream character to let me get my own way. I took the small screen off him and tried to use my finger to drag the image to enlarge it for a better view (the way I can on the screen of my phone). This did not work - it left black scribbled marks on the image of the lizard. 

I woke up suddenly.

TIME: 22:45 - 11:30 hours (this dream happened in the last part of the sleep as I woke up from it)
LUCIDITY: Fully Lucid via DILD (Dream Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream) in first lucid dream. WILD (Wake Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream) with dream-re-entry in second lucid dream
  • Spontaneous DILD, no induction technique/method used (first lucid dream)
  • Re-entry into the dream in a Semi-Lucid state (making this a form of WILD), from which I willed myself to become fully lucid (second lucid dream)
  • Lucidity triggered by suddenly with no obvious dreamsign or prompt other than a desire to look closely at the skin of a dream character (first lucid dream) and my own hands (second lucid dream)
  • No reality check performed in either dream
  • Strong lucidity/clarity in both dreams
  • Strong stability (hand rubbing on thigh/staring closely at hands) in both dreams
  • Approximately 80% of first dream lucid (16 minutes out of 20 overall, estimated) & 100% of second dream lucid (10 minutes overall)
SPECIAL NOTES: REM Rebound Effect from cannabis withdrawal and binge-drinking of vodka (day 2 of mild alcohol poisoning)

Dream Information:
  • LF was my former best friend during my second undergraduate degree - we no longer speak, but are still Facebook friends
  • NN is one of my childhood best friends
  • SVF is one of my childhood best friends, although I have lost contact with her. She is the person I started smoking cannabis with as a teenager
  • I had no idea until I started recording this dream that both Woody Harrelson and Ted Danson starred in the US sitcom, Cheers (1982 - 1993) - this fact really shocked me
  • PS is my ex-boyfriend
  • I attended the University of York (Langwith was my college) for my first undergraduate degree - English Literature & History of Art

Dreamsigns:
  • In both dreams, skin had a complex fractal pattern (F - Form)

Recurrent Dream Themes:
  • Cannabis
  • Classroom/learning institution 
  • Lizards

Potential Day/Dream Residue:
  • I had a conversation about astrology with DL several days before this dream
  • A couple of days before this dream, I watched an episode of The Ricky Gervais Show in which Karl Pilkington described his (ludicrous) idea for a movie plot where he mentions using Ted Danson as a star. One of my favourite pastimes is challenging DL to come up with weird/funny movie ideas, something I had done shortly before this dream
  • Shortly before this dream I had a discussion with my friend JL about what it felt like to fail an exam for the first time (it was when I was doing my Bar Exams - I failed Conciliation) 

Waking Thoughts & Emotions:
This was a brilliant dream as I managed to enter it via a spontaneous DILD (and retain my waking memories of my recent lucid dream). I was able to exercise some of the best lucid dream control I have ever experienced (not quite Super-Lucid, but a more intense version of Fully Lucid than before). After I woke up, I was able to re-enter the same dream again - as a second lucid dream. However, I was Semi-Lucid from the outset of this second lucid dream, so it felt like a WILD (Wake Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream) as there was no lapse between my waking brain and my discovery I was in a dream state. This 'double lucid dream' represents the most interesting and powerful lucid dreaming experience in a long time and marks a vast improvement in my dream stabilisation and control techniques.

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

Dream 459 (LUCID DREAM)

'Beautiful Kitten'
Dream date: 14 June 2015 (During Afternoon Nap)
I was in my bedroom in Norwich. It looked exactly like my normal bedroom - i.e. I could not perceive any noticeable difference and everything felt normal. I was sitting on my bed, and I was aware my mum was just outside the room, although there was a kitchen on the same floor as my room. I was meant to be packing some bags. However, I became aware that there was a big fountain of water spurting from the floor behind the top of my bed. It was making the carpet wet, and there were papers on the floor which were soaked in the water, making the ink run. I shouted out to my mum that she needed to come and help me stop the water before more of my possessions got ruined. I started to zip up a large pink suitcase which was standing upright on the bed behind me - and was filled to capacity, making it hard to zip up. 

My mum came in the room and I turned to face her. Now I could see my room looked different. The room was quite dark now and had a theatrical feel to the decor. At the foot of my bed was a shelving unit (which has appeared in an earlier dream set in my bedroom), and behind this was an armchair. Beside the shelving unit was a chalkboard - or some kind of easel. My mum stood beside this, dressed in a glamorous outfit. She gestured to one side (dramatically, which added to the sensation of theatricality in the room) and in came a thing which was human-sized and shaped and was standing on two legs, upright also like a human, but looked like a painted lizard. My mum said: 'It's a pregnant lizard-woman'. I was not sure why she was presenting the lizard-woman to me in this way. My mum left the room with the lizard woman. 

Something compelled me to look under my bed. I knelt down and I saw there was a cute white and tabby fluffy kitten under my bed. I was really pleased to see that I had a kitten and shouted out to my mum: 'Thank you for the kitten!' I then saw that the kitten had a pink section of fur on its chest and patches of blue fur on it's upper body. I thought this was amazing - as clearly it is not natural for cats to have this colouring! I decided that I must take a photograph of the kitten, which would not come out from under the bed, although it seemed friendly. I took out my mobile (smart)phone, but I was completely unable to use the camera. I could not swipe the camera icon to open that function. I went over to sit in the armchair so I could look at my phone and see what was wrong with the camera icon/function. While I was looking at the phone screen, I noticed the camera icon was made out of coloured foil - like the kind yoghurt pot lids are made from. It had peeled away from the screen and become crumpled. I tried to stick it back onto the screen and swipe with it to open the camera, but this would not work. It was frustrating as I really wanted to take a photograph of the kitten. As I was fiddling around with the foil camera icon, I realised how bizarre the situation was and I became lucid.

I then noticed that the room was much bigger - there was a large space to the side of my bed, which was much lighter - I think there was a large window illuminating this area. There was another bed in this new part of the room (see the diagram below). Laying on this bed was the kitten. The kitten called me over to it. I am pretty sure it was a male, although I am not sure. 

I ran over to the bed and sat down on it. The kitten was laying on it's back against a pile of pillows. It looked slightly bigger than it had when it was under my own bed. I knew that I could communicate fully with the kitten because I was in a lucid dream, but first, I decided that I needed to stabilise the dream because I had become lucid very suddenly and had the accompanying adrenaline rush which sometimes can wake me up prematurely. I started rubbing my left thigh. I noticed I was wearing a pair of burgundy trousers (which I do not own in real-life). The kitten asked me what I was doing and I said: 'Stabilising this lucid dream'. The kitten looked at me, confused. I said to the kitten: 'Do you realise you are just a dream character in my lucid dream?' The kitten said: 'You don't need to worry about things like that.' I wondered if this lucid dream was going to tell me something insightful about my consciousness or the state of human existence or the meaning of life - or something equally as deep and fundamental, because I got the impression that the kitten had great wisdom and might reveal something (about my own subconscious) to me if I asked the right questions. I looked up and saw that there was actually a window adjacent to the bed (where I had assumed there might be one). I saw that there was a beach/seaside outside the building we were in (which was still partly my own house in Norwich, despite the obvious changes). It was a dark, gloomy day and the sea was rough. I looked to my left and saw that the remainder of the room looked like one of my childhood classrooms in Sheringham Primary School - possibly when I was in Year 1 or 2. This part of the room was very dark - and seemed to be quite messy, as though an arts and crafts class had just taken place. The area directly around the top of the bed on which the kitten was laying looked like it was carved out of dark, ancient wood - like a medieval wall of some sort. I was getting frustrated by my inability to see the changes happen, as it seemed that all I had to do was glance away, and as soon as I looked at the same thing again, it had changed completely, which was confusing. It meant I had to keep thinking and focusing hard. The only thing which was not changing was the kitten laying on the pillows in the centre of the bed which had a white duvet on it. 

I was rubbing my left thigh throughout the time I was looking around at my dreamscape, as I was aware I needed to maintain lucidity and the stability of the lucid dream. I said: 'Stay lucid!' and the kitten said: 'You already are'. I said to the kitten: 'Are you able to tell me something meaningful about myself?' The kitten's answer was: 'Don't worry about meaningful, you're supposed to enjoy the sex and violence'. I took this to mean that I should use my lucid dream for fun. exciting, fantasy adventures, not look for deeper meaning in them - at least in this instance. I closed my eyes and decided to change dream location, but not try and exert full control over where I ended up. I was going to let my subconscious mind place me somewhere at random. 

I discovered that I was in a pub (see diagram below). The pub looked slightly like the main bar in The Lobster pub in Sheringham, but it was slightly different, as it had an open fire (behind me, opposite the bar which I was standing at) and a larger seating area to the right of a longer bar. The front entrance was opposite the bar, to the left. There were numerous tables and chairs on the wooden floor, and at these, dream characters (customers who I did not know). Separating the room (partially) was a wooden arch, which was merely decorative as it was still one big room, not two. The bar itself was made out of pale wood and there was another archway to the right, leading to a different area of the building. Mounted on the wood were brass horseshoes and other ornamental brass/leather objects. 

There was an old man (male dream character - white, aged 60 - 65 years, small and slim, ginger-brown hair) working behind the bar. He was dressed in old-fashioned clothes - a waistcoat (vest) and tweed trousers. He came over to me (I was leaning on the bar) and asked: 'Who do you want to bring into the dream?' I said: 'Anyone?' and he said: 'No, it has to be a real friend'. I was slightly disappointed by this and said: 'RBA'. The old man said: 'No, you have to write it down'. He passed me a notebook which had sheets of green paper in it. He also gave me a (black ink) pen. I started to write 'RBA', but the old man (who was watching me) said: 'No, you have too write out his proper full name). I noticed there were loads of empty, dirty pint glasses stacked on the bar around me, and for the first time ever, heard the voices of other customers in the background. I tried to write RBA's real name (DY), but was completely unable to write. I knew this was a symptom of being in a dream, but it still frustrated me a lot as I was really concentrating on performing the task. After what seemed like ages (and many failed attempts at writing 'DY' in legible handwriting), I heard RBA shout my name. He was coming into the bar area from the archway which was to the right side. For the first time, I noticed that there were fruit machines against the adjacent wall, and the pub looked a lot less like the traditional seaside pub I had originally seen, and more like a commercial chain pup, like a Wetherspoons. I noticed that DL was walking in behind RBA. They both approached me. Suddenly, an elderly man (an unknown dream character) pushed past me roughly. I realised the pub still had the archway which slightly separated the main floor of the bar, and I was standing with my back to it, with the fireplace to my right. The elderly man dropped some money on the floor. RBA bend down to pick up the money, which he handed to the elderly man. RBA said to me: 'You need to be more careful!' I wondered why he was blaming me, as it had not been my fault that the elderly man walked/pushed into me. I said: 'It wasn't my fault' and turned round to walk across the bar as I felt like the dream was slipping away and I needed to distract myself from the conversation with RBA for a moment so I could stabilise it. I woke up. 

TIME: 17:00 - 20:30 hours (this dream happened in the last part of the sleep as I woke up from it)
LUCIDITY: Fully Lucid via DILD (Dream Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream)
  • Spontaneous DILD, no induction technique/method used
  • Lucidity triggered by dreamsign (absurd action)
  • No reality check performed
  • Strong lucidity/clarity
  • Strong stability (hand rubbing on thigh) in first 75% of lucid section of dream)
  • Approximately 40% of overall dream was lucid - 8 minutes out of a 20 minute dream (estimated)
SPECIAL NOTES: REM Rebound Effect from cannabis withdrawal

Dream Information:
  • RBA & DL are both close male friends. I have been in a relationship with DL only. They both have the same first name and are both rappers
  • Wetherspoons is a popular low-budget pub chain operating in the UK and Ireland

Dreamsigns:
  • A kitchen was on the same floor as my bedroom (IA - Inner Awareness/F - Form)
  • Fountain (A - Action/F- Form)
  • The appearance (size/dimensions/furniture/lighting) changed on several occasions (F- Form)
  • Pregnant lizard-woman (F- Form)
  • The appearance of the kitten (F - Form)

Recurrent Dream Themes:
  • Cats

Potential Day/Dream Residue:
  • Recently I told my housemate about the kitten (Tinky) I was given when I was 5 years old who had to be given away because I was allergic to cats - read the full details and the influence this event had on my subsequent dreams, by clicking here.

Waking Thoughts & Emotions:
I really enjoyed this lucid dream because the lucidity/clarity, and often the stability, was strong and there was some degree of dream control also. I did not need to perform a reality check for this DILD (Dream Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream), I was consciously aware of the dream state as soon as I noticed the dreamsign (camera icon on my phone), and was able to think quite clearly as soon as I became lucid. 

I also feel quite positive about my conversation with the kitten. Spiritual/mystical people are always urging me (an atheist humanist) to 'speak' to my lucid dream spirit guides to learn some kind of fundamental truth or connect to a greater collective consciousness. I am sceptical about all spiritual elements of dreaming and have always defended my right to exercise my hedonistic side at the expense of spiritual enlightenment. 

Often I am too overwhelmed to even formulate a plan of action once I am lucid, so this makes it even less desireable to try something too complex, because I usually allow my lucid dreams to occur spontaneously, rather than try to induce them regularly (because I have poor sleep patterns due to insomnia and a disorganised routine). In this instance, because my dream seemed clear and stable - and because of the aura of importance I was getting from the kitten (the most constant part of the dream - featured prominently in the non-lucid section; contributed to my lucidity trigger; and was my first interaction with another dream character in the lucid dream state) and the fact it had seemed unperturbed by me telling it that it was a dream character in my lucid dream (in my previous experience when I tell dream characters they are part of my lucid dream, they usually deny it or laugh at me). When I tried to probe the kitten - as representative of my subconscious - as to the fundamental nature of my lucid dream or inner self, the kitten (my subconscious) reminded me that I like to use my lucid dreams for sex/violence, not enlightenment or spiritual pursuits, which seems very 'truthful' and 'insightful' - even if banal, obvious and lowbrow according to some of the more 'serious' oneironauts!

Monday, 18 May 2015

Lucid Dream Tutorials - Common Lucid Dreaming Mistakes (LUCID DREAMING FOR BEGINNERS TUTORIAL SERIES)

Tutorial Aims: 
  • Experience Level: Beginner (Level 1)
  • Explain the common mistakes made by beginner lucid dreamers
  • Explain the main reasons why these mistakes may lead to failure in learning how to lucid dream 
  • Provide tips on how to avoid or overcome these common mistakes

  • Focusing on the Wrong Induction Method
Many beginner lucid dreamers get swamped by the plethora of lucid dreaming induction techniques discussed on popular online forums and pages dedicated to lucid dreaming. There seems to be an 'ILD' (abbreviation for 'induced lucid dreaming') for absolutely everything (i.e. FILD - finger; SILD - sex; SSILD - senses; U- urination; T- thirst; O - object etc). There is an 'ILD' for just about every letter of the alphabet!

The problem is, if you focus on obscure and niche forms of lucid dream induction method, you are neglecting to recognise that most of them are simply variations of the MILD Technique (Memonic/Memory Induced Lucid Dreams) aiming to achieve a DILD (Dream Initiated/Induced Lucid Dream), the method devised by Dr Stephen LaBerge of the Lucidity Institute. Almost any induction method which involves entraining yourself to recognise a certain event or trigger in a dream and then performing a reality check is a part of programming your memory, which is the ethos behind the MILD Technique which is the single best method for learning how to train yourself to experience a DILD. 

Instead of learning the key principles and foundations of the MILD Technique, beginners often choose a favourite 'ILD' and concentrate exclusively on that. Many of these induction methods were created by non-expert lucid dream enthusiasts looking to differentiate themselves and gain status for coming up with something new, when all they are really doing is refining (but not improving the MILD Technique). My advice is to learn the basics of the MILD Technique from grass-roots (enhancing dream recall; performing reality checks; doing lucid dream affirmations; understanding the sleep cycle; and practising Wake-Back-to-Bed). Ignore all the other 'ILD' methods for DILDs - they simply limit your capability of recognising when you might be in a lucid dream.

Another common mistake beginners make is trying to perform WILD (Wake Initiated/Induced Lucid Dreams) before even learning the MILD Technique. WILD is the 'holy grail' of lucid dream induction, and as compelling as it sounds (the idea of transitioning directly from a waking state into a lucid dream), it is very difficult and requires you to learn superior meditation methods to induce the unnatural state of the Mind Awake/Body Asleep paradox, which involves waking sleep paralysis and dream visualisation skills. The WILD Technique is not a beginner technique and should be worked up to slowly once you have the basics mastered - you cannot build a skyscraper without first ensuring you have a solid foundation in place!

Using the wrong induction technique and trying to run before you can walk by attempting the WILD Technique before you can achieve DILDs via the MILD Technique can lead to you becoming very disheartened by the inevitable failure. Lucid dreaming is a journey, not a final destination and cannot be rushed. There are no short-cuts or quick fixes! 

FILD (Finger Induced Lucid Dreaming) is a popular modern-day version of WILD (FILD was created by an online forum user ('Haggart'), while WILD is part of ancient Tibetan Dream Yoga practice). FILD is no easier to achieve than WILD - and actually may be counter-intuitive as it involves movement of the fingers to keep the mind awake, which can disrupt that vital Mind Awake/Body Asleep balance. It's main 'advantage' is that it bypasses the sleep paralysis stage which is vital for WILD - however, sleep paralysis, while unsettling and sometimes scary - is a great indicator that you are achieving the Mind Awake/Body Asleep paradox and heading towards a successful lucid dream attempt. Embrace the WILD Technique for what it is - an empowering way to induce a lucid dream. Learn the traditional method - there is a wealth of evidence (and my own personal accounts on this Blog) to suggest it works well when done correctly. I would personally advise beginner lucid dreamers to completely ignore FILD. 

  • Failure to Commit
In order to achieve successful lucid dreaming, you need to regularly train and dedicate yourself to your goal. Lucid dreaming is analogous to hacking your own brain - it's not an easy task to trick your brain into performing in a way contrary to how it has naturally evolved (i.e, to be consciously aware you are asleep and dreaming and to actively control your dreams). It is very common for beginner lucid dreamers to give up hope and decide to quit after an extremely short amount of practice. It has taken me years to be able to induce lucid dreams - and I am a natural lucid dreamer, who had a lot of failure still. Another common problem is that because many beginner lucid dreamers are seduced by the idea of controlling their dreams, they don't focus on the basic skill of remembering their non-lucid dreams and recognising their dreamsigns sufficiently.

One particular study found that with extensive daily training, it was possible for beginner lucid dreamers to have their first lucid dream within 3 - 21 days, but this varies greatly.

My advice is to learn the MILD Technique, effective reality checking and meditation - and practice every single night. Record all dreams in a dream journal and focus your mind on reaching your goal - it will happen eventually.



  • Trying Too Hard
This mistake is rather like choosing the wrong induction method - some beginner lucid dreamers are too enthusiastic and want quick results so try to combine everything at once. They attempt a variety of different methods, take lucid dreaming supplements, use binaural beats - all at the same time, without success. This is because they are not nailing the basics - lucid dreaming is not about a race to the finish line - it is about purposeful effort and motivation to learn and develop important skills. If you want to hit a target, it is best to aim accurately and carefully rather than haphazardly firing from every angle. 

Mindful practice is much better than trying to tick every single box. If you desperately try each and every method at the same time, this puts undue pressure on you and you are likely to end up frustrated and confused by what went wrong. Also, if by chance one of your variety of induction methods happened to work, how would you know which one it was and how to refine your technique in that area? That would be like ticking every single answer in a multiple choice exam - one of them is correct, but you don't actually know which one! You can't rush lucid dream entrainment - simplify your practice, take it slow and steady and note what works for you. You can always move on to another technique/method if you have no success, but give it a fair chance before you try something different.



  • Poor Dream Recall
Since I advise all beginner lucid dreamers to start with DILDs (using MILD Technique), dream recall is absolutely vital. I am always surprised by how many beginner lucid dreamers admit they don't recall many of their normal non-lucid dreams. If you cannot recall your dreams, how can you hope to become lucid in a dream? If you do happen to become spontaneously lucid in a dream, the chances are that you will simply forget it and the opportunity to relish that experience will be completely lost.

In order to successfully lucid dream you need a decent standard of dream recall - at least one dream per night. These dreams should be recorded in a dream journal, which will also enable you to note recurrent themes and potential dreamsigns which can act as lucidity triggers in a future DILD. Establishing strong dream recall enhances the vividness and intensity of your dreams, which is a great advantage for your lucid dream practice. Keeping and reflecting on your dream journal entries has a secondary purpose (and benefit) of placing greater emphasis and focus on your dreams.



  • Sleep Deprivation/Not Understanding How the Sleep Cycle Works
If you are sleep deprived (i.e. not getting enough deep, restful, restorative sleep) then you will limit your REM sleep, which is when dreams occur. Sleep deprivation has a negative impact on brain function and general health and will inhibit both the amount and recall of your dreams which is detrimental to lucid dreaming.

The best time for lucid dreaming is the longest, most intense period of REM sleep which occurs after approximately 4 - 6 hours or deep sleep. This is why we often have the longest, most vivid dreams just before we wake up. Distractions and unnatural awakenings (by an alarm clock) are often the reason why we cannot recall dreams which occur during this period of REM sleep. If you need to wake early, there are several methods which can increase your chances of having a lucid dream. 

Firstly, go to bed earlier - you will have your necessary deep sleep earlier in the night and then experience your longest REM stage in good time before you are due to wake up. 

Secondly, if you can't get more than 4 - 6 hours sleep in a night, try and take an afternoon or early evening nap, which is another great time to experience a lucid dream. An afternoon nap means you can do some affirmations/meditation directly before you go to sleep, and hopefully (if you are fully rested from the night before) you will enter an REM sleep straight away, while those lucid dream induction methods are fresh in your mind. As a nap is a short sleep, you will also wake up from the REM dream sleep and your dream will be easier to remember!

Thirdly, if you cannot dedicate longer periods to sleeping during the week, or having afternoon naps, exploit your free time at weekends to having lie-ins. Get your full quota of deep sleep and then do a Wake-Back-to-Bed. The WBTB works on the same notion as an afternoon nap - you are fully rested after your 4 - 6 hours of deep sleep, then you awaken and practice some lucid dreaming induction methods (reality check, mindfulness, affirmations and meditation) for a brief period (say 10 - 30 minutes) and the  return to (REM) sleep while the intention to lucid dream is fresh in your mind. Hopefully, your WBTB will coincide with that long period of REM sleep and you will experience a lucid dream. 

Fourthly, there are many innovative technologies and devices aimed at improving your sleep cycles - and encouraging lucid dreaming. Some devices can help to re-programme your circadian rhythms which benefits your sleep cycle and chances of lucid dreaming. Other devices can be set to wake you up just after you are likely to have been in REM sleep, which helps you improve your dream recall. 



  • Failure to Stabilise a Lucid Dream
Becoming lucid in a dream (DILD) is such an overwhelmingly exciting and exhilarating experience that it often causes dreamers to destabilise their dream and either lose lucidity or wake up. Lucid dreams are a very tenuous, unstable state - the dreamer is so close to wakefulness that anything can tip them over the brink. Often when I lose stability in a lucid dream I am aware of the dream fading before my eyes as I wake up. At other times I stay semi-lucid, but the lucid dream environment is vague and unclear meaning I cannot fully engage with it or explore it, rendering the experience unsatisfying and pointless.

The euphoria which accompanies a successful lucid dream is the most common reason for its premature ending!

The best way to prolong your lucid dream is to learn how to anchor yourself in the lucid dream environment and stabilise the dream sufficiently before you continue your adventure. My advice is to stand still and concentrate on something - either your hands (focusing on the palms of your hands is one of the most popular methods) or one single thing in the lucid dream world. You could try touching a wall or another object and not allowing anything else - especially dream characters - to distract you. Another method I like to do is to sit on the ground. The trick is to calm yourself down completely. 

To stabilise the dream, you can try rubbing your hands together, while saying to yourself: 'I'm dreaming' or 'This is a lucid dream', then performing a reality check, which I advise you do after every lucid dream stabilisation. If the dream is still somewhat unstable or unclear, you can say in a firm voice: 'Clarity!' and then engage all your senses - sight, sound, smell, touch, taste etc. 



  • Forgetting you are Lucid
This seems like an odd mistake to make, but it does commonly happen to me. Often I become lucid in a dream and then 'forget' I am lucid and allow myself to slip back into a non-lucid dream. This is particularly likely to happen after lucid dream stabilisation. The key to overcoming this obstacle is to consistently perform reality checks to remind you that you are lucid and to exercise your conscious awareness and cognitive performance. 



  • Bad/Poor Reality Checks
The key to a good reality check is to choose an action which has a very different outcome when you perform it in waking life to when you perform it in a dream. However, sometimes reality checks - even very good ones - can fail. It may be just misfortune, or it could be that your dreaming brain has taught itself to override the reality check.

Another bad reality check practice is not performing mindful reality checks. This means simply performing the physical reality check without engaging your conscious awareness. You need your conscious awareness to be strongly linked to the performance of the physical reality check.

Every single time you perform a waking reality check, stop whatever you are doing and focus on your conscious awareness. Ask yourself: 'Am I dreaming?' and instead of simply assuming the answer, focus your senses and use cues from your environment to give you an answer. Perform the reality check to confirm your answer was correct and then ask yourself again 'Am I dreaming?'

Regular, frequent and mindful reality checks are a core aspect of mentally entraining yourself to lucid dream.

Also make sure you are performing enough reality checks throughout your waking day. You need to establish a habit which will transition across into your dreams. This will not happen if your reality checks are inconsistent and irregular.

Research by LaBerge and Levitan suggest that 15 - 20 reality checks yield the best chances of becoming lucid via a DILD. Try to perform a reality check every time you do a particularly frequent waking action, such as walking through a doorway, looking at our phone, using the toilet etc.



  • Expecting Too Much (Control) Too Soon
Many beginner lucid dreamers confuse lucid dreaming with dream control and treat them as synonymous. There are several levels of lucid dreaming, from pre-lucid through to super-lucid. Lucid dreaming - by definition - is simply the conscious awareness that you are dreaming. Controlling a dream - or further - dream architecture are additional elements of a lucid dream and have to be learned after you have some experience in lucid dreaming. 

When you first begin to lucid dream it is very common to have little to no control at all. You need to work on dream stabilisation before you can learn dream control. Even when you start learning how to successfully control your lucid dreams you may find that you are only able to control your own actions, and dream characters remain autonomous beings with their own self-determination and will. You may also find that the dream environment has been created for you and cannot be changed. 

Many beginner lucid dreamers want to jump in at the deep end and enjoy flying, sex or space exploration. If you attempt too much too soon you will end up limiting yourself significantly (see below).

Before you become omnipotent and without boundaries you need to build confidence and self belief. You wouldn't attempt to run a marathon before you have discovered whether you have enough stamina to run to the end of your street, so use this approach in your lucid dreaming and take small steps and work your way onwards and upwards gradually. 



  • Prioritising Sex/Flying as a Lucid Dream Goal
Sex is the second main reason beginner lucid dreamers state they were motivated to learn how to lucid dream. Many of our dreams are driven by primal urges and it is unsurprising that dreamers seek the instant and risk-free gratification available in the dream world. However, due to the highly stimulating, intense nature of sex, it is common for beginner lucid dreamers to suffer from 'sensory-overload' and prematurely end their lucid dream by focusing on fulfilling their goal of engaging in lucid dream sex. Lucid dream sex requires a lot of skill and concentration - you need to be able to anchor yourself in the lucid dream; stabilise the dream; exercise some form of lucid dream visualisation and control and then remain calm and grounded as your excitement increases. 

Lucid dream sex can also be disappointing for other reasons - your conscious brain may be set on physical gratification, but your subconscious mind may have a completely different agenda and try to throw a spanner in the works. You may think you are wholly motivated by physical satisfaction and release of sexual energy, but your subconscious knows best - it may be that you are actually looking for a more intimate meaningful connection or relationship. This is one of the main reasons why sexual lucid dream encounters fail - either your dream character rejects you outright or morphs into something undesirable and repellent.

If you haven't had any real-life sexual experience it may be impossible for you to translate your desire for a realistic sexual experience into a lucid dream - after all, what are you actually basing your lucid encounter on? Most likely it will be the visual depiction of sex (i.e. sex scenes in movies or pornography) rather than the memory of actual physical sensations. Lucid dream sex - when it happens - can often feel more like masturbation.

Try not to make lucid dream sex your sole motivation for learning how to lucid dream - you will be short-changing yourself in the long-run and preventing yourself from fully enjoying the incredible range of experiences available in the lucid dream world. 

On the same note, I hear many beginner lucid dreamers complain that they want to fly in their lucid dreams - and attempt to do so as soon as they become lucid for the first time, resulting in disappointment when things do not go to plan. Flying is the number one lucid dreaming activity according to online surveys. Of course, it sounds like an incredibly exciting activity to attempt, but the simple fact is, because humans cannot physically fly, it is not something which will come naturally, even in a lucid dream state and especially if you have not established sufficient stabilisation and control over your lucid dreams. Focusing exclusively on one lucid dream goal may prevent you from enjoying other aspects of the experience and lead to frustration, which is not helpful when you are learning the ropes. See flying as something to build up towards as you improve your skills if you are unable to achieve this in your early lucid experiences - it is not a failure - you weren't born able to walk even though this is the natural method of transportation for humans - we still had to learn how to do it, even if it is intuitive and something we were designed to do!



  • Relying on Lucid Dream Supplements & Drugs
I would never advocate the use of recreational drugs on this Blog, and further, recommend that anyone seeking to take legal, natural supplements consult a medical professional before doing so.

Many beginner lucid dreamers think you can pop a pill and lucid dream. In fact many experienced lucid dreamers seem to advise using supplements - or illegal drugs - in place of learning and refining the core methods outlines above. 

Many lucid dreamers ask if cannabis can help you lucid dream. The answer is 'no' (THC suppresses REM sleep and encourages deeper, dreamless sleep), but quitting cannabis can cause REM Rebound which is characterised by intense, vivid dreams. Other lucid dreamers suggest ayahausca, salvia divinorum, LSD and psilocybin ('magic mushrooms') are great for lucid dreams, but what they seem to be actually saying is that psychedelic experiences are similar to being in a lucid dream state. If you are awake and hallucinating, you are not in a lucid dream - you are in a drug induced state. I have never taken LSD before, so I do not know what effect it has if you go to sleep while it is still in your system, but personally, I would steer clear from experimenting with illegal recreational drugs - psychedelic or otherwise. 

Also, be aware of the inherent dangers in taking any recreational drug. Not only are they illegal in many countries, but there are obvious health risks (mental and/or physical) associated with consuming or using all controlled drugs, regardless of what many 'users' of such drugs say on the internet by way of recommendation. Just because another person has a pleasurable and relatively safe experience using a particular controlled drug, this is not an indicator that your own experience will be risk-free. Nor is anecdotal evidence about drug use a reliable source of information about what the experience will be like - people exaggerate or lie all the time. In my personal life, I have found many people boast about frequency or levels of drug use/alcohol consumption as a means of gaining social status amongst their peers and the same will be true in relation to lucid dreaming forums. Never feel pressure to try a recreational drug or 'legal high' because it may help you lucid dream. The reality is, it probably won't, and a quick browse through research on the effects of many recreational drugs on dreaming or cognitive performance generally usually states that the effect will be negative or detrimental.


Research chemicals are another major problem on the lucid dreaming forums. I see many 'companies' promote their products on lucid dream forums/pages because they are aware that many people are keen for a 'short-cut' and will assume the product is safe if it is sold online and has an official looking website. 


These drugs may appear legal because of the way in which they are promoted and advertised online, but I have done a fair amount of background research and found that often these substances (including those listed as 'legal highs') may carry health risks. Just because a pill or powder is sold online rather than in a back alley by a 'dealer', doesn't mean it is any safer - it just means it hasn't yet been legislated against, labelled as a controlled substance, or been had its effects properly tested/published. Research chemicals (or 'designer drugs' as they are sometimes known) are usually synthesised (i.e. artificially made) so that they have a similar chemical structure to a more well-known psycho-active drug, but in a slightly altered form which allows the makers/sellers to evade legal restrictions. Who knows how these products will affect you? Many 'companies' are unscrupulous and exploiting the fact that many beginner lucid dreamers want an 'easy option'.

In terms of natural vitamins and supplements (and food sources known to boost lucid dreaming), these can be great for boosting REM sleep, enhancing the vividness and recall of dreams and encouraging lucidity, but should never be used to compensate for learning the basics of lucid dream induction and dedicating yourself to daily mental entrainment. Supplements should be used alongside - in addition  to - lucid dream induction methods such as the MILD Technique. Also, I would advise that you do not take a variety of different vitamins and supplements at the same time - some may counteract the effects of the others and as with trying too many different induction techniques at the same time, how will you know which ones work and which don't? Lucid dream supplements can be very expensive and sometimes a waste of money - especially if you rely on the hearsay of other lucid dreamers or the marketing material from the manufacturer of supplements branded as 'lucid dreaming supplements'. Many effective lucid dreaming supplements are not produced specifically because of their effect on dreaming - they have primary health benefits and coincidentally happen to also aid dreaming. 

I would suggest you learn the basics of the MILD Technique without any supplements and then slowly incorporate them into your routine, one-by-one, so that you can monitor the effects and any changes to your patterns of dreaming. 

Do not just try supplements because another lucid dreamer has given them a positive recommendation - different chemicals/substances will react differently from person to person, and there may be a whole host of reasons why this person is able to successfully lucid dream. Before you spend money on lucid dreaming, try the basic mental entrainment which is free and without risk to your health!



  • Putting Your Faith into Lucid Dream Induction Devices/Lucid Dream Machines & Technology
This is not to suggest that lucid dream technology is a bad idea - above I mentioned lucid dream devices/apps in terms of understanding the sleep cycle. However, many beginner lucid dreamers are seduced by the idea of buying a piece of flashy equipment which requires minimal effort and seems to promise instant results, unlike the cognitive techniques. This is largely because we live in such a technology-dependent world, but lucid dreaming has been induced successfully for centuries - without the use of high-tech gadgetry. The truth is, the empirical data on the success of lucid dreaming devices is patchy and there is no single device which has been proven to work perfectly. Furthermore, the devices are intended to be used in conjunction with cognitive techniques, not as an alternative or replacement for putting the groundwork in. Lucid dreaming can be completely free - there is absolutely no need to spend cash on commercial products.

Another point - even if you do use cognitive techniques and then buy a lucid dreaming device, any success when using the device may be a simple placebo effect - i.e. the fact you are using a device may get you in the right mindset to lucid dream rather than the technology having any tangible effect. What does this mean? The real success was still part of a mental process anyway! My thoughts are that if lucid dreaming devices were as successful as some manufacturers/advertisers claim, they would be more visible and accessible in the commercial marketplace (rather than being sold exclusively on manufacturers' websites or still requiring crowdfunding through sites such as Kickstarter to get off the ground). Imagine if there was a foolproof and reliable lucid dream induction device, which involved nothing more than putting on a sleep mask or pushing a button before going to sleep - surely this technology would be the next big thing and in mass production given the numbers of people worldwide (many of whom may not currently be interested in learning how to lucid dream) who would rush out to buy such a device? I'm pretty sure that there would be little need for a Kickstarter campaign to get the project off the ground.  

This is not to put anyone off buying a lucid dreaming device, but if these devices need the dreamer to learn cognitive techniques in addition, then any beginner is far better off learning and concentrating on a method such as the MILD Technique and understanding how that works; seeing how successful it is after a reasonable amount of time (this could be weeks or months, depending on the individual) and then considering whether to invest money in a lucid dreaming gadget. You may be surprised by how your brain responds without the need for any technological assistance!



  • Paying for Tuition from 'Experts'
This may sound counter-intuitive, since I am writing this article as part of a lucid dreaming for beginners tutorial series, but hear me out on this one!

Some lucid dreamers think that because a service costs money if must be tried/tested and effective. This is not necessarily true. Lucid dreaming is becoming increasingly popularised and as a result people will try to exploit a growing audience. It may not be fraudulent - these 'guides' or 'gurus' may have your best interests at heart, but this doesn't mean they are qualified to charge a fee for what they have to offer. The internet is awash with free tuition on how to lucid dream - and you can buy published books by experts such as LaBerge who certainly has the pedigree and expertise to offer advice and information on lucid dreaming. This Blog offers tuition on how to lucid dream, but it does so completely free of charge - my advice, tips and techniques are there for those who want them and cost nothing. Do your research and you will find that you are perfectly capable of getting all information online without spending a single penny.




  • Putting Too Much Faith & Trust in Other Lucid Dreamer's Anecdotal Evidence/Experiences
I would advise that all beginner lucid dreamers converse with and listen to the advice of other more experienced lucid dreamers. However, you should always question how subjective their experiences actually are and how they can relate to your own lucid dreaming journey. 

I am a non-spiritual, non-religious (atheist) humanist, who seeks credible scientific evidence or validation before I can put my belief or faith into anything. Therefore, when I discuss lucid dreaming with spiritualists, much of what they say is completely irrelevant to my own understanding and experience of lucid dreaming. I don't believe in astral projection, spirit guides, guardian angels, shared consciousness, universal life-forces etc. Therefore any advice which involves the belief in, or embracing of, these concepts will not be of any benefit to my lucid dreaming practice. Despite what many lucid dreamers think, you do not need to embrace spirituality to enjoy lucid dreaming. Many spiritualists are lucid dreamers, but not all lucid dreamers are spiritualists. Putting your faith into something as esoteric as some of the spiritualist theories I have heard can prevent you from finding out what really works and the rational or scientific reasons for why (see below for further on this specific point).

Be wary of taking advice or information without carefully checking credible sources which support it. 

Also, don't become dissuaded from your own ability or progress just because Person X says they have a lucid dream every single night without trying; or Person Y says they have a lucid dream just from listening to binaural beats in a dark room; or Person Z says eating cheese while wearing a dream mask is all it takes for them to experience hour-long lucid dreams where they visit alternative planes of existence. That's the thing about lucid dreaming - in the absence of a sleep laboratory, a dream expert/neuroscientist and an EEG machine, these wild and wonderful claims (usually made online) cannot be substantiated - or disproved. You shouldn't base your own lucid dream practice on the hearsay of anyone else - no matter how much they talk up their own skills and experience. 


Certainly listen to what they have to say, but do your own research to ascertain whether you have been given good advice and ask for their source material if they have some - any experienced lucid dreamer willing to help a beginner should be more than happy to recommend the books, websites or documentaries they are referencing or borrowing information from. Trust your instinct and intuition - if something sounds like a sham or a little less than believable, it may well be so. Many people use online forums to gain social status, feel self-important and blow their own trumpet, so concentrate on what works for you and take everything you are told with a pinch of salt unless it can be externally verified. And remember, you are a unique individual whose brain will never work exactly like Person X, Y or Z - so while some general basics will work for everyone, some things are very subjective and specific and won't translate across to your own practice. 




  • Confusing the 'Science' of Lucid Dreaming with 'Pseudoscience' or Subjective/Individualist Interpretations & Practices
I do not wish to speak negatively of anyone's own fundamental/foundational beliefs or world-view - diversity means we are all part of a rich tapestry of individuals and communities which equally important views, opinions and interests. However, the point is, often claims are made in lucid dream groups/forums/pages which are rooted in one particular esoteric practice, spiritualist movement - or subjective, personal belief system of an individual and these need to be treated as just that: individual beliefs, not scientific fact. 

When some beginners seek advice online, they are given advice which may conflict or run counter to their own personal beliefs or views, which can be off-putting. When spiritual or pseudoscientific advice is given in circumstances where there is a valid scientific explanation readily available, it can limit a beginner's understanding of the nature of, and methods for inducing, lucid dreams or make the experience seem more overwhelming than it need be. For example, it is very common for certain people to explain sleep paralysis as a form of 'demonic visitation' (which often frightens beginners of the WILD Technique) or to suggest that they will 'visit' the beginner in a shared dream to help trigger lucidity (when there is no scientific evidence of shared dreaming/dream telepathy). Focusing on spiritualism or pseudoscience can detract from effective, scientifically-verified methods of induction and create false expectations of what lucid dreaming is or should be.

I would encourage everyone to develop their own style of lucid dreaming practice in line with their individual lifestyles, goals and beliefs (or lack of) - but not to wholeheartedly buy into the 'truth' of what someone else says, no matter how attractive it may sound. Science can objectively verify, measure and account for phenomenon - through rigorous observation and empiricism. The same cannot be said for all spiritual beliefs. For example, I have heard many people claim that astral projection has been 'scientifically proven'. This is not at all true. There is actually no firm scientific evidence for astral projection and all studies which claim it to be possible were either shown to be methodologically flawed, biased or based solely on anecdotal evidence. 

Many people make the claim that lucid dreaming and astral projection are intrinsically linked - or that you need to be spiritual and believe in brain/mind dualism (i.e. the notion that the consciousness can leave the physical body and that the brain and mind are separate entities) to actually lucid dream. This is factually inaccurate. Lucid dreaming has been scientifically proven in various laboratory experiments and is now recognised as a form of sleep phenomena by many neuroscientists and psychologists. While it can be used alongside spiritualism in a very advantageous way for those who do believe, not everything linked to consciousness or the dream world needs to have a spiritual basis to be fully enjoyed.

This is not to say that some people do not (subjectively) experience what they describe as 'astral projection', 'OBEs', 'dream telepathy/dream sharing' or 'precognitive dreaming' etc - it is a warning that not everything said to be 'scientifically proven' is necessarily so, which is why the term 'pseudoscience' exists. Careful research will debunk or clarify a lot of claims and highlight which ones are likely to be objectively verified as  possible and which are more subjective, individualistic or esoteric experiences which require a certain belief or faith in spiritualism or parapsychology. 

On this basis, avoid confusing lucid dreaming with other forms of spiritual practice and do not assume that every claim made by a fellow lucid dreamer must be the truth - do your own research before you let other peoples' beliefs influence your own lucid dream journey.



  • Ignoring the Dream Self/Ego
One of the best things about lucid dreaming is that it enables the dreamer to engage in a dialogue with their inner-self - i.e. their subconscious. Instead of focusing solely on lucid dream control (which is regarded as some lucid dream experts as superficial gratification), beginner lucid dreamers should also consider the advantages of communicating with their subconscious and unlocking their psyche in a way which is not easily possible in waking reality.

Your subconscious mind is not the executor of your free-will - it is the silent observer and author of your dreams - part of a dual consciousness which operates on two separate, yet interconnected levels. Some people pay psychoanalysts huge sums of money to decode their subconscious minds - you can use your lucid dreams to do this yourself for free. Use your lucid dreams to question your dream ego and unlock the parts of your mind which are shielded from your waking life. 

Ignoring the dream self/ego is neglecting to engage with the richest aspect of dreaming and missing a precious opportunity to inspect the dark and hidden recesses of your own mind.



  • Mistaking Dreaming of Lucid Dreaming for Lucid Dreaming
Many beginner lucid dreamers are unaware of what a lucid dream should feel like. As a result of the influence of 'day residue' and lucid dreaming being on their mind when they go to sleep, beginner lucid dreamers can often dream of lucid dreaming, resulting in confusion as to whether they actually experienced a true lucid dream. However, it is completely normal for something which takes up so much of our waking thoughts, hopes and desires to surface in dream form - even for experienced lucid dreamers. I often dream of lucid dreaming, without becoming lucid at all! I have tried to teach people how to lucid dream - and be taught lucid dreaming - in totally non-lucid dreams! 

References to lucid dreaming do not prompt me to reality check or question the nature and truth of my reality - because I haven't trained myself to use the words 'lucid dream' as a trigger for a reality check. If I did that, it would be incredibly hard for me to use Facebook or write this Blog! Instead I use my 'inner awareness' or another form of dreamsign as a cue. Lucid dreaming is triggered by a deep mental awareness that you are in a simulated environment or version of reality - it is a cognitive process, not a mere reference to lucidity. This is why a steady, dedicated and mindful practice is important rather than simply going through the motions and paying minimal attention to each aspect of lucid dreaming just to tick a box. 

Dreaming of lucid dreaming is not the same as lucid dreaming, but it is an indication that the concept and ideas of lucid dreaming are filtering through to your subconscious mind and entering into your dreams which is very positive. If thinking about and practising lucid dreaming can cause the theme of lucid dreaming to pop up in your non-lucid dreams, it is easy to imagine how all the methods you will be learning as part of the MILD Technique will make the same transition and eventually result in a successful DILD lucid dream.