đŸ•šī¸ Louise Are there any lucid dreamers here? I have some questions.
đŸ•šī¸ Louise Basically: 1. how easy is for you to go into a lucid dream? how long it took you to get to that state? what's the best recommendations you can provide?
Login or register your account to reply
â˜ī¸ Jean-David Moisan 1. I've been lucid dreaming for as long as I can remember. 2. It didn't take very long, but I remember ~waking up in the morning but staying in bed for a while trying to keep the dream alive for as long as I could. 3. Some movies that I find helped would be "The Butterfly Effect" from 2004 and "Inception". I found my dreams to be boosted after watching them. 4. From the start, lucid dreaming was more of a way to cheat during my dreams. More on that if you reply to this.
đŸ—¨ī¸ Fui Not OP, but hey, now I want to read more about your experiences while lucid dreaming. Some questions: do you get more tired? Does LD interferes with the quality of your deep sleep? Are there any noticeable trade-offs in LD?
â˜ī¸ Jean-David Moisan 4b. Sometimes dreams degenerate pretty fast. Maybe you're fighting bad guys and you lose. I can use lucid dreaming to reset the dream, restart the fight with extra powers.-As far as I can tell, I'm not more tired. Quality of my sleep is good.-When I was around 5 or 6 years old, I remember going to sleep by visualizing a dice with a clown from a circus. The dice would have various dream ideas on each face. It would roll around a bit in the air. Then I would get sucked in one.
đŸ—¨ī¸ Fui Thank you so much for sharing this. It's really motivating to hear about your LD experience!
😃 Javier Answers: 1. Not easy. Day dreaming helps. It took me 20 years daydreaming . Watch movie Waking life. Most of my lucid dreams revolve around unresolved issues. Long days in front of the screen had reduced my ability for it. Prime your mind with thoughts and ideas before going to sleep.
đŸ•šī¸ Louise Alright, thanks for the tips!