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INTRODUCTION: WHAT IS LUCID DREAMING?
Lucid dreaming is a state in which the sleeper becomes alert and conscious that he or she
is dreaming. The imagery in this state is reported to be more vivid than in non-lucid states,
and it is difficult to distinguish between the dream and reality. The dreamer is able to
control what is dreamed.
Lucid dreaming has formed the central core of virtually every shamanic and mystical practice
throughout history. It allows the shaman to visit the spirit realms to gain healing power and
insight. In the East, lucid dreaming has long been seen as a signpost on the way to enlightenment.
The Goldi shamans of Siberia guide dying or dead subjects through the realms of the otherworld
through lucid dreams. Native Americans rely upon conscious dreaming for their vision quests,
and consider dreams to be central to life itself, and the foundation of all spiritual matters.
The Australian Aborignes are the oldest lucid dreamers, but the Tibetan shamans have carried
the process of lucid dreaming more exactly into the realm of mysticism. In 12th century Tibet
there arose famous schools of Dream Masters who appeared to use lucid dreaming as a powerful
method of meditation, which was reported to speed up the process of enlightenment. The Tibetan
shaman was always "chosen" through a lucid dream, which transformed the dreamer into a new being.
Many Western subjects entering lucid dreaming for the first time report experiencing nothing
comparable in the whole of their waking lives, feeling as if they had been radically changed by
the event and mysteriously transformed. The essential purpose of lucid dreamwork is ultimately to
wake up. Lucid dreaming helps us understand that we are just as asleep when we think we are awake,
as we are in dreams.
PART ONE: Brain States
The sleep cycle is made up of numerous clearly definedstages. The first is a transitional state
called the hypnagogic, which is the feeling of floating off, sometimes accompanied by vivid or
psychedelic images. At this point the brain is in alpha, which then gives way to the slower and
more rhythmic theta waves of light slumber. These are joined by rapid bursts of brain activity
(spindles and K-complexes). About 20 minutes after the beginning of the sleep cycle, the large
and relatively slow delta waves take over. This is the deep plunge into the void of sleep.
The quiet phase and the active phase are the two main stages of sleep, and can be distinguished
by differences in biochemistry, physiology, psychology, and behavior. The quite phase occurs
during deep sleep and is known as "S" sleep, as it is characterized by slow wave EEG. This Delta
pattern takes up most of our sleeping time, thus the "S". It is the state of restful inactivity,
your mind does little while you breathe slowly and deeply; your metabolic rate is at a minimum,
and growth hormones are released facilitating restorative processes. When awakened from this state,
people feel disoriented and rarely remember dreaming.
However the second type of sleep pattern, REM (rapid eye movement) is the sleep state that pertains
to lucid dreaming. REM sleep or "D" sleep is characterized by rapid eye movements and is often
accompanied by dreams, thus the D. The first episode of REM or D sleep in adults lasts about ten
minutes but can increase to as much as an hour throughout the night. During REM sleep your eyes
move around rapidly, breathing is quick and irregular, and you dream vividly. During this activity,
your body remains still, because it is temporarily paralyzed during REM sleep to prevent you from
acting out your dreams.
The length of REM periods increase as the night proceeds, and the intervals between REM periods
decrease. The first REM period usually lasts about ten minutes, after with the sleeper almost
awakens before stage two. The cycle is then highly variable with each individual. Usually the
complete REM/non REM cycle lasts about 90 minutes, with the dreamer experiencing four to five
cycles of sleep each night. During the last two hours of sleep the REM has increased from ten
minutes to as much as one hour.
Therefore "dreaming sleep" accounts for as much as 20 percent of our sleeping life. We spend
as much as five years in dreamworlds, and experience over 150,000 dreams in a lifetime. During
the last several decades, sleep researchers have discovered that for every 100 persons in REM
sleep, over 80 percent will remember a dream if awakened. REM is clearly a unique brain state,
though it is similar to the waking state in EEG activity. This may explain why dreams seem so real.
While other structures in the brain are involved in sleep, the neocortex is a major brain area
involved in the production of dream images and experiences.
PART TWO: How to Induce a Lucid Dream
a) How to schedule your efforts for best results
Most lucid dreams happen in the late morning hours of sleep. If you normally sleep for eight hours,
you will probably have six REM periods with the last half occurring in the last quarter of the night.
The probability of having a lucid dream in the last two hours of sleep is more than twice as great
as the probability of having a lucid dream in the previous six hours.
If you are serious about lucid dreaming, you should arrange at least one morning a week where you
can stay in bed several hours longer than usual. If you can't afford more time in bed, there is a
simple secret to increasing your lucid dreaming that requires no extra sleep.
b) Techniques for Lucid Dreaming
Carlos Castaneda is instructed in one of his books that the best way to have a lucid dream is to
shift the attention while dreaming. His teacher advises him to look for his hands or feet during
the dream, which will help him remember that he is dreaming, and have access to using his dream body.
The technique does work, although it may take many trials before a person actually remembers to
look at the hands or feet while they are dreaming.
Training Protocol for Lucid Dreaming.
Should be practiced each night before going to sleep.
2. Listen to tape and do some deep breathing (Noise Removal Breathing p.87 & Level One Breathing p.86).
3. Imagine and feel a point of white light in middle of forehead. Sense it radiating its light in front
of the brain and directly in front of you.
4. Imagine and feel you are walking along a deserted beach at twilight. Notice the sky, moon, stars.
As you walk, sense the point of white light on forehead, look down at hands and feet. Rotate hands
and look at them in the light of the moon and stars.
You will find yourself drawn to one of the doors. Know that your chosen door holds something of
value behind it. As you walk towards the door, feel the point of light, and glance down at the
hands and feet. When you open the door, look at your hand. Enter the next room and explore everything
- the people or beings you find there may be metaphorical. You may talk to anyone. As you explore,
occasionally glance at hands or feet and feel the point of white light on the forehead.
After exploring the room, return to the first room and the entrance that leads to the stairs. Open
the door and walk to the beach. Bring awareness back to physical body, and slowly open eyes.
Preparation for Lucid Dreaming
2. Close eyes, deep breathing (or Level One Breathing).
3. Imagine point of white light in forehead.
4. As your awareness rests on this point, say to yourself silently: "I intend to have lucid dreams
tonight. I recognize when I am dreaming and I am able to move freely in my dream body." (Can use
any similar statement).
5. Continue to keep mental focus gently at point of light in the middle of forehead. When you
feel yourself drifting off to sleep, let go of the focus.
DREAM-INITIATED LUCID DREAMS (DILDs)
Critical State Testing: Ask yourself whether you are awake ordreaming throughout the day, so that
you can get into the habit of asking the same question while you are dreaming. It is important to
ask the question "Am I dreaming or not?" at least five to ten times a day, especially in situations
that are dreamlike, or remind you of your dreams. It is also good to ask the question at bedtime.
Don't just automatically ask the question and mindlessly reply, "Obviously I'm awake," or you will
do the same thing when you are actually dreaming. Look around for oddities that may indicate you
are dreaming, and think back over the events of the past several minutes. If you had trouble
remembering what happened, you may be dreaming.
State Testing: Don't ask other people in your dream whetheryou are dreaming, because they will
often reply that you're not. The best way to check if you're dreaming is trying to fly. Hop into
the air, and if you stay there, you're dreaming. You can also read something, look away and see
if the text has distorted in any way when you look back.
Another method is to look twice at a digital watch, because they never behave correctly in dreams.
Don't use an analogue watch to check because they can tell dream time quite believably.
You may discover that any time you feel the genuine need to test reality, this in itself is proof
enough that you're dreaming, as when we're awake we almost never seriously wonder whether we are
in fact awake or dreaming.
Intention Technique:
2. Visualize yourself recognizing dreaming - Visualize yourself in dream situations that would
normally make you realize you are dreaming.
3. Imagine carrying out an intended dream action - Resolve to carry out a particular action in a
dream, e.g. see yourself flying, knowing that you are dreaming.
Prerequisites: It is necessary to have or develop the ability to remember future intentions using
your mental capacity only, rather than relying on external reminders such as lists.
MILD TECHNIQUE
2. Recall your dream - When you awake from a dream period, no matter what time it is, recall as
many details as possible from your dream.
3. Focus your intent - While returning to sleep, concentrate on your intention to remember to
recognize that you are dreaming.
4. See yourself becoming lucid - At the same time, imagine that you are back in the dream from
which you have just awakened, but this time you recognize that it is a dream. Find a dream sign
(something odd or bizarre in a dream that alerts you to the fact that it's a dream) and say to
yourself, "I'm dreaming!" and continue your fantasy.
5. Repeat - Repeat steps 3 and 4 until your intention is set, then let yourself fall asleep. If
your mind strays while you are falling asleep, repeat the procedure so that the last thing in your
mind as you fall asleep is your intention to remember to recognize that you are dreaming.
WAKE-INITIATED LUCID DREAMS (WILDs)
This involves falling asleep consciously.
Attention on Hypnagogoc Imagery - This is the most common strategy for inducing WILDs and involves
focusing on the hypnagogic imagery that accompanies sleep onset, e.g. flashes of light, geometric
patterns.
HYPNAGOGIC IMAGERY TECHNIQUE
2. Observe the visual images - Focus attention on the images that appear before the mind's eye,
watching how the images begin and end. Observe the images delicately, and allow them to be passively
reflected in your mind as they unfold. Do not attempt to hold on to the images, just observe and
let them pass. At first there will be a series of disconnected, fleeting patterns and images,
which will eventually develop into scenes.
3. Enter the dream - When the imagery becomes a moving, vivid scenario, you should allow yourself
to be passively drawn into the dream world. Do not try and enter the dream scene. Be careful of
too much involvement and too little attention, and don't forget that you are dreaming now.
TIBETAN WHITE DOT TECHNIQUE
1. Before bed
B) Visualize in the throat chakra the syllable "ah", red in color and vividly radiant.
C) Mentally concentrate on the radiance of the "ah". Imagine that the radiance illuminates
everything in the world and shows it as being unreal or dreamlike.
B) Resolve eleven times to comprehend the nature of the dream state.
C) Concentrate on a dot of pure white situated between the eyebrows.
D) Continue to concentrate on the dot until you find that you are dreaming.
BLACK DOT TECHNIQUE
1. Before bed
B. Make 21 resolutions to recognize the dream.
C. Then, concentrate your mind on a pill-sized black dot at the root chakra (base of genitals).
D. Continue to focus on the black dot until you find you are dreaming.
2. Count to yourself while falling asleep - As you are drifting off to sleep, count to yourself,
"1, I'm dreaming; 2, I'm dreaming..." and so on maintaining vigilance. You may start over after
reaching 100.
3. Realize you are dreaming - After continuing this for some time you'll be saying "I'm dreaming,"
and you will notice that you are dreaming.
THE TWIN BODIES TECHNIQUE
2. Focus on your body - Focus attention on each part of body and notice how it feels, watching
for vibrations or other strange sensations. When these sensations arrive, following will be a
complete paralysis of the body. You are then ready to leave the paralyzed physical body and enter
the dream body.
3. Leave your body and enter the dream - As soon as the physical body is in a profound state of
sleep paralysis, you are ready to go. This paralyzed physical body has a moveable twin, called
your dream body. Imagine yourself in your dream body, rolling or floating out of your physical body.
Jump, crawl or fall out of bed. Sink into the floor. Fly through the ceiling. This is lucid dreaming.
1) Try reading the same passage from a book twice;
2) look at a digital watch, look away, then look back a few seconds later.
c) Preventing Premature Awakening
When the lucid dream is threatened by wakening, it is usefulto carry out some form of dream action
as soon as the visual part of the dream begins to fade, e.g. listening to voices, music or your
breathing; beginning or continuing a conversation; rubbing or opening your (dream) eyes; touching
your dream hands and face; touching objects or being touched; flying. Another technique is to look
at the ground.
DREAM SPINNING
2. Spin as soon as the dream begins to fade - As soon as you notice the dream fading, stretch out
your arms and spin like a top with your dream body. You can spin any way you like, but you must feel
the vivid sensation of movement in your dream body, not just imagine it.
3. While spinning - remind yourself that the next thing you see will probably be a dream.
4. Test your state wherever you seem to arrive - Keep spinning until you find yourself in a stable
world, you will either still be dreaming or will have awakened. Carefully test which state you are
in, i.e.read a text, look at a digital watch.
d) Lucid Dreaming for Problem Solving
2. Go to bed - Without doing anything else, turn out the light and go straight to bed.
3. Focus on your phrase and your intention to become lucid - Recall the phrase and picture, and
visualize yourself dreaming lucidly about it. Meditate on the phrase and your intention to become
lucid until you fall asleep, letting other thoughts pass.
4. Pursue your intention in the lucid dream - Carry out your intention while in a lucid dream.
Ask what you want to ask, do what you want to do. Be sure to notice your feelings and be observant
of all details in the dream.
5. Remember to awaken and recall the dream - When you achieve a satisfying answer in the dream,
wake yourself up by going back to your dream bed, blinking or otherwise withdrawing your attention
from the dream. Immediately write down at least the part of your dream that includes the solution.
Even if you don't think your question was answered, still write the dream down. You may find on
reflection that the answer was hidden in your dream and you didn't realize it at the time.
It is useful to confront threatening characters in a dream or nightmare, and turn it into a lucid
dream by beginning your own dialogue with them. You could ask the following:
"Who are you?"
e) Conversing with Dream Characters
1. Practice imaginary dialogues in the waking state - Chose a recent dream in which you had an
unpleasant encounter with a dream character. Visualize yourself talking to them, and initiated
a dialogue using the above questions or any of your own. Don't let critical thoughts interrupt
the flow, such as "I'm just making this up," or "This is silly." Terminate the dialogue when it
runs out of energy or when you have your resolution. Evaluate what you did right or would do
differently next time.
2. Set your intention - Set the goal for yourself that the next time you have a disturbing encounter
with a dream character, you will become lucid and engage the character in dialogue.
3. Converse with problem dream figures - When you encounter anyone with whom you have a conflict,
ask yourself whether or not you are dreaming. If you find that you are, stay and face the character,
and begin a dialogue with one of the opening questions above. Listen to the character's responses and
try and address their problems as well as your own. See if you can make friends or reach a resolution.
Wake yourself up while you still remember the dream clearly and write it down.
4. Evaluate the dialogue - Ask yourself if you achieved the best result you could, or how you could
improve it next time.
PART THREE: COMMON QUESTIONS ON LUCID DREAMING
Q:If dreams are messages from the unconscious mind, will consciously controlling dreams interfere
with this important process, and deprive me of the benefits of dream interpretation?
A: Dreams are not letters from the unconscious mind, but experiences created through the interactions
of the unconscious and conscious mind. More info from the unconscious is available to us in dreams,
however if dreams were the exclusive realm of the unconscious, we wouldn't remember them. You
shouldn't always be conscious in dreams any more than you should always be conscious of what you
are doing in waking life. However, if your actions are taking you in the wrong direction (in dreaming
or waking), you should be able to "wake up" to what you are doing wrong and consciously redirect your
approach.
As for the benefits of dream interpretation, lucid dreams can be examined as fruitfully as non-lucid
dreams. Lucid dreamers can even interpret their dreams while they are happening.
Q: Will the efforts of learning lucid dreaming lead to sleep loss, and will I be more tired from
being awake in my dreams?
A: Dreaming lucidly is as restful as dreaming non-lucidly. Lucid dreams are often positive experiences
and leave you feeling more invigorated. How tired you feel depends on what you did in the dream. You
should practice lucid dreaming when you have the time and energy to devote to the task. If you are
too busy to allot more time to sleeping, or to sacrifice any of the sleep you are getting, it's
probably not a good idea to work on lucid dreaming right now. Lucid dreaming requires good sleep
and mental energy for concentration. Once you learn the techniques, you should reach a point where
you can have lucid dreams whenever you wish just by reminding yourself to do so.
Q: Will practicing lucid dreaming affect my psychotherapy?
A: Lucid dreaming can be instrumental in psychotherapy, however if you are in psychotherapy and want
to experiment with lucid dreaming, talk it over with your therapist. Make sure your therapist is
well-informed on the subject of lucid dreaming, and understands its functions and implications.
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