English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

like a dream where you know your dreaming so have complete control over it. Ive had a couple and they are awesome, the trick is to not think about it too much when you realise you are dreaming or you will wake yourself up, but is there a way to trigger them?

2006-08-15 02:14:59 · 23 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

23 answers

There are ways to condition lucid dream triggers... devices are marketed for that purpose.

It is also possible to learn to recognize dreams and co-opt them. One of the classic methods is auto-suggestion to look for your hands when dreaming. When you catch yourself doing this in a dream, you begin realizing it is a dream, and become lucid in the dream state.

2006-08-15 02:18:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Interpret Your Dreams on this site all the meanings without having to look them up never mind the...Title...of the web-site. http://www.freakydreams.com/ because Good Dreams also can be Interpreted.
Dreaming is a place of possibility and creation, a land of futures that might come and pasts that never were. It is also a land of nightmares.
It constantly changes as people fall asleep and shape parts of it, then wake up and their dreams dissolve back into mist. A dreams dictionary always helps ( for other descriptions needed ). http://myjellybean.com/dream/pagey.html
Did you know you can make yourself dream anything its called...Lucid Dreaming which this site will explains along with some other questions about dreaming. http://www.dreams.ca/

2006-08-16 18:47:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Maybe its a question of good software. According to these lucid lunies at www.lucidity.com you can either pay for a trip to tropical paradise with their group of dreamers or try this software.

The Lucidity Institute offers electronic devices that help people have lucid dreams. They were developed through laboratory research at Stanford University by LaBerge, Levitan, and others. The basic principle behind these devices is as follows: the primary task confronting someone who wishes to have a lucid dream is to remember that intention while in a dream. One of the best ways to increase a person's chances of having a lucid dream is to give a reminder to the person during REM sleep. In the lab, we found that flashing light cues worked well in that they tended to incorporate into ongoing dreams without causing awakening. You may have noticed that occasional bits of sensory information are filtered into your dreams in disguised form, like a clock radio as supermarket music or a chain saw as the sound of a thunderstorm. This is the same principle used by our lucid dream induction devices: the lights or sounds from the device filter into the user's dreams. In cases of very deep sleepers, we found that it was sometimes necessary to use sound as well as light to get the cues into dreams. The dreamer's task is to notice the flashing lights in the dream and remember that they are cues to become lucid. Because we could not possibly accommodate everyone who wants to come into the sleep lab for a lucid dream induction session and most people would rather sleep at home anyway, we worked for several years to develop a comfortable, portable device that would detect REM sleep and deliver a cue tailored to the individual user's needs.

I feel asleep before the 5th sentence.

2006-08-15 02:21:58 · answer #3 · answered by jodimode 3 · 0 0

The two essentials to learning lucid dreaming are motivation and effort. Although most people report occasional spontaneous lucid dreams, they rarely occur without our intending it. Lucid dream induction techniques help focus intention and prepare a critical mind. They range from millennium-old Tibetan exercises to modern methods developed by dream researchers. Try the following techniques and feel free to use personal variants. Experiment, observe, and persevere - lucid dreaming is easier than you may think.

2006-08-15 02:19:07 · answer #4 · answered by endrshadow 5 · 0 0

One way that I have heard of is this. Every time you wake, you should try to describe your previous dream out loud in as much detail as you can. After a while, you can remember more, and then eventually you start to be able to control what happens in your dreams.

2006-08-15 02:22:06 · answer #5 · answered by Roger B 3 · 0 0

attempt leaping into the air some situations an afternoon whilst no one is around. try this on an known basis. After 3 to 4 weeks, in case you have been consistent, you would be wanting a dream the place you leap into the air. yet in objectives, we don't basically drop back to the floor, we flow back off. then you definitely would be conscious of you're in a dream.

2016-09-29 07:12:33 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes there is but it takes time. You can also reach a state where you can change a dream through the subconscious mind but personally I like my dreams to have full reign. I have enough decision-making to do in my waking hours.

2006-08-15 02:22:36 · answer #7 · answered by vzhnri 3 · 0 0

just take control, not everydream is the same! Sleep early and have abt 12 hour sleep. that way ur energy will be restored and you have more strength and energy to control in ur dream. If u sleep lke 6 hours and u will be tired still and ur dreams will make u weak.

2006-08-15 02:18:38 · answer #8 · answered by vaiosoft 4 · 0 0

YES. There were directions on the site "How Stuff Works." Google that and get clear details. Whether it really works I can't guarantee but there definitely is a set of steps to follow.

2006-08-15 02:19:27 · answer #9 · answered by Rich Z 7 · 0 0

I had them often when I was young.

I could even end the dream when I wanted to by tumbling over and over.

I sure would like to have that back.

2006-08-15 02:20:32 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers