Psych 101: How to Induce a Lucid Dream

in #psych1018 years ago (edited)

 

 "Lucid dreaming can best be described as experiencing a dream as though  it were real life.  Often in dreams, the scenes depicted are hazy or  illogical.  They are usually random, and when you wake up in the  morning, forgotten.  Instead of simply acknowledging your surroundings  in a dream, lucid dreaming allows you to understand them, and at times,  control them. 


 Lucid dreaming is a waking awareness of your surroundings while you are  dreaming.  While the frequency varies between individuals, chances are  you've had one at some point in your life.  What you may not have known,  however, is that it is possible to compel your mind to generate lucid  dreams, allowing you to take advantage of all the benefits it provides. 

 People most often want to experience lucid dreams as a form of  recreational pastime. They give you nearly full control of your dreams,  making your imagination the limit for what you experience.  Other times,  lucid dreams are helpful for people who experience chronic nightmares,  as a wakeful consciousness allows them to rationalize their fears. 

 Here are the most common ways to encourage your body to have lucid dreams.  

 Perform Reality Checks 

 As suggested by the name, reality checks are actions you perform to see  whether or not you are awake and in reality.  The purpose of this is to  train your mind to be aware of your surroundings, so if something seems  "off" when you are dreaming, your mind will take notice.  If performed  often and habitually, reality checks eventually become an automatic  action that occurs within dreams you have. 

 There are many different reality checks that are helpful in identifying  either the waking world or the sleeping world.  For instance, you may  have noticed that while you are sleeping, words and numbers often appear  in seemingly nonsensical patterns.  At the time, when you're dreaming,  the words seem logical, but retrospectively they mean nothing.  This can  be used to your advantage as a reality check.  Every so often, look at  your watch or a book and make sure the words or numbers appear in the  expected order.  Another example of a reality check is pinching your  nose and seeing if you can still breathe through it.  During a dream,  you will be able to breathe through it; when you're awake, you won't. 

 While you are performing your reality check, be critical of the results;  do not simply look and your watch and think that will be sufficient.  You must carefully look and ensure that all of the numbers appear in the  right order. Likewise, when pinching your nose, make sure you cannot  breathe. 

 Mantra-Induced Lucid Dreams  

 Another easy and accessible method to encourage lucid dreaming is to  tell yourself that you will have one as you fall asleep at night.  As  you sleep, repeatedly tell yourself "I will remember my dream tonight,"  "I will experience a lucid dream,"  or the like. Priming your mind for  such actions makes it more likely that they will occur. 

 The scientific basis for this is hazy, but anecdotal evidence suggests  that this is a reliable technique.  However, you must believe in the  mantra you are reciting; mindlessly thinking the words over and over  again will yield no progress because you will not be internalizing the  thoughts.  A deep belief that what you say is true is necessary for this  method to work properly.  In addition, make sure that the idea you are  thinking of is consistent.  Mixing ideas, such as thinking both "I will  experience a lucid dream tonight" and "I will dream of a car tonight"  provide varied success rates when compared to sticking with a  centralized idea. 

 Wake-Back-to-Bed Technique  

 With the wake-back-to-bed method of prompting a lucid dream, you are  encouraged to wake up in the middle of the night and then fall back  asleep after a brief period of wakefulness, 30 minutes for example. This  activates certain key components in your brain which remain active as  you return to sleep. Because you are combining both wakefulness and  dream states, you are more likely to experience a lucid dream. 

 This technique can either be employed naturally or artificially; both  methods have their benefits.  By waking up naturally, you are not  potentially damaging your hours of rest. However, you also run the risk  of not being able to fall back asleep, which ruins any chance of having a  lucid dream.  By setting an alarm for the middle of the night, you are  almost guaranteeing you will fall back asleep and have a more active  dream state.  On the other hand, you might be missing out on sleep and  feeling tired the next day.  If you choose to wake up with an alarm, you  may want to set it for five hours after you fall asleep. 

 There are several different methods you can use to raise the possibility  of experiencing a lucid dream.  Those described above are safe and easy  to apply each night. "

Moving these articles to my main Psych 101: Account for better management. Yes, This article is mine.

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