lucid dreamer

Lucid Dreamer Articles

 

How Do You Become A Lucid Dreamer?


If you want to know how to condition yourself to be a lucid dreamer, you’ve come to the right place. Let’s look at how this can be accomplished.

So, what is so good about being a lucid dreamer? What would you gain from it? In order to understand the advantages of being aware when you are dreaming, we need to examine what regular sleep actually is.

When you go to sleep, you normally get into bed, close your eyes for a length of time, and then you either dream or aren't conscious of anything for a while before waking up. Normal sleep isn't very interesting!

Average sleep has a purpose it prepares our minds and bodies to carry out the duties of the next day. However, consider the idea of managing your dreams consciously.

Would you like to stop just being a passive observer and make sure your dreams are whatever you want them to be? That's what being a lucid dreamer is all about. You're totally in control of your dreams, and able to explore new worlds that aren't bound to the real world's laws.

How does a person train themselves to be a lucid dreamer? A dream initiated lucid dream or DILD is when the dreamer realizes he or she is dreaming. When you are having a dream and know you are dreaming, you are having a lucid dream.

Method number two is a wake initiated lucid dream, or WILD. This is when the dreamer begins awake, then goes to being asleep, but without losing consciousness. The dreamer enters their dream as though via a door, instead of waking up inside a dream he or she is already having.

So, what methods can you use to induce these kinds of lucid dreaming states?

Remember your dreams.

If you want to become a lucid dreamer, one of the easiest ways is to begin by learning dream recall. Dream recall is nothing more than being able to remember your dreams. Learning to remember you dreams makes it easier for you to recognize that you are in a dream while sleeping – you are more than likely to either have the same dream moiré than once, or at least have elements which recur in your dreams.

Keep a record of your dreams. You may not remember much at first but write down any details regardless of how trivial. You will begin to remember more and more as time goes on. Do this as soon as you wake up when your dreams are still fresh in your mind, otherwise you will forget as the day goes by.

Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams (MILD)

Dr Steven LaBerge is a leading scientist who studies lucid dreaming. He was the founder of MILD. This method involves telling yourself you will remember your dreams or perhaps an object in the dream. When you see the object while dreaming it will trigger your mind into knowing you are in a dream.

Wake-Back-to-Bed (WBTB)

To use this process, go to sleep with an alarm set to wake you up five to six hours later. When you wake up, don't go right back to sleep. Instead, do something else, like think about lucid dreaming or read a book, for about an hour. Then go back to bed.

According to Dr, LaBerge, this method has a 60% success rate. The idea here is to wake yourself in the midst of a REM cycle so that upon returning to sleep, lucid dreaming will be easy to achieve.

Cycle Adjustment Technique

Daniel Love came up with this way to accomplish lucid dreaming. Start getting up an hour and a half earlier. After you get used to this, go back to getting up at your usual time. Since you are used to getting up earlier but don’t have to now, your mind is still thinking you are awake, therefore you will be more likely to be aware in your dream.

Wake-initiation of Lucid Dreams (WILD)

Let's get back to this method which is described above. To achieve lucid dreaming, the technique is to try to keep mentally aware even as your body relaxes into a sleep state. Think of it this way – you are getting ready to watch a movie; your closed eyelids are like the black screen before the movie begins and you are waiting for the trailers to roll.

Some of the methods which can keep you mentally alert are chanting, being aware of your breathing, counting, and picturing yourself climbing up or down stairs and focusing on relaxing your body from head to toe. All of these techniques fall under the umbrella of self hypnosis. The best time to use this technique is when you are not physically tired, especially in the afternoon.

Technologies like strobe lights and dreaming masks can also help you to become a lucid dreamer.

Listening to binaural beat frequencies through a head set is the simplest and most consistent way to create a lucid dream.

Binaural beats induce lucid dreaming by causing the hemispheres of your brain to work synchronously, making your brainwaves shift to the frequency required for lucid dreaming.

With a combination of self affirmations, self hypnosis and binaural sounds, being a lucid dreamer is something anyone can do successfully.
Another Night, Another Lucid Dream!

 

Dream Control
Conscious Dreaming
Lucid Dream
Lucid Dreams
Lucid Dreamer
Lucid Dreaming
Home Page