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- Newsgroups: alt.dreams
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!leland.Stanford.EDU!news
- From: clint@waldron.stanford.edu (Jennifer Dole)
- Subject: Lucid Dreaming FAQ
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.004611.15867@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Organization: Psychology Dept, Stanford Univ.
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 92 00:46:11 GMT
- Lines: 189
-
- (Answers to these frequently asked questions on lucid dreaming
- brought to you by THE LUCIDITY INSTITUTE.)
-
- Q. What is lucid dreaming?
- A. The term "lucid dreaming" refers to dreaming while knowing that
- you are dreaming. The "lucid" part refers to the clarity of
- consciousness rather than the vividness of the dream. It generally
- happens when you realize during the course of a dream that you are
- dreaming, perhaps because something weird occurs. Most people who
- remember their dreams have experienced this at some time, often
- waking up immediately after the realization. However, it is
- possible to continue in the dream while remaining fully aware that
- you are dreaming.
-
- Q. If you are lucid, can you control the dream?
- A. Usually lucidity brings with it some degree of control over the
- course of the dream. How much control is possible varies from
- dream to dream and from dreamer to dreamer. Practice can
- apparently contribute to the ability to exert control over dream
- events. At the least, lucid dreamers can choose how they wish to
- respond to the events of the dream. For example, you can decide to
- face up to a frightening dream figure, knowing it cannot harm you,
- rather than to try to avoid the danger as you naturally would if
- you did not know it was a dream. Even this amount of control can
- transform the dream experience from one in which you are the
- helpless victim of frequently terrifying, frustrating, or
- maddening experiences to one in which you can dismiss for a while
- the cares and concerns of waking life. On the other hand, some
- people are able to achieve a level of mastery in their lucid
- dreaming where they can create any world, live any fantasy, and
- experience anything they can imagine!
-
- Q. Does lucid dreaming interfere with the function of "normal"
- dreaming?
- A. According to one way of thinking, lucid dreaming _is_ normal
- dreaming. The brain and body are in the same physiological state
- during lucid dreaming as they are in during most ordinary non-
- lucid dreaming, that is, REM sleep. Dreaming is a result of the
- brain being active, at the same time as the sense organs of the
- body are turned off to the outside world. In this condition,
- typically during REM sleep, the mind creates experiences out of
- currently active thoughts, concerns, memories and fantasies.
- Knowing you are dreaming simply allows you to direct the dream
- along constructive or positive lines, like you direct your
- thoughts when you are awake. Furthermore, lucid dreams can be even
- more informative about yourself than non-lucid dreams, because you
- can observe the development of the dream out of your feelings and
- tendencies, while being aware that you are dreaming and that the
- dream is coming from you. The notion that dreams are unconscious
- processes that should remain so is false. Your waking
- consciousness is always present in your dreams. If it were not,
- you would not be able to remember dreams, because you can only
- remember an event you have consciously experienced. The added
- "consciousness" of lucid dreaming is nothing more than the
- awareness of being in the dream state.
-
- Q. Does everybody dream?
- A. Everybody dreams. All humans (indeed, all mammals) have REM
- sleep. Most dreams occur in REM sleep. This has been demonstrated
- by awakening people from different stages of sleep and asking if
- they were dreaming. In 85 percent of awakenings from REM sleep,
- people report having been dreaming. Dreams are rarely reported
- following awakening from other types of sleep (collectively called
- non-REM sleep). REM sleep alternates with non-REM sleep in 90
- minute cycles throughout the night. In a typical 8 hour night, you
- will spend about an hour and a half total time in REM sleep,
- broken up into four or five "REM periods" ranging in length from 5
- to 45 minutes. Most dreams are forgotten. Some people never recall
- dreams while others recall five or more each night. You can
- improve your ability to recall dreams. Good dream recall is
- necessary for learning lucid dreaming. There are two basic things
- to do to get started with developing dream recall. Begin a dream
- journal, in which you write everything you remember of your
- dreams, even the slightest fragments. You will remember the most
- if you record dreams right after you awaken from them. Before
- falling asleep each night, remind yourself that you want to awaken
- from, remember and record your dreams.
-
- Q. Why would you want to have lucid dreams?
- A. The laws of physics and society are repealed in dreams. The
- only limits are the reaches of your imagination. Much of the
- potential of dreams is wasted because people do not recognize that
- they are dreaming. When we are not lucid in a dream, we think and
- behave as if we are in waking reality. This can lead to pointless
- frustration, confusion and wasted energy, and in the worst case,
- terrifying nightmares. It is useless to try as we do to accomplish
- the tasks of waking life in dreams. Our misguided efforts to do so
- result in anxiety dreams of malfunctioning machinery, missed
- deadlines, forgotten exams, losing the way, and so on. Anxiety
- dreams and nightmares can be overcome through lucid dreaming,
- because if you know you are dreaming you have nothing to fear.
- Dream images cannot hurt you. Lucid dreams, in addition to helping
- you lead your dreams in satisfying directions, enjoy fantastic
- adventures, and overcome nightmares, can be valuable tools for
- success in your waking life. Lucid dreamers can deliberately
- employ the natural creative potential of dreams for problem
- solving and artistic inspiration. Athletes, performers, or anyone
- who gives presentations can prepare, practice and polish their
- performances while they sleep. This is only a taste of the variety
- of ways people have used lucid dreaming to expand their lives.
-
- Q. How do you have lucid dreams?
- A. There are several methods of inducing lucid dreams. The first
- step, regardless of method, is to develop your dream recall until
- you can remember at least one dream per night. Then, if you have a
- lucid dream you will remember it. You will also become very
- familiar with your dreams, making it easier learn to recognize
- them while they are happening. If you recall your dreams you can
- begin immediately with two simple techniques for stimulating lucid
- dreams. Lucid dreamers make a habit of "reality testing." This
- means investigating the environment to decide whether you are
- dreaming or awake. Ask yourself many times a day, "Could I be
- dreaming?" Then, test the stability of your current reality by
- reading some words, looking away and looking back while trying to
- will them to change. The instability of dreams is the easiest clue
- to use for distinguishing waking from dreaming. If the words
- change, you are dreaming. Taking naps is a way to greatly increase
- your chances of having lucid dreams. You have to sleep long enough
- in the nap to enter REM sleep. If you take the nap in the morning
- (after getting up earlier than usual), you are likely to enter REM
- sleep within a half-hour to an hour after you fall asleep. If you
- nap for 90 minutes to 2 hours you will have plenty of dreams and a
- higher probability of becoming lucid than in dreams you have
- during a normal night's sleep. Focus on your intention to
- recognize that you are dreaming as you fall asleep within the nap.
-
- External cues to help people attain lucidity in dreams have been
- the focus of Dr. Stephen LaBerge's research and the Lucidity
- Institute's development efforts for several years. Using the
- results of laboratory studies, they have designed a portable
- device, called the DreamLight, for this purpose. It monitors sleep
- and when it detects REM sleep gives a cue -- a flashing light --
- that enters the dream to remind the dreamer to become lucid. The
- light comes from a soft mask worn during sleep that also contains
- the sensing apparatus for determining when the sleeper is in REM
- sleep. A small custom computer connected to the mask by a cord
- decides when the wearer is in REM and when to flash the lights.
-
- Q. Is there a way to prevent yourself from awakening right after
- becoming lucid?
- A. At first, beginners may have difficulty remaining in the dream
- after they attain lucidity. This obstacle may prevent many people
- from realizing the value of lucid dreaming, because they have not
- experienced more than the flash of knowing they are dreaming,
- followed by immediate awakening. Two simple techniques can help
- you overcome this problem. The first is to remain calm in the
- dream. Becoming lucid is exciting, but expressing the excitement
- can awaken you. Suppress your feeling somewhat and turn your
- attention to the dream. If the dream shows signs of ending, such
- as the disappearance, loss of clarity or depth of the imagery,
- "spinning" can help bring the dream back. As soon as the dream
- starts to "fade," before you feel your real body in bed, spin your
- dream body like a top. That is, twirl around like a child trying
- to get dizzy (you probably will not get dizzy during dream
- spinning because your physical body is not spinning around).
- Remind yourself, "The next scene will be a dream." When you stop
- spinning, if it is not obvious that you are dreaming, do a reality
- test. Even if you think you are awake, you may be surprised to
- find that you are still dreaming!
-
- Q. How can I find out more about lucid dreaming, or get involved
- in lucid dreaming research?
- A. Contact the Lucidity Institute, an organization founded by
- lucid dreaming researcher Dr. Stephen LaBerge to support research
- on lucid dreams and to help people learn to use them to enhance
- their lives. The Lucidity Institute's mission is to advance
- research on the nature and potentials of consciousness and to
- apply the results of this research to the enhancement of human
- health and well-being. The Lucidity Institute offers a membership
- society, whose quarterly newsletter, NightLight, discusses
- research and development in the field of lucid dreaming, and
- invites the participation of members in at-home experiments.
- Workshops and training programs are available periodically. The
- Institute sells books, tapes, scientific publications and the
- DreamLight.
-
- Write or call:
- The Lucidity Institute
- P.O. Box 2364
- Stanford, CA 94309
- (415) 321-9969
-
- Or email: clint@matia.stanford.edu
-
- For additional information:
- LaBerge, S., LUCID DREAMING (Los Angeles: Ballantine, 1985).
- LaBerge, S. & Rheingold, H. EXPLORING THE WORLD OF LUCID DREAMING
- (New York: Ballantine, 1990).
-
-