home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.dreams
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!ux1.cts.eiu.edu!csmcm
- From: csmcm@ux1.cts.eiu.edu (Mary C. McDaniel)
- Subject: A Place Between Regular and Lucid Dreams?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.201030.23085@ux1.cts.eiu.edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 20:10:30 GMT
- Organization: Eastern Illinois University
- Lines: 37
-
- I do have lucid dreams. However, of late I've noticed some other
- dream species, one in which, when I'm confronted by a threatening
- person or situation, I behave exactly as I've told myself I ought
- to if such a situation occurred to me in the waking world, yet there
- is no actual lucidity involved. For instance, in the real world,
- I have an odd fear of being in some precarious place (a cliff, a bridge)
- with my small daughter; I'm afraid of heights, and I'm concerned about
- my ability to "save" her. I try to deal with this fear by planning
- exactly what I would do if such a situation actually did occur.
- What I find more and more is that such preparation carries over
- into my dreams: I recently had a dream in which my daughter and
- I were hanging onto a large pipe which stretched across a deep
- ravine; to "save" her, I had her hang onto my legs while I swung
- them toward a cliff a half dozen feet away, and indeed, she eventually
- landed on the ground. (Me? Last I recall, I was still hanging there (-:.)
-
- At any rate, in such dreams there is never a moment at which I say
- "I'm dreaming, and in a dream, I'm in charge of the situation and can
- make it come out any way I choose"; and yet, I behave as if this has
- occurred. My question is, thus, how should such dreams be classified?
- They certainly don't involve solving problems in the super-human ways
- that lucid dreamers often do-- instead, the solutions are very practical,
- very humanly attainable. And yet, again, I am (mostly!) in control
- of these dreams, a luxury that I thought was reserved for lucid dreams.
- (Indeed, the way I learned to lucid dream, about 25 years ago, was
- to repeat-- when I had a scary dream-- "this is only a dream" to the
- point that the _next_ time such a dream occurred, I knew I was dreaming,
- was in control, had nothing to fear.)
-
- Is my interpretation of lucid dreaming wrong, or could there be
- other categories of dreams? At least varying degrees of lucidity?
-
- I'm listening.
-
- -- Mary
-
-
-