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The Wonders of Lucid Dreaming
Article knowledge, Article lucid dream,Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming ( 1.The Wonders of Lucid Dreaming )
The World of Lucid Dreaming
The Wonders of Lucid Dreaming
I realized I was
dreaming. I raised my arms and began to rise (actually, I was being lifted). I
rose through black sky that blended to indigo, to deep purple, to lavender, to
white, then to very bright light. All the time I was being lifted there was the
most beautiful music I have ever heard. It seemed like voices rather than
instruments. There are no words to describe the JOY I felt. I was very gently
lowered back to earth. I had the feeling that I had come to a turning point in
my life and I had chosen the right path. The dream, the joy I experienced, was
kind of a reward, or so I felt. It was a long, slow slide back to wakefulness
with the music echoing in my ears. The euphoria lasted several days; the
memory, forever. (A. F., Bay City, Michigan)
I was standing in a
field in an open area when my wife pointed in the direction of the sunset. I
looked at it and thought, “How odd; I’ve never seen colors like that before.”
Then it dawned on me: “I must be dreaming!” Never had I experienced such clarity
and perception – the colors were so beautiful and the sense of freedom so
exhilarating that I started racing through this beautiful golden wheat field
waving my hands in the air and yelling at the top of my voice, “I’m dreaming!
I’m dreaming!” Suddenly, I started to lose the dream; it must have been the
excitement, I instantly woke up. As it dawned on me what had just happened, I
woke my wife and said, “I did it, I did it!” I was conscious within the dream
state and I’ll never be the same. Funny, isn’t it? How a taste of it can affect
one like that. It’s the freedom, I guess; we see that we truly are in control
of our own universe. (D. W., Elk River, Minnesota)
I am studying to become
a professional musician (French horn), and I wished to remove my fear of performing
in front of people. On several occasions I placed myself in a state of self
hypnosis/daydreaming by relaxing my entire body and mind before going to sleep.
Then I focused on my desire to have a dream in which I was performing for a
large audience by myself but was not nervous or suffering from any anxiety. On
the third night of this experiment, I had a lucid dream in which I was
performing a solo recital without accompaniment at Orchestra Hall in Chicago (a
place where I have performed once before, but in a full orchestra). I felt no
anxiety regarding the audience, and every note that I played made me feel even
more confident. I played perfectly a piece that I had heard only once before
(and never attempted to play), and the ovation I received added to my
confidence. When I woke up, I made a quick note of the dream and the piece that
I played. While practicing the next day, I sight-read the piece and played it nearly
perfectly. Two weeks (and a few lucid dream performances) later, I performed
Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony with the orchestra. For the first time, nerves
did not hamper my playing, and the performance went extremely well. (J. S., Mt.
Prospect, Illinois)
Strange, marvelous, and even impossible things regularly happen in
dreams, but people usually don’t realize that the explanation is that they are
dreaming. Usually doesn’t mean always and there is a highly significant
exception to this generalization. Sometimes, dreamers do correctly
realize the explanation for the bizarre happenings they are experiencing, and
lucid dreams, like those recounted above, are the result.
Empowered by the knowledge that the world they are experiencing is
a creation of their own imagination, lucid dreamers can consciously influence
the outcome of their dreams. They can create and transform objects, people,
situations, worlds, even themselves. By the standards of the familiar world of
physical and social reality, they can do the impossible.
The world of lucid dreams provides a vaster stage than ordinary
life for almost anything imaginable, from the frivolous to the sublime. You
could, if you chose, revel at a saturnalian festival, soar to the stars, or
travel to mysterious lands. You could join those who are testing lucid dreaming
as a tool for problem solving, self- healing, and personal growth. Or you could
explore the implications of teachings from ancient traditions and reports from
modern psychologists that suggest that lucid dreams can help you find your
deepest identity – who you really are.
Lucid dreaming has been known for centuries, but has until
recently remained a rare and little understood phenomenon. My own scientific
and personal explorations, together with the findings of other dream
researchers around the world, have just begun to shed light on this unusual
state of consciousness. Recently, this new research field has captured the
attention of the population outside the world of scientific dream research
because studies have shown that given proper training, people can learn to have
lucid dreams.
But why are people interested in learning to be conscious in their
dreams? According to my own experience, and the testimony of thousands of other
lucid dreamers, lucid dreams can be extraordinarily vivid, intense,
pleasurable, and exhilarating. People frequently consider their lucid dreams as
among the most wonderful experiences of their lives.
If this were all there were to it, lucid dreams would be
delightful, but ultimately trivial entertainment. However, as many have already
discovered, you can use lucid dreaming to improve the quality of your waking
life. Thousands of people have written to me at Stanford telling how they are
using the knowledge and experience they have acquired in lucid dreams to help
them get more out of living.
Although the outlines of a practical art and science of lucid
dreaming are just beginning to emerge and the systematic use of lucid dreaming
as a tool for psychological self-exploration is still in its infancy, most
people can safely use the available knowledge about lucid dreaming to conduct
their own explorations. Probably the only people who
should not experiment with lucid dreaming are those who are unable to
distinguish between waking reality and constructions of their imagination.
Learning lucid dreaming will not cause you to lose touch with the difference
between waking and dreaming. On the contrary, lucid dreaming is for becoming
more aware.
Why This New Book?
In Lucid Dreaming, I collected the available knowledge on
the subject from both ancient and modern sources. Since that book’s
publication, some ten thousand people have written to me describing their
experiences and discoveries, and requesting more practical information about
lucid dreaming. In response to those requests, I decided to collaborate on a
new book with Howard Rheingold. Howard has written extensively on topics such
as creativity, consciousness, and dreamwork.
Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming is a self-teaching
curriculum, a step-by-step method for learning to have and use lucid dreams.
You can learn at your own pace, and to your own depth, how to explore your
lucid dreams and use them to enrich your life. You will read a rich variety of
examples of actual lucid dreams excerpted from letters to the Stanford program,
like the three quoted at the beginning of this chapter. While the kind of “anecdotal
evidence” offered by these nonprofessional dream explorers cannot replace the
carefully controlled experimentation that is required for testing scientific
theories, it does offer invaluable inspiration for continued exploration of the
world of lucid dreaming.
Since Lucid Dreaming, my research team has continued its
laboratory work at Stanford University, mapping mind/body relationships during
the dream state and, in Courses and workshops with volunteer oneironauts
(pronounced oh-NIGH-ro-knots, meaning “explorers of the dream world”), studying
techniques for inducing, prolonging, and using lucid dreams. This book draws on a
number of sources of knowledge about lucid dreaming, including the Stanford
research, the teachings of Tibetan dream yogis, and the work of other
scientists. The investigations of the German psychologist Paul Tholey, who been
studying lucid dreams for the past twenty years, have been particularly
valuable in writing this book.
Our Approach
This book strives to present, in a step-by-step manner, everything
you need to know in order to learn the skill of lucid dreaming. All the many
techniques and exercises presented work for some people, but how effective each
exercise will be for you depends on your individual psychology and physiology.
Experiment with the exercises, test them for yourself, and see what works best
for you.
The basic structure of the book is as follows: You will be guided
through preparations for learning to have lucid dreams, provided with plainly
spelled out techniques for learning
lucid dreaming, and then shown how lucid dreaming can be applied to your life.
If you practice diligently, the lucid dream induction techniques should
significantly increase your frequency of lucid dreaming. Chapter 5 presents the
relevant scientific background and theory to help you understand the basis for
the applications. The remaining chapters are devoted to describing how you can
use lucid dreaming to enhance your life, both waking and sleeping. Examples
selected from our compendium of lucid dreams illustrate what others have
achieved, to model for you some of the potentials of lucid dreaming.
As far as we know, this is the first time that detailed
instructions on lucid dreaming have been widely available to the general
public. However, you are not likely to learn lucid dreaming by quickly skimming
through this book. Like most anything else worth learning, lucid dreaming
requires effort. Motivation is an essential pre requisite; you have to really
want to do it and make sufficient time to practice. If you persevere with the
exercises and procedures, we are confident that you will increase your
proficiency at lucid dreaming.
Outline of the Book
This chapter reviews reasons for learning to become lucid in your
dreams and describes the contents of this book.
Chapter 2: “Preparation
for Learning Lucid Dreaming” provides necessary background information on sleep
and helps you overcome any reservations you might have about lucid dreaming
that could inhibit your progress. Next, it helps you get acquainted with your
dreams. You will learn how to begin a dream journal and how to increase your
dream recall. You should be able to recall at least one dream per night before
attempting lucid dream induction techniques. When you have a dream journal with
several entries, you will be ready to build a catalog of dreamsigns. These are
the characteristic features of dreams that you can use as signposts to
lucidity.
Chapter 3: “Waking Up in the Dream World” discusses techniques for
realizing you are dreaming from within the dream. The two major techniques
presented are the reflection-intention technique, which is based on the
practice of questioning whether you are awake or dreaming, and MILD, the
technique I used to learn to lucid dreams at will. MILD trains you to remember
to notice when you are dreaming.
Chapter 4: “Falling Asleep
Consciously” describes techniques for entering the lucid dream state directly
from the waking state.
Chapter 5: “The Building of Dreams” provides a solid background on
the origins and nature of the dreaming process and discusses lucid dreaming in
the context of dreams in general.
Chapter 6: “Principles and Practice of Lucid Dreaming” shows you
how to gain control over the dream: how to remain in a lucid dream, how to
awaken when you wish and how to manipulate and observe the dream world. In
addition to explaining methods of exercising power over the dream, we discuss
the benefits inherent in taking an open, flexible, and non-commanding role in
lucid dreams.
Chapter 7: “Adventures and Explorations” shows how you can use
lucid dreaming for wish fulfillment and the satisfaction of your desires.
Examples and suggestions are provided to help you explore new worlds or enact
exciting adventures in your dreams, and show how you can tie your dream
adventures into your personal self-development.
Chapter 8: “Rehearsal for Living” explains how lucid dreaming can
be a practical tool for preparing for your waking life. Lucid dreaming can be
used as a “flight simulator” for life, a way in which you can test new ways of
living, as well as particular skills. Practice in the dream state can
contribute to enhanced experience, improved performance, and deepened
understanding in waking life.
Chapter 9: “Creative
Problem Solving” discusses lucid dreaming as a fruitful source of creativity
for art, science, business, and personal life. Diverse examples show how people
have used lucid dreaming to find a name for a soon-to-be-born child, to repair
cars, and to understand abstract mathematical concepts.
Chapter 10: “Overcoming
Nightmares” helps you use lucid dreaming to face and overcome fears and
inhibitions that may be preventing you from getting the most out of your life.
Lucid dreamers can overcome nightmares, and in so doing learn how to make the
best of the worst situations imaginable.
Chapter 11: “The Healing Dream” shows how lucid dreamers can
achieve more integrated, healthier personalities. Lucid dreams can help those
who have unresolved conflicts from past or present relationships, or with
deceased friends or family members. Also, in lucid dreams, we can learn mental
flexibility. Because nothing can harm us in dreams, we can try to solve our
problems in unusual or unheard of ways. This helps us to increase our
repertoire of possible behaviors in the waking world, thereby decreasing the
probability of getting stuck in situations we don’t know how to cope with.
Chapter 12: “Life Is a
Dream: Intimations of a Wider World” takes a step beyond the application of
lucid dreaming to your everyday life, and shows how lucid dreams can be used to
attain a more complete understanding of yourself and your relation to the
world. In the dream you are who you “dream yourself to be,” and understanding
this can help you see to what extent your waking self is limited by your own
conceptions of who you are. Examples of transcendental experiences in lucid
dreams will show you a direction that you might wish to explore in your own
inner worlds.
The book ends with an afterword (“The Adventure Continues”)
inviting you to join the Lucidity Institute, a membership society devoted to
advancing knowledge on the nature and potentials of lucid dreaming.
Source by Stephen LaBerge, Ph.D. & Howard Rheingold
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