Sunday, November 14, 2010

Lucid Dreaming Paper

I have been working on a paper for the last few weeks about lucid dreaming, how to do it, and what are the positive and negatives about the subject. Its hardly perfect but I wanted to post what I had and ill edit it over the next few weeks.

How to Be a Lucid Dreamer


Lucid dreaming

Lucid dreaming is the realization that one is dreaming (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997). Though the definition of lucid dreaming may be simple, the ability to be lucid inside of a dream is another matter entirely.  So much has been the case that until recently lucid dreaming was considered nonexistent in the scientific world. It wasn’t until Stephen LaBerge’s experiments in the lucid dreaming community did it become known that lucid does occur in some individuals (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

Lucid dreaming is something that didn’t just start to occur in the last twenty years, it has been around much longer than that. In Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche’s book “The Tibetan Yoga’s of Dream and Sleep” he describes lucid dreaming as being an active meditation practice since the practice of meditation in the Tibetan culture was formed (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998).  Though not a highly known or practiced form of meditation, lucid dreaming is still a known and taught way by the Tibetan Buddhist community of exploring the unknown areas of the human psyche.

Though lucid dreaming is a relatively new area of research into the dream research community, it is still something that there is multitude of information about in the online community as well as in books where people express their personal experiences and their own guides into how to lucid dream. Through years of personal trials and errors many of those guides have become useful for practice, as some have become useless.

Different types of lucid dreams


Lucid dreams can be broken up into a number of different groups. Robert Waggoner, author of the book “Lucid dreaming: Gateway to the inner self” describes lucid dreaming as five different levels.

  • Stage 1: Personal Play, pleasure, and pain Avoidance- In this stage the individual who becomes lucid explores the lucid dream with a sense of awe by seeking out those things in the dream world that provide the most amount of pleasure, and avoid those things that are troubling (Waggoner, 2008).

  • Stage 2: Manipulation, Movement, and Me –In this stage the individual may be trying to explore the common lucid dreaming experience of flight (being able to fly) or may also manipulate the dream environment to be how they would like it to be (Waggoner, 2008).

  • Stage 3: Power, Purpose, and Primacy – In this stage the individual may realize that they are in power of the dream characters and require that they obey the dreamer. The individual may also wonder what the purpose of the lucid dream and test situations to try to find out that purpose (Waggoner, 2008).

  • Stage 4: Re-reflection, Reaching Out, and Wonder – In this stage the individual may realize that the dream characters have something to offer the dreamer and in result they ask the characters questions into insight into reality and dreaming. The individual may also ask questions that they seemly know the answers to in order to understand more of themselves as well as the dream world (Waggoner, 2008).

  • Stage 5: Experiencing Awareness- In this stage the individual understands that something besides the “ego” is controlling the dream world. They go past the images of the dream and looks to seek to find the awareness behind the dream world (Waggoner, 2008).


The ultimate goal of a lucid dreamer can be said to want to be a stage five lucid dreamer, but often enough a lucid dream can pertain many different stages of Waggoners dreaming scale (Waggoner, 2008).  It is also not uncommon that a lucid dreamer who has been able to dream a stage five lucid dream will often dream other stages of lucid dreams again before having another stage five lucid dream. The possible cause for this is the slight loss of long term memory due to serotonin increase during REM (Hobson, 2002).

Different ways of lucid dreaming


There are a number of different guides to inducing lucid dreams that many different authors describe in their own ways. In result there seems to be an endless amount of techniques to induce lucid dreams.  A number of the most popular techniques are:

  • WILDS- Wake Induced Lucid dreams- The subject falls asleep seamlessly without losing consciousness though a series of techniques of relaxations and tricking the mind to believe that the body is asleep. The person then can experience a fully conscious lucid dream without having to realize they are dreaming.  Often these dreams are interpreted as producing Out of the Body Experiences (OBEs) because of the experiences felt while the individual’s body falls to sleep (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • MILD -Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams – The subject falls asleep and realizes they are dreaming after a type of cue is initiated inside of the dream. The subject remembers that when they see the cue they are in fact dreaming and then become aware (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • ELDI – Electronic Lucid Dream Induction – The subject uses a device that activates when they are in rapid eye movement (REM) and indicates that they are possibly dreaming. Devices such as the DreamLight shine a bright LED into the closed eyes that often shows up as a red dot inside of the dream of the subject. The subject then knows they are dreaming and becomes aware (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • DILDS – Dream Induced Lucid Dreams- The subject realizes they are dreaming after something out of the ordinary happens such as the impossible situation, or an object out of place. In result the person becomes aware they are dreaming and a lucid dream occurs (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • WBTB- Wake Back To bed- The subject in this lucid dreaming realization technique wakes up a number of times a night and focuses on the idea of producing a lucid dream. This often causes a person to remember more of their dreams and have more dreams to realize they are dreaming in. This technique is normally used in conjunction with other techniques (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • CAT- Cycle Adjustment Technique- Much like WBTB the objective of this technique is to put the body out of the normal circadian rhythm cycle. In this technique the subject goes to sleep at different times of the night “tricking” the body to fall into more REM sleep and produce more chances for an individual to remember they are dreaming (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997).

  • SILD- Supplement Induced Lucid Dreams- The subject takes a series of supplements that aims at reducing the amount of REM a person experiences during the first part of the night and extends it during the ending cycle (Yuschak, 2006). These supplements also improve recall and normal sleep processes that occur by increasing the amount of neurotransmitter a person has. This technique is used in conjunction of other lucid dream techniques to become aware (Yuschak, 2006).

  • CWILD- Caffeine-withdrawal Induced Lucid Dream- The subject uses caffeine until a addiction is formed where they end their use and produce the withdrawal symptoms. The subject then falls asleep and wakes up when they are most likely able to be in their REM cycle. They then administer a caffeine based substance and fall back to sleep. The withdrawal symptoms go away and acts as an indication to the sleeper of being in a dream. (Mortal Mist Community, 2009)


The Dream World


When an individual becomes lucid in their dreams and they experience the different stages of a lucid dream they may become more aware of a few remarkable things. The first noticeable learned experience is that in stages one through four a person only is partially lucid during a lucid dream. There is still the element of the separation between the dreamer and the creator of the lucid dream. The idea is that the lucid dreamer is the conscious mind and the director (the consciousness creating the dreaming world) is an entirely different identity or the sub-consciousness. The realization that these consciousnesses are exactly the same thing creates a perception of awareness that caused the dreamer to be fully of full lucidity inside of the dream. This makes it so that dream images are no longer needed in order for communication between the “ego” and “sub-consciousness” to communicate. There is no longer a defined line between the two and “total awareness” is possible. Those who provide us examples of these stage five lucid dreams provide little to no detail into the experience of the dream, possibly meaning that a dream without the images or verbal communication is indescribable. Until an individual obtains a stage five type of dream, there are many different experiences that a lucid dreamer may experience.

Realism

Often when a person first starts to explore a lucid dream they are often found testing the environment around them to see how real something is or not (Lucidology, 2008).  In a normal lucid dream there has been described a type of realism that is below the realism of reality (Lucidology, 2008). Often there are mistakes in the psychics of the dream world, or unrealistic characters may be involved in the dream. In cases where people experience OBE type lucid dreams, the realism is increased to another level. It is possible that the lucid dreamer’s ability to test the dream reality in OBE dreams has become reduced and lucidity lowered, but this doesn’t seem to be the case. In contrary in OBE lucid dreams the individual seems to realize more than ever that they are dreaming. Details are ever more vivid in OBE experiences than in normal lucid dreams, and testing the reality of the experience seems to fail almost in every situation. Psychics may not be exactly correct in the situation of gravity, but for the most part the rules apply the same as in waking realty.  Dream characters in OBE type lucid dreams seem to follow their own set of rules and seemingly seem far more intelligent than in normal lucid dreams. This experience of OBE lucid dreaming is often considered so real that many people have been perplexed to believe that these dreams are in fact real (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998).  Though these dreams seem very real simple experiments inside of these OBE dreams have shown that they often fail simple reality tests. In the following dream I tested the reality of the dream:
Falling asleep I felt the vibrations that normally came when I knew I would have a OBE type dream. I opened my eyes and was in my room. Things seemed slower and I knew that there was a good chance I was dreaming. I walked around my room and thought that there was a chance that I was sleep walking as everything was very slow but still realistic. I feared my roommates would see me walking around the house but figured the risk was worth it and continued on my way to the bathroom to look in the mirror. I flicked on and off the light in the bathroom and it worked how it should have which caused me to believe more that I was sleep walking. I looked at my face in the mirror and noticed everything was slightly green. I walked down the stairs which lead to outside the house and saw my shoes. I positioned my shoes so that when I awoke the next day that I would see I was sleep walking. I continued outside where the sky was full of amazing stars and supernovas. After a while of walking around I lost my lucidity and had a long dream. I awake and checked my shoes. They were not positioned in any strange manor and I noticed that the temperature outside was around 15* which would have caused me to wake up if I went outside in my sleeping cloths.

Though in my experience I thought the dream was real I still was unable to produce any results where the dream interacted with reality. Theories have been presented that when we have an OBE our minds tend to create a world that resembles the one which we went to sleep in. Often there is a portal (a door or window) in these dreams that when we walk through them (or fly through them) we are transported into a dream world that is unique. It is unknown why these dreams seem so much more real than other types of lucid dreams, but it could be hypothesized that the area of the brain which deals with long-term memory is still very active. This could be because of the result of the improper sleep process of the WILD type dream. Often people who experience OBEs experience vibrations, auditory hallucinations, visual hallucinations, as well as sleep paralysis.

Characters

Dream characters can be as dynamic as the dreams themselves. Often these dream characters can be broken into a few groups:

Mindless- this type of dream character seems to be pre-programmed to do a number of tasks but when asked questions can only reply with a fixed number of replies and often cannot perform complex tasks of any kind. These characters are easily tricked and often have little insight to the dream world, assuming that they too are awake. Some examples of this type of dream character can be described in a number of dreams I had:
I dreamed I was at a college in Boise and noticed that I was dreaming. Knowing I was lucid I decided to go find people and ask them questions. I found a large church and went inside. Inside were a number of people all doing homework. I asked them what they were doing and they replied with “Doing homework.” They had no other answer besides that and no description of what homework they were doing.

I became lucid in a building that I was dreaming of. I saw a number of people around me and asked them if they wanted to see a magic trick. They said sure. I said I could make a million dollars appear with the words abracadabra. I said abracadabra and then nothing happened. The dream characters expressed how lame the trick was, but I expressed for them to wait a moment. Soon enough a woman with a suitcase walked down the stairs and she opened it with the result of a million dollars inside. The dream characters asked how I did it and I replied, it’s magic.

Intelligent- These dream characters can answer complex questions that the dreamer may not know the answer to.  They often are insightful to dream world as well as reality and can be asked questions that the dreamer doesn’t seem to know the answers to. Some examples of this type of dream character can be described in a number of dreams I had:
I had a OBE type experience and was fully lucid. I went to the door to the outside of my house and walked through it. I met a older woman which told me her name was Jabooty. I asked her if I had known her before, she said yes. I asked her what I should do with my life and she said that it’s very simple what we should all do with our lives, we should enjoy it and take care of it. She said she had to go because she was playing games with some kids.

I dreamed I was at work and then noticed that my hair was acting funny and then became aware of dreaming. I looked around the building for a panda because I had intended to find a panda before I had fallen to sleep. I found the panda but it was a person with dark eyes and dark ears. I laughed at the idea and he laughed too. I asked him about the reality of dreams and he told me that dreams were real and not real at the same time. He said that dreams were a way for our subconscious mind to communicate with other people’s sub-consciousness and dreams were a visual representation of that.  I found it interesting and continued on my dream.

Dwellers- the last type of lucid dream characters are what I describe as the dwellers. These dream characters often resemble monsters or feelings of fright in a lucid dream and are often not any more intelligent than mindless dream characters. They often present themselves during sleep paralysis or during a lucid dream that the dreamer is actively trying to control. Often they are found in OBE type lucid dreams and though often don’t actively attack the dreamer they provide the dreamer to produce fearful thoughts.  Often dwellers are described as sitting on ones chest and pushing down on the dreamer making it hard to breathe (Lucidology, 2008). Often bells, screeching metal, or the shuffling of feet across the floor are heard before a dweller is hallucinated. The experience of the dweller often is experienced by portal object (door or window) being opened with the dreamer unable to move due to sleep paralysis.

Many common monsters of our day are attributed to dweller based experiences. The succubus, vampires, old hag, and even the term nightmare derive from the word Mara which means The Crusher which is termed after the experience of sleep paralysis.

Though not much research has been spent into understanding these dweller based characters, it has been theorized that they are a form of negative emotions produced by the mind. In some cases lucid dreamers have been known to accept these characters and they often go away. When the lucid dreamer awakes after accepting these types of characters they often feel better about themselves and rarely have these character experiences. Some examples of this type of dream character can be described in a number of dreams I had:
I awoke in my room and noticed a shadow like figure in my room. I ran at the figure to try to scare it way or to destroy it. After a number of attempts the figure dissolved.

I awoke in my room and walked down the hall. I knew I was dreaming with a type of OBE dream and remembered I wanted to face my fears and accept it. I thought about seeing that dweller based dream character and it appeared. I was fearful but walked up to the character and asked it what it wanted. It stated that it was unsatisfied. I asked it what it was unsatisfied about. It said it didn’t know but was just unsatisfied. I then saw another dweller character and it walked towards us. We all sat down on the ground and I molded them into each other like clay. They then both disappeared.  I woke up feeling refreshed and happier.

Though these groups of dream characters are defined there are many different variations of them inside of dreams. Some dwellers are intelligent and perform complex strategies to try to scare the individual as they become actively aggressive. There are also mindless based dream characters that have the capacity to learn and become somewhat intelligent.  In a dream world environment there is truly an endless amount of possibilities with complex and different characters.

How to Lucid Dream


There are countless amounts of guides online a books that will tell you that they know best on how to lucid dream. As lucid dreaming has become much more popular in the last twenty years, people have produced seminars on how to lucid dream and help those who can’t remember dreams start to explore the wonderful world of the imagination.  After reviewing many of these books and sights it has become ever increasingly apparent that there are a few practices that are common throughout all guides.

Remembering dreams

The biggest part and maybe the only part that is important in lucid dreaming are remember your dreams (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997). It’s very possible that all of us have lucid dreams every night we go to sleep, but we don’t remember any of them because we don’t remember our dreams, or in enough detail (Laberg & Rheingold, 1997)(Berrett & McNamara, 2007). According to Allen Hobson and his theory on sleep with his Activation-synthesis hypothesis, the area of our brain that controls long term memory shuts down (Hobson, 2002). With this process shut down we may shortly remember our dreams while we are dreaming, but when we wake up we soon forget (Hobson, 2002). Often in a night we have a number of dreams and many of these dreams we don’t even realize we have because of this exact process. To overcome this problem a number of techniques have been created in order to increase the ability of the dreamer to remember their dreams.  They are listed by importance and put into easy groups for those who are the hobbyist lucid dreamers and expert groups for those who don’t mind losing a little sleep to obtain their lucidity:

Easy Groups

Set and setting: Though the term is used for those who experiment with psychoactive drugs, the dream experience is much of the same type of situation. Make sure you are sleeping in a comfortable situation. Keep things that will irritate your sleeping out of the bedroom. Keeping lights off will help with your eyes not picking up photo waves as the pineal gland is photosensitive and will not produce melatonin (a natural sleep aid) when it detects light.  How you position your body also has a great deal on how you may lucid dream. Lying on the side has said to produce more normal dreams as lying on the back may produce more OBE type lucid dreams (Lucidology, 2008).

Dream journals: Keeping a dream journal is maybe the number one most important aspect of all lucid dreaming guides because it seems to helps to keep active our long term memory during sleep. It increases our motivation to remember dreams and there for increases our dream recall ability while in sleep and outside (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998). It may have also other altering affects as we have more intelligence to realize we are dreaming while we are in the dream world.

Mediation on awareness: Being aware of your daily life is very important in becoming lucid. Paying attention to things that you are doing at a very single moment creates a focus on the reality of the situation and also allows for the dreamer to realize they are dreaming when reality changes. Practice clearing the mind by focusing on breathing as is done in meditational practices is one way of increasing awareness. Focusing on an object or focusing on breathing while awake is one of the greatest ways of increasing your dream recall and becoming lucid (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998).

Aware of the processes of sleep: Understanding what your body does before it goes to sleep is an important aspect of understanding when you are asleep. This technique helps in the WILD type of lucid dreaming because it allows for consciousness to know when the body is asleep and you are dreaming without becoming un-conscious. The body will twitch often when you are about to fall asleep, temperature changes will occur and images will start to appear with the eyes closed. Often laying on the back while practicing breathing techniques (meditating on breathing) will cause an OBE preceded by sleep paralysis and possibly a hypnotic hallucination, such as a dweller.  You can also purposely twitch your body like it does before you fall asleep to sometimes trick the mind to believing it’s ready for dreaming.

Waking often: Foods and Drinks: What you eat and drink before you go to bed is very important to if you will have any lucid dreams or not.  If you have a heavy night of drinking the night before you will awake to often remember having a lot of dreams. This is because alcohol increases the amount of serotonin in your system and serotonin does not allow for REM to occur until it’s out of your system.  Once the serotonin is out of your system you have what is called REM relapse where REM occurs for a longer than normal period at the end of the sleep cycle at the point when you will awake. Even though REM rebound is ideal situation while trying to remember a lucid dream alcohol also produces a lot of negative effects.  Drinking milk or eating fish before going to bed will naturally increase the amount of serotonin in your body and allow for REM rebound. Supplements such as 5-HTP are precursors (where your body naturally converts the chemical into another substance) to serotonin and can be taken before going to bed.

Expert Group

Changing the cycle of sleep: Just like it’s good to mix up your work outs when you are trying to build muscle, it’s good to mix up the times you go to sleep to build lucid dreams. Your body and mind start to remember what time it’s normal to go to bed and the processes put into motion to make it so you have a good night’s sleep without remembering your dreams. If you mix up the sleep cycle then the mind may not be fully asleep when you don’t want it to, making it so you have a better chance to be lucid.

Supplemental support: In Thomas Yuschaks book “Advanced Lucid dreaming: the power of supplements” he lists a number of supplements that he experimented with in order to increase his lucid dreaming (Yuschak, 2006). After experimenting with these supplements my colleague and I have found that the supplements that support acetylcholine, serotonin, and histamine production are the most productive for lucid dreaming as they are used naturally as neurotransmitters during sleep (Yuschak, 2006).

Caffeine: Coffee as well as other caffeine based stimulants help produce a number of chemicals that help with sleep, if taken in small amounts. Caffeine has been shown to increase adenosine in the body, which helps to convert serotonin into melatonin in the pineal gland in the brain. Melatonin is one of the bodies best sleep aids and is produced while the eyes are closed due to the light sensitive of pineal gland (Oneirology, 2009).

Serotonin: as discussed earlier, serotonin helps with reducing REM until later in the sleep cycle. Using 5-HPT is a good way of increasing your serotonin production. Serotonin also has benefits during the waking day as it’s known to reduce depression, elevate mood, and reduce the need to over eat (Yuschak, 2006).

Acetylcholine: this neurotransmitter helps with memory and is tied directly to modulate levels of wakefulness (Yuschak, 2006). Choline salts are good supplements to be used to increase the amount of acetylcholine in the system but I much more prefer an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor called galantamine (Yuschak, 2006). A acetylcholinesterase inhibitor makes it so that the normal breakdown of acetylcholine is reduced and allows for the buildup of acetylcholine in the brain. Galantamine is used to help reduce the affects of Alzheimer’s and seems to improve the ability to recall and remember things better (Yuschak, 2006).

Histamines: though histamines are not talked about often in the lucid dreaming community, they are quite frankly maybe the most important. Histamines are tied to being one of easiest ways of releasing serotonin into the body as well as releasing a substance called PDG2 into the system that is theorized to be the cause of sleep activation.  Niacin or vitamin b-3 is a good supplement for this, however; it must obtain the flush ability (Barrett & McNamara, 2007). The flush causes a rash type of feeling over the body that is the release of serotonin and PDG2 into the system. It is frankly one of the best sleeping pills that my colleagues and I have found that’s over the counter.

Having the right supplements seems to be half the battle as using them at the correct time is also just as important. The best technique for the use of these supplements is by using the WBTB system as follows:

  • A day before: Have some type of caffeinated foods, drinks, or supplements. This will produce a later withdrawal.

  • The day before: Don't use use any caffeinated substances a day before or in a time peirod that will be needed in order to produce the withdrawal symptoms during sleep.

  • At bedtime: Take a 5-HTP or a Niacin supplement combination. This will increase the ability to have WILD type lucid dreams as well as allowing you to remember your dreams later in the night after you wake up the second time.*Note niacin causes a niacin flush that will make your body feel warm as though having a reaction. It’s best not to move very much after taking the supplement combination.

  • 2 Hours after sleep: Wake up, take an additional 5-HTP along with an galantamine supplement as well as a small form of caffeine. This will increase memory and sleep cycle proficiency along with increasing the REM rebound about 4 hours into sleep.


*Note- Removing the CWILD type instructions is also an option to produce lucid dreams. The CWILD is just one of the most effective way of having lucid dreams.

Make sure not to do this technique every night or if you are not going to get more than 6 hours of sleep.

An important note here is to make sure that the supplements that use are safe for the individual to use. A doctor must be consulted before any levels of supplements are used to insure that there will be no reactions. Only recommended use must also be maintained.

Daily ritual timeline

In order to practice lucid dreaming to the point of having common occurrence lucid dreaming experience, there is a easy to follow timeline of systematic events that will lead to this conclusion.

  • A.        Supplements/Mediation) Prior to sleep the individual takes a supplement combination of niacin and serotonin. The person relaxes in a meditative state with a breathing technique that allows them to be calm and ready for sleep.

  • B.        Sleep occurs after the meditation practice is complete.

  • C.        The person awakes after 2 hours of sleep allowing for the body to become rested and ready for the lucid dream. The awakening allows for the taking of the additional supplement galantamine. A meditation practice is then used to calm the mind and allow for sleep again.

  • D.        A highly likely occurrence of a WILD type lucid dream is prominent at this point of the night because of the relaxation from meditation support of the galantamine supplement in produce REM stages of sleep, and the support of the serotonin supplement reducing REM earlier during the nights rest.

  • E.         The person can attempt to produce a number of WILD dreams by repeating steps C and D until the end of the sleep process.

  • F.         After awaking the person will write down their dreams in the journal that they experienced that night as well as how they slept and the things they would like to improve on in the next night. This will help to reaffirm the goal of having a lucid dream.


These steps are illustrated in figure 1.

Figure 1.



Understanding the body

Understanding how the body feels when a person is falling asleep as well as when the body is experiencing different events related to lucid dreaming is also very important. Some of the experiences can be terrifying as well as confusing and can cause a lucid dream to become negative or end suddenly if poorly understood. Relaxation during these events often results in a meaningful and sometimes blissful experience (Lucidology, 2008).

Ready to sleep feelings

Ready to sleep feelings are the experiences of the mind interpreting the body being ready to sleep. Twitching and jerking is a common occurrence right before sleep. Some techniques of lucid dreaming encourage individuals to try to trick their body into being ready to dream by imitating the twitching (Lucidology, 2008). I have found this to be not helpful in most cases.  Temperature change is common before sleep due to the body naturally exhausting heat during this phase of relaxation (Roger, Bowes, Lushington ,& dawson, 2009). Hypnotic Hallucinations are common right before sleep and are often tied to WILD type lucid dreaming. Images may be seen with the eyes closed as well as intrusive thoughts that don’t make sense.

WILD and OBE feelings

There are a number of experiences that are felt when having a WILD or OBE type lucid dream that are often confusing and terrifying. Buzzing sounds are often heard before or during sleep paralysis and are a good indicator that a WILD or OBE type lucid dream is about to occur (Lucidology, 2008). Hypnotic hallucinations, paralysis, extreme vibrations and a sense of floating often are tied to these types of dreams as well.

The benefits and negatives of lucid dreaming


The benefits of being able to lucid dream are truly endless based on the belief system of the person and their cultural. Some persons believe that through lucid dreaming you can travel to other worlds or become enlightened much like the Buddhist culture believes Siddhārtha Gautama did in his meditational practice. Other lucid dreamers take the more western approach of believing that lucid dreamers have the ability to communicate with the sub consciousness.

Enlightenment

The Tibetan Buddhist practice in dream yoga has only one purpose, to become enlightened and end suffering.  The Buddhist believe that life is based on a cycle of death and rebirth and that in order to end the never ending cycle one must understand that the true reality of consciousness is based off of dualisms and a type of psychological drape that covers up what true reality is (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998). It takes years of study into the philosophical beliefs of the Buddhist to really understand what their true beliefs are to give them full justice, however; lucid dreaming in the Tibetan culture is one way of ending this rebirth cycle (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998). In order to do this one must realize that the dream world is made up of purely images produced by the sub consciousness or what they call the awareness (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998). Once the dreamer realizes that the dream world is an illusion then they can experience true awareness dreams called white light dreams. These white light dreams ultimately lead to the understanding of reality and enlightenment (Wangyal, Wangyal, & Dahlby, 1998).

Some people are gifted lucid dreamers and have amazing experiences in the dream world.  This approach to lucid dreaming can allow those individuals to have a more meaningful spiritual life through their experiences in the understanding of reality.

Traveling to other worlds

Many lucid dreamers that experience OBE truly believe that these dreams have an alternate reality to them. The reality of our world ends once they travel through the portal in the real world (a window or door in their house or place of sleep) and are then able to travel to other worlds and experience real events in those realities. These individuals have said to have experienced saving other worlds from destruction and taken part in Star Wars like experiences across the universe.

The benefits from these experiences are that the dreamer can have a more adventures life however we can see many problems that are produced psychologically from this experience. As a very important part of lucid dreaming is to understand that reality is still a very important big part of a person’s life and that negative actions in reality have very real long lasting consequences. Because of the degree of the realistic dreams, at times individuals have had problems determining the difference between reality and dreams.

Sub conscious communication

The greatest benefit from lucid dreaming and OBE experiences are the ability to communicate with the mind in a very visual and unusual way. During the dream states experiments can be conducted to find out the limitations of the narrator based dream creator that illustrates the dream world and manifest the dream characters.  A true personal relationship with the sub consciousness can be achieved through lucid dreaming, something that Sigmund Freud expressed was impossible. Through these experiments alternate theories of the sub copiousness models like those provided by Carl Jung have slowly become more realistic view into how the sub consciousness works (Gustav, & Shamdasani, 2009).

Conclusion


Lucid dreaming is a complex and for most individuals an extremely challenging form of dreaming to master. There are many different ways to lucid dream and many different types of lucid dreaming. Lucid dreaming can be extremely gratifying in one’s life by supporting the understanding reality, understanding self and overcoming fears with little to no negative effects.  With continuing research into the area of lucid dreaming, we can better understand the subconscious thoughts something that was deemed impossible by many psychiatrists. Truly lucid dreaming has become one of the final frontiers to explore.

References

Barrett, D., & McNamara, P. (2007). The New Science of Dreaming. Greenwood Publishing Group.

Gustav, C, & Shamdasani, S. (2009). The red book. W W Norton & Co Inc.

Hobson, A. J. (2002). The Dream Drugstore: Chemically Altered States of Consciousness. MIT Press.

LaBerg, Stephen, & Rheingold, Howard (1997). Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming.Ballantine Books.

Lucidology, (2008). Lucid Dream Forum, OBE Forum. Retrieved March 30, 2009, from Saltcube Lucid Dream and OBE Forum Web site: http://www.saltcube.com

Mortal Mist Community. (2009, October 5). caffeine--the overlooked lds? . Retrieved from http://mortalmist.com/forum/lucid-aids/caffeine-the-overlooked-lds/

Oneirology. (2009).  Strassman interview. Retrieved February 9, 2010, from http://lucidconsciousness.com/?p=107

Rogers, N. L., Bowes, J., Lushington, k., & Dawson, D. (2009). Thermoregulatory changes around the time of sleep onset. Physiology & Behavior, 90, 643-647.

Waggoner, R. (2008). Lucid dreaming: gateway to the inner self. Red WheelWeiser.

Wangyal, T, Wangyal, T, & Dahlby, M. (1998). The tibetan yogas of dream and sleep. Snow Lion Pubns.

Yuschak, T. (2006). Advanced Lucid Dreaming - The Power of Supplements. Lulu.com

11 comments:

  1. Hello. Great job, if I wasn't so busy with my school work I read your whole site. Thanks!

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  2. Hallo,

    One of the most challenging aspects of the LDS method is timing and dosage. Every supplement has a peak plasma and elimination half-life that has been determined experimentally. These values have some variability based on the persons metabolism, but the typical values are a good start for timing. In the article it states that 5HTP is something that can be taken 5 minutes before WBTB. I think this is risky based on the reported half-life and peak plasma of the 5-HTP. With a peak plasma time of 90 minutes it would act to suppress your next REM period. Now, that could cause some strong rebound in a later cycle, but that depends on your reaction to the dosage. Or, it could essentially ruin your REM the rest of the sleep period…not good. Taking 5-HTP at bedtime is preferred because it suppresses REM (~1 hour worth) during a time when it is occurring between delta cycles and no LDs typically happen. A supplement that could extend REM in the periods after that would be great. Other than rebound there is not much more you can do. One possibility is to take 5-HTP at bedtime, then again at WBTB after 3 hours of sleep. The effect would essentially suppress almost 2 hours of REM sleep or your first 4.5 REM periods. Along with the 5-HTP at WBTB, take Huperzine-A (an AChEI), which peaks in almost 84 minutes. That is about the time of the 6th REM period. I have never tried this, but IN THEORY, the REM rebound would be *enormous* in the 6th REM period, and combined with a boost of ACh, an LD is almost a done deal. Now, with a Zeo, this extended REM suppression idea could be measured to see if it works.

    Very Best,

    Scot Stride

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  3. Scot,

    Thanks always for your comments! You know your supplements for sure. I really should look back into the life span of the 5-htp but I agree with you that supressing the REM is ideal way of having that rebound at the end of the night. I think your idea into taking 2 5-htp during the night to supress REM until later in sleep and taking a Ach type supplement to help the dream process. This testing will be sure on my lists of things to do.

    I just started to use the myzeo and from the looks of my "normal" sleep processes I'll be a perfect subject to see how much REM I can push tell the end of the night. If you want you can look at my charts and see what I mean.

    Thanks for your info and I'll incorporate it into my paper.

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  4. I appreciate you for making this thing public. I learned a lot regarding telekinesis.

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  5. I'm psyching up for 5TP measured with Zeo. Need to get the supplement and still would like a few more days of baseline sleep data before I go (plus, I'm fighting a cold right now).

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  6. Ryan,

    I am too. I can't wait to see how it goes. I'm sad that it takes nights and nights of work to get this test done lol. I had to miss lasts night baseline because I watched a movie at midnight and didnt think it would be a very good baseline for anything lol.

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  8. I'll definitely have to look into this. Thank you!

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