Powerful Tools For Lucid Dreaming
- Author Andrew Strachan
- Published August 27, 2006
- Word count 1,102
Dream Signs - What Are They?
“I awoke in the morning as usual. I lay in bed for a moment and reached over to pick up the phone, as I had an important call to make. I started to dial the numbers and glanced away briefly. Looking back at the phone, I noticed something odd had happened. The object in my hand had now changed into the remote control for the television! What was going on?”
As you may have guessed, I was in fact dreaming. The above extract is from my dream journal. That was my first hint of what was to prove to be one of the major dream signs to occur repeatedly throughout my dream journals. After spotting this, becoming lucid became a lot easier. Whenever I see a phone in my dreams I almost always know that I am dreaming, and therefore become lucid.
That is exactly what a dream sign is. It’s a common theme that occurs within your dreams that may give you some sort of hint that you are dreaming. Keeping a dream journal is the key to spotting these because you can read through old dreams and try to spot a common element. Some dream signs can be something as subtle as a flashing light or the appearance of an animal occurring repeatedly in your dreams. Noticing them and seeing them for what they are is the key to making a dream sign work for you.
Reality Checks
One of the most powerful tools for inducing lucid dreams, is the reality check. It is also the one method that requires the most commitment. This method often seems futile to those who have never experienced a lucid dream but a certain amount of faith has to be put in the advice offered by those who have more experience.
Where ever you are at this very moment as you are reading this book, just stop for a moment and ask yourself “Is this real or am I dreaming”. Now, this may seem silly to a lot of people but I can assure you that I have failed to achieve many a lucid dream because I was convinced that my dream was real life and I chose not to bother with a reality check.
Merely asking “is this real?” is not enough to test your reality. You need to perform a test. The following paragraphs describe some ways of testing our reality.
The Clock Test
It’s a little known fact that when we dream, our short term memory becomes very poor indeed. A good example is the clock test. If you look at a clock or wristwatch now, either an analogue or digital clock will do. Now, look at the time on the clock and remember it. Look away from the clock for a couple of seconds and then check the time again. You will notice that the time is exactly the same (except for a few seconds). In our dreams, when we check the clock for the second time, the time will be totally different! This then tells us that we are dreaming and hey presto we enter a lucid dream.
My own mother once asked me to have a look at her alarm clock for her because when she woke up during the night it would sometimes read a later time than when she woke in the morning. What in fact was happening was during the night she was having what is known as a “false awakening”.
A false awakening is when we wake up in during the night but we are in fact still asleep and just dreaming we are awake. This happens a lot more than people realize. I have several false awakenings per week. Usually I perform reality checks that can alert me to this false awakening and cause the onset of a lucid dream.
As it turns out, the alarm clock was perfectly o.k. but my mothers dream alarm clock was reading strange times. When I pointed this out to her (she didn’t believe me at first) the next time it happened she looked away from the clock and then re-checked the time. The second time she checked, the time had changed. This immediately told her that she was dreaming, and so began the first of my mother’s lucid dreams. That method has worked several times for her.
An extension of this check is reading text. In our dreams just as with the clock, if you read something it often changes when you read it again.
You’d better read that sentence again just in case. Who knows, you may be dreaming!
Light Switch Test
Another way to check your reality is to test the light switches. In our dreams, light switches do not seem to work properly. In fact most gadgets seem to do odd things. Phones don’t seem to work very well either. To test a light switch just go over and press the switch a few times. If the lights fail to operate properly, either your dreaming or somebody forgot to change the bulbs.
Pinch Nose Test
In my opinion this is by far the best reality check. If you consider that you will be checking you reality through the day it is the most convenient and the most reliable. Simply pinch your nose and then try and breathe in with your mouth closed. As you’d expect, you can’t. In our dreams we can! If you can breathe in easily through a pinched nose then you must be dreaming.
How To Use Reality Checks
The most effective way to use reality checks is to periodically throughout the day perform at least one reality check. Some people find it easier to set their watch to bleep on the hour and then perform the clock check for example.
Others find it easier to look for “weirdness” during the day like a flickering light, or a door jamming shut. As soon as you encounter one of these situations, ask yourself “Is this real ?” and do a reality check.
The commitment involved with this method is actually doing the reality checks and also not just saying the words “Am I dreaming” but actually meaning what you are asking yourself.
If you perform ten reality checks per day, eventually that habit will start to enter your dream world and this is when things really start happening. You will find yourself questioning your reality whilst you are dreaming and that is why reality checking is the single most powerful tool to assist you with lucid dreaming.
Andrew Strachan has been lucid dreaming for over 20 years. Anybody can learn how to lucid dream. Let him teach you the techniques he uses so that you can learn to lucid dream yourself.
Article source: https://articlebiz.comRate article
Article comments
There are no posted comments.
Related articles
- The Power of Connection: How Walking With a Friend Reveals What Truly Matters
- Unlocking Your Potential: The Value of Taking an Online IQ Test
- Adult Attachment Theory and Research
- Social and Mental health issues don't mean it's the end of the world
- Substance Abuse Today and the Role of Therapy in Recovery
- The Childfree Choice as Self-Care
- The Multilingual Advantage: How Speaking Multiple Languages Enhances Brain Functioning and Leadership Abilities
- Embracing Discomfort: The Catalyst for Personal Growth and Transformation
- Gaslighting Tactics Exposed: Strategies for Combatting Psychological Abuse
- Why Ignoring Feelings Harms Kids and Adults: Discover the Antidote
- Why Psychiatrists Email Lists Are Essential for Healthcare Marketers
- Quantum Behavioral Psychology: The new frontier in mental health.
- A Take On Recovery
- Online Psychology: The Evolving Landscape in Mental Health Care
- Holistic Anxiety Treatment: Embracing Mind and Body Approaches
- What the Freeze Response Tells You About Your Anxiety
- Understanding Authenticity
- Understanding Men's Mental Health
- Exploring the Impact of Childhood Trauma on Adult Mental Health
- The Psychology of Avoiding Accountability: Unraveling the Web of Excuses
- Harmony in Understanding: The Interplay of Psychology and Emotional Intelligence
- Disability Discrimination
- You Are Not Your Brain
- Counselling psychologists to the rescue for better parenting
- The Transformative Power of Mindset
- Understanding the Depths of Mental Health: Unveiling the Hidden Struggles
- Understanding Different Types of Trauma: A Comprehensive Overview
- 8 Affordable Therapy Options for 2023 in the UK, Including CBT
- Breaking Down the Benefits of Online Counselling in Alberta with Ouronlinetherapy.com
- Realistic, prudent-thinking in this age