I had a lucid dream once too, what did I do? Teleport myself to the shopping centre and run really, really fast until I suddenly woke up of course! I don't even know why, it's just what my mind thought was the best course of action when you have power over everything, running exceptionally fast in a shopping centre...
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· 9 years ago
I knew a guy who tried lucid dreaming and got so engrossed in it that he stopped being able to tell what was dreaming and what was reality and started doing crazy things because he thought it was in a dream and couldn't affect anybody in the real world. Dreams and consciousness are some scary things.
When I was a kid I read a book on lucid dreaming and decided to work on it. Now I regularly lucid dream, not every night but often, and I've never had any issues with it.
I've worked on lucid dreaming for a while and am able to do it. I'm pretty good at it but i rarely do it because some medicine i take gives me terrifying nightmares so it can get way to intense for me
I used to lucid dream a lot when I younger, and I had no idea what was happening to me but I knew that this wasn't ordinary sleeping. Earlier this year I read about lucid dreaming and I finally found out what it was
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· 9 years ago
I've always been able to lucid dream, and I've never once had sleep paralysis.
When I was a kid I had a nightmare every night as well, up until I was five. It would always present itself as a part of my daily routine gone awry, like me getting up to go to the bathroom and a pit opening under my feet or an invasion of hateful monsters. They always ended when I found out I was dreaming, so I just woke myself up as soon as a recurring dream began to unveil. I can now tell when they are coming before I fall asleep, but it scarred my reality so badly that happy imagination ended when I was a child.
Don't live your dreams, as they can be more real than you can imagine.
I once forgot the difference between dream and reality, but I was in a lucid dream when it happened. Quick fact, the smarter you are, the faster you can dream. So one full year in a dream can be only 12 hours in reality. For me, I forgot I was dreaming and spent what felt like 3 years dreaming, and when I finally woke up because I died in the dream, it was actually 4 days later. My parents thought I was in a coma. I didn't lucid dream for years after that.
Since I was a kid I often experienced sleep paralysis and as an adult I still do and it one of the scariest feelings I have experienced. The same method the author uses to wake up is also the only way I can get out of it too, eyes shut and rapid breaths.
I lucid dream frequently but I've never had sleep paralysis. But I do have something called exploding head syndrome where when I start to fall asleep I hear a loud bang or scream that wakes me up. It gets worse if I'm stressed or sleep deprived.
Sometimes I realize that my dream is not real but I still can't do anything to change my dream. I'd say I've lucid dreamed at least 3 or 4 times that I specifically remember.
Don't live your dreams, as they can be more real than you can imagine.
Other wise no problem for me