Sometime on Saturday morning I had my first lucid dream. I'd read about these things, but never experienced one. However, my reading probably came in handy, because it allowed me to recognize that I was in a dream state.
In the dream, I was expecting the mailman to deliver a package to me. (In reality, I was expecting a package to arrive on Saturday, so this thought was obviously on my mind.) As I went through my home toward the door, I suddenly realized that the foyer was completely different from anything in my actual residence. At this point, realization struck, and I said to myself, This isn't real. It's a dream. I'm having a lucid dream!
As I said, reading about lucid dreams probably played a key role in my ability to become self-aware at this moment. One of the points made in lucid-dream literature is that you should be on the lookout for things that don't match up with reality. If you suddenly notice that there's something wrong with your environment, something that doesn't match your knowledge and recollection of the physical world, then you should say, Maybe this is a dream. And as you can see, that's exactly what happened here.
I was pretty excited to be having a lucid dream, and immediately I started to worry that I would lose it somehow -- that my concentration would fail and I would slip out of the lucid state. I remember touching the wall of the foyer and feeling its solidity and texture while watching my hand against the wall. All of this was intended, of course, to keep me "in the moment" as long as possible.
Now self-aware, I went to the door and opened it. What I found outside was not my actual street, but a breathtakingly beautiful view of a wide expanse of blue water -- possibly the ocean or a vast lake or bay. The weather was bright and clear, and the color of the water was almost painfully lovely.
Excited, I set about exploring the rest of my house. Although the details have faded somewhat, I recall walking through a series of spacious and beautifully appointed rooms, much larger and nicer than my actual home. I think I passed a very large flatscreen TV mounted on a wall (I don't actually own one of these), so evidently there is television in dreamland!
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In the dreamtime
Started by
Admin
, Jun 29 2010 12:23 PM
2 replies to this topic
#2
Posted 09 July 2010 - 07:19 PM
Lucid dreaming comes easier to some than others. I've had quite a few in my lifetime.
#3
Posted 18 September 2010 - 04:59 PM
Lucid dreams, intesesting subject. Can you have a lucid dream when your awake?
Something like this has happen to my wife. She was perparing for a shower, but swears that the fixture in that bathroom were not the fixture that are in our bathroom now. Only lasted for a miniute, and has happened to her before. How do you know if your in a Lucid dream or It's your experencing a life in some other dimension.
Jsut asking
Something like this has happen to my wife. She was perparing for a shower, but swears that the fixture in that bathroom were not the fixture that are in our bathroom now. Only lasted for a miniute, and has happened to her before. How do you know if your in a Lucid dream or It's your experencing a life in some other dimension.
Jsut asking
What is hidden is more harmful then the truth, and we seek what is the real truth of the seen and the unseen. Lets walk this path together.
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