❤ This video has been made possible through the kind support of: 👽 @TheDeadofNightAmbience 👽@FireboltJB 👽@jimvanhall217 👽@stevenrice7297 👽 (YOUR NAME HERE WITH A SUPER THANKS)
Most people sadly see their dreamworld as external to themselves. It's like when one talks about going into the nature, and to reach nature they have to use different techniques to get there, be it by foot or by car. But what they fail to realize is that nature as well as their dreamworld exists within them. By constantly looking outside of themselves for answers, they isolate themselves from nature and from their inner world of dreams.
This might be the most valuable video on lucid dreaming I have watched so far. The amount of valuable insights and perspectives in these 17 minutes, might as well have changed my approach to lucid dreaming forever. Thank you, Daniel! Your work matters a lot, and I am sure many share the same sentiment. To anyone reading this, I wish you a wonderful dream life
Man, you really are the real deal. There's nothing like actual experience and wisdom this channel is a blessing. I can't wait to have my first lucid dream!
I was spontaneously lucid decades before I even heard the term as well. Most techniques don't help a lot. I still spontaneously do it far more than intentionally. But one thing is crucial. Recognizing your dream patterns. Like any time I meet old friends from school, I KNOW I'm dreaming. Anytime I can "leap". Anytime everything is dark and hard to see... etc. Regular reality checks do seem helpful as well.
Man. After watching your video, I went to bed trying to mindfully observe the moment I fell asleep, and while I was dreaming, I was still meditating, but like on auto-pilot. It was weird. I didn't lucid dream, but I definitely experienced something new.
My comment seems to have disappeared, as I cannot find it. This video presents a new path - at least for me - and, like any new path before me, I pause and reflect on it. In this case, it touches on one of my weaknesses: doing without doing, letting go. I cannot begin to comprehend this, at least not yet, but my love for lucid dreaming prevents me from turning away simply because I do not understand it right now. Intellectually, I grasp it, but in practice... no. I served in the special forces for several years, and now I work in the corporate world - everything is driven by goals and objectives. My lucid dreaming practices follow the advice given on this channel to the letter: establish lucid dream goals and pathways. And now, this video... I am truly lost, for the moment, with all of this. Daniel, will there be further guidance to help deprogram the standard goal-oriented mindset and practically reshape our approach to this whole concept? Thank you for all your work.
This is so right. I found techniques somewhat helpful at the initial stages of my practice. But then they started to get in the way especially when I got worked up when I failed and wondered if I was doing them wrong. But as soon as I relaxed my practice, I started having more lucid dreams. An organic approach is my way now. Sometimes I just think how nice it would be to have a lucid dream and then leave it (no obsession) only to be surprised with lucidity in a dream a couple of days later. 😄
This rings true. Several years ago, i got into lucid dream techniques after having a handful of them by accident. I wanted to have them deliberately. I practiced reality checks, journaled and struggled implementing wake back to sleep. While i did get more lucid dreams with these techniques, they were very hit and miss and i felt like i was just going through the motions, especially with the reality checks. The few times I had lucid dreams seem to come after not trying for a while. I was also having irregular sleep patterns and digestive issues at the time. Indigestion lends itself to it for some reason
Amazing video Daniel, I started to fight with myself for being so strict because of the desire I had to have lucid dreams, one day after not being able to sleep I got angry and said well enough trying for today and I fell asleep, that same night I had 2 lucid dreams that Although they were somewhat short, but enough to understand that if I took off that pressure it would be better for me!
This is how the protagonist in my fantasy novel learns to fly(accidentally in a dream no less.) Letting go of the ego, simply existing and being, allowing the mind to just flow as it will, albeit with awareness and a touch of intention. Great video!
Great video as always. My favorite part is the idea of making it organic. I've been trying to do that with school subjects and finally got there for today, resulting in my most productive day in recent memory. One thing I love about this channel is that the principles of the concepts involved in lucidity often have carryover to other areas of life
My experience is that, when we live moment by moment in the now, without past or future and so without thought, we are present and now i get lucid dreams every time, because m aware of the now always. 🌹🌹🌹🙏
I think I made lucid dreaming feel like a job early on, trying to figure out what things I needed to do and trying to follow them 100%, which led to this feeling of "pressure". It felt like I was tricking my mind (and also that my mind was, in turn, trying to trick me - like I was my own enemy) into trying to like doing things in order to get a reward. Gradually, I stopped being so rigid, but I felt the "reward" part start to become a job - I needed to meet my weekly "quota" of lucids, I needed "meaningful" dream goals. Although I'm purely talking from a results-based mentality, all of that combined started to cause my lucidity to plummet and me to feel burnt out from the whole topic, like I was just following along due to the "pressure" to do so. I had an interest in dreams due to a particular dream (or a few days of dreams) where the dreams were particularly vivid and had waking affects on me. I had lost that core motivation for a while because it felt like I had to fit a rigid (or "right") mold and "I" wasn't that. It felt like a 9-5 of masquerading of a "true" lucid dreamer. I "knew" the lessons but didn't "understand" or live through them. With that being said, yea, I probably need to assess some things and pull apart what is me and what isn't. It's an on going process but so is lucid dreaming and sometimes, going back to your roots is beneficial. Great video as always! P.S. - the whole "recipe" talk was driving me crazy! I hadn't ate today and every time the word was brought up, my stomach was growling. Time to have some lunch I suppose!
Wow. Great video! Challenging to the typical mindset, which means a lot of food for thought! I'm not sure I get all of it, but that just means I'll want to listen to this one multiple times. If it was easy to wrap my head around all this, it wouldn't be as significant, I imagine.
Great! This is the type of insights and direct information we all wanted. And, this is the reason your videos are now getting more views, I'm very happy to see that.
"Okay brain, what's happening now?" love it :) Thanks, Daniel. I've been metacognating on and off for years trying to develop visualization. Not being a visualizer, it was a wild experience first realizing that the subvocalization in my head was not the most basic form of thought; they were not even thoughts, but mere expressions of thought; consciously silencing that voice is difficult and uncomfortable, but I find I can better observe my mind when I'm not "speaking" every thought I have.
I have left using techniques long ago. Yet i am able to lucid dream frequently. And as time is passing my mind is accepting more creative dreams. For lucid dreams as well as normal dreams. Both are awesome. I love you Danial . Its not about lucid dream its about lucid mind ❤
I have certainly occasionally fell into the trap of doing my dream journal reluctantly, just to log another day so I don't break the chain. Maybe that is just necessary sometimes, as I won't always feel super enthusiastic about journaling, and might struggle to find every dream fascinating every single day, depending on my mood, other things going on in my life, etc. But I imagine that on those days, even if I can't muster up the enthusiasm, doing the journal anyway, without enthusiasm, is better than skipping it that day, right? I'll just focus on fostering that enthusiasm so that most days I am excited about my dream journal practice.
i totally feel you about the Not Wanting to Journal because getting Lazy or Life gets in the way. i'm the same. the worst parts of Dreamjournaling for me is waking up, getting my journal, lay on my back because i'm too tired to sit and feeling uncomfortable but then sometimes i fall right back asleep in another dream so i have a dreamjournal open for two dreams. sometimes i oversleep and then i tend to almost forget the dream because i'm hasty to start the day wich is beginning with Breakfast - Writing - reading. but if i had a Lucid Dream then i have motivation to fill up three or four pages. i need to get back into the journal part again and stop slacking that part. another reason i sometimes hate dreamjournaling is because my writing sucks, and not only ugly unreadable writing but i also write very slow. so writing a dream down is very time consuming.
@@netabolt6546 my writing is sloppy when I am wide awake, but when I’m groggy and trying to write fast before I forget something… well… Sometimes it seems like I am inventing my own shorthand or hieroglyphics. 😆 It is often tempting to use my phone to write, but not only does that preclude any sketching, but any time saved or clarity of letters gained is sometimes offset by typos or interesting auto”correct/suggest” errors that can leave me baffled later. And yes, sometimes when trying to remember dreams, I get sleepy again. I find that if I can’t immediately remember anything, it can help me to wake up more if I focus on the “dream/memory fishing” practice of interrogating myself (“Did I go to place X… Did I see person A, B, or C…. Did I feel this that or the other thing…”) helps wake me up and jog my memory centers up as it does so, instead of just waiting for memories to come back to me, which does tend to put me back to sleep. I’d say that most of the time I am enthusiastic about my journaling, and most of my dreams are interesting to me, but sometimes certain dreams are a bit boring, and I’m not getting into it. I guess that just means I need to get more interesting in my waking life, if I can, to inspire more interesting dreams.
@@netabolt6546 My hands are developing arthritis so writing as soon as I wake up is extremely difficult so I've found a cheap voice recorder works better for me. I don't use the record function on my phone either as the glare of the screen, even for a short time makes it hard for me to go back to sleep.
For what it's worth, Ecclesiastes in the Bible also talks about letting things happen and accepting your circumstances. Moving forward, I want to keep track of what I've done throughout the day at the end of the day, so that I can practice memory, observation, and insight about my own life.
Thank you ... really, it is one of your unique gifts to share this kind of high quality content, keep going in this professional style! It is very much appreciated🖖
Thank you Daniel. Great approach and fantastic information as usual. The only fellow worth learning from on UA-cam! Greatly appreciated. Like the new approach to the channel . Your enthusiasm is infectious! And GOD damnit I will make a Fri**ING Sunday stream one day!!!
Thank you so much Steven! Really glad you're enjoying the new style, it's definitely far more rewarding to forget the algorithm and go in depth! Would be great to have you at one of the streams!!!
due to anxiety to fall asleep (paranoid thoughts, thinking about my phobia's and bad flashing memories) i have a hard time in trying WILD technicques so with me its always Mild as i read myself to sleep (or play 3DS games) to rest my mind for obsessive and sometimes intrusive thoughts. i'm not good at Lucid Dreaming every week but every month or two months i still have Lucid Dreams. The not so good part of this is that i get Lucid Dreaming more chances when i drank a beer (i only drink one beer, three in the whole weekends, one per night) late at night, the later i drink my alcohol the weirder my dreams get and so the more chances of Lucid Dreams. as well as the days i could'nt sleep at all due to stress or loud neighbours or because of pain, then the nights after were i fell asleep insanely fast the REM Rebound gives me extreme nightmares or very weird but vivid dreams, then the chances of getting Lucid is bigger indeed. its not a good way to try beeing lucid whilst i'm drinking beer but pretty much half of my Lucid Dreams are monday's or Sundays, the times were i was drinking One Beer late at night and had like a fuzzy mind, but i guess the REM Rebound is probably the issue of bad dreams after drinking and its not that i drink to get drunk, just one beer to have a chill moment, relaxing and watching youtube etc... the latest Lucid Dream was probably somewere in September were i was flying again, through mars, the sort of wishing fullfilment. i think the next Lucid Dream i'm going to talk to my Dreamlings and ask them deep questions, That, or i'll change in another animal. i already did that at some point in a Lucid dream were i was transforming myself in a huge Crow. maybe even try find the ocean or a deep puddle and diving whilst i still could breath (i tried that somany times in Lucid dreams before but i always felt scared. maybe its the irrational fear of still not getting to breath or just my Fear of the Dark (wich is not my worst fear but i sleep with the light on so its still an issue). when its dark i think about the darkest things possible that could happen. i also read your other book Lucid The Tao of Dreaming. but i feel like i need to reread it again but way way slower as i read it in one day and in the beginning of the book you wrote that it needs to be read slow and not back to back wich is what i done but not a big issue since i'll going to reread it soon but then only one page per night. its a good and easy to read book. as allways, a great video with so much depth about it.
I am loving the new format Daniel . Absolutely superb video , really spoke to me on this one. BTW, I saw you in one of my dreams and ofcourse became lucid straightaway. We even had a conversation about it haha. Also again just a couple of nights ago I saw you again and didnt immediately become lucid thiis time, but once l climbed some dreamstairs just after talking to you , I became lucid )
Amazing, thank you Francis, I'm really glad you're enjoying the new format! I love these kinds of dreams, and absolutely well done for not letting the trigger slip past!
Hey Daniel keep it up i really thank u again for your good calming videos but i wonder why have you changed your channel name? I really liked lucid dreaming portal with the spacy intro it gave your videos an extra vibe with the green portal greetings a fan😃❤️
Wonderful concepts! I had a couple of spontaneous Lucid Dreams before. However, they were very short. But that's OK. At least, I had them. Thank you Daniel!
I'm really liking the new, more measured (more thoughtful? more substantive?) approach in your channel... ... though I'll confess I do kind of miss the old "Lucid Dream Portal" name and logo. The new style has helped nudge me over the top to finally, actually become a member.
I've been thinking of lucid dreaming kind of wrong. I have been fascinated by the subject but I've been trying to force my way into lucid dreams and I've gotten no results from it. This reminds me of how my first lucid dream was a night that I didn't try any technique or practice, I just let it happen. I'm going to change how I think of lucid dreaming as whole, that it is something you let happen and I'm gonna be more mindful during the day. Just like the Boy Scout motto says, I will be prepared.
I didn't follow any recipe for a lucid dream. I only became very interested in lucid dream topics, and one night, I add my first lucid dream not too long ago from when I became interested.
Daniel, I've been having this weird thing happen to me where I think about doing a reality check while I fall asleep and I do one. I had happen 3 times in a row last night. I would lie there and then all of a sudden my brain would be like lets do a RC. Then I find out I'm dreaming. I honestly don't know what's going on. Perhaps you can shed some light on this? It's like an automatic thought.
Firstly, thank you for being brilliant. But onto the question.... This is actually great news, your mind is integrating practice onto it's default mode. This is similar to what I discuss in this video, it's what we're aiming for. As you progress it will become more a part of who you are and less structured, and lucidity will become second nature. So, nothing to worry about, you're just transitioning into a more natural state of questioning reality
I tried to catch when my dreams start after watching this and noticed after meditating when my minds drifted to hypnogogia, and we knew that meant a dream was close, but then we lost consciousness for a bit in a sort of half nap, but I’m back and will keep trying that later. ❤
you actually described how I've been approaching lucid dreaming ever since the start. It's like there's a wall I keep trying to push through, but the wall is only there because I've been percieving dream lucidity as something almost un-achieveable. How do you keep your mind on dreams throughout the day, though? it's like as soon as I wake up a switch is flipped and all my focus is on the waking world. I have a strong interest in dreams but it's almost never on my mind until I'm ready for sleep, and I think that affects my ability to lucid dream. especially because most of my dreams are non-lucid and I think im awake in them, so I'm just focused on the "waking world" still
Hi Daniel. Love the new focus on the wider reality and consciousness instead of pandering to good algorithms by youtube with techniques and everything else. I have a question - seeing that you said in some of your videos that you can lucid dream whenever you are in the proper conditions and at will in the proper context - would you be able to make a video relating your findings in comparison to Frank Kepple Astral Pulse post - in particular - FRANK'S MODEL OF THE WIDER REALITY with the 4 types of Focus and I know that his model was based on a ground basis for Robert Monroe gateway program but I was wondering if there is any correlation or not between you and him. I realize that maybe it is too much of a discontinuity in the material from what you presented before but I thought to ask anyway. At some point in time I concentrated and did all of the major technique and I was able to lucid dream a few times; nowadays I wake up randomly between 4-6 am in the morning - stay for a bit and then go to sleep again (and I realize it is WBTB) but now whenever I am in the dream spontaneously I am able to realize I am dreaming by making the sort of questions that you presented in this video - but at this point for me it comes naturally - what does not come naturally though is that even though I am awake and realize in the dream - I cannot focus enough and bring let's say a more richer experience - meaning I always want to fly (and still the laws of physics at least for me do not disappear in my dream) instead of exploring the cosmos or the mind - but I guess this is due to the lack of practice - and me being in the middle of life with many responsibilities that are taking all of my main physical life focus. But when I was doing it in the beginning when I was much younger and I had a lot of time - I had amazing lucid dreams - one of them I still remember to these days - in which I was able to have a ROTE experience which to this day leaved me in AWE at the awesomeness of the dream - meaning that I knew all of the people in the dream and everything seemed so familiar and it made perfect sense - but when I woke up I couldn't explain and unpack the memories but in the dream I JUST KNEW - this is one of the experiences that still leaves me puzzled - it almost feels like a different life - in fact even when I woke up for a few moments I was a bit disoriented in that I didn't know which life was primary :) Good day, Ozzy
You have changed my approach on LD. Until now I was struggling to get a lucid dream I was struggling to "Do a technique right". I had too many worries in my brain and I was afraid I am doing it wrong. I did all the research on forums servers sites videos but with each information i got a new fear came, "what if I'm not doing like the guy in the video said", "what if I'm not doing everything the guide in the forum said" and so on. From now on I will be open to learn about myself and I will learn, I will observe and ask questions. Thank you!
Very nice video:) Thank you:) You described that when you lay down in bed you try to figure out how you feel and what you mind is doing etc. Sadly my hypersensitivity would not allow me to fall back asleep. I absolutely have to distance from myself e.g thing of a film or series etc. Do you think that a good practice over the day can compensate this?
Focus on the "doing without doing" part, this isn't an active process, it's not trying it's a very subtle for of metacognition. But yes, daytime practice tunes the mind for this :)
I’ve been trying to lucid dream, and when I get to the point where I recognize that I’m dream I tend to wake up in sleep paralysis or I wake up and my mind is awake but my body is asleep and I’m not sure what to do, sometimes I’m kinda in denial that it’s happening but I know that my mind is awake because I can’t move my body. When I find out I’m dreaming I always say “I’m dreaming” and I can’t help it but after I say it I “wake up” not quite sure why though and since my body won’t move I feel as if the body is asleep but the mind is awake. Also for me personally I’ve noticed that in my regular dreams I can breath underwater and it seems like for me that, that might be the best way to to lucid dream and even if I’m not lucid I just start to breath underwater but once I do that I kinda have that realization that I’m dreaming. I feel like if I could make myself dream that I’m underwater it might be my chance to lucid dreaming whenever I want, but the only thing is, once I get to to point where I’m aware I wake up. Any tips?
Another interesting video. This is similar to what I do but for slightly different reasons. I’ve mentioned before that I don’t do reality checks, there is no need as my mindset doesn’t require it to experience WILDs. I’m just curious Daniel, are you suggesting in this video that one would no longer need to do reality checks, which I thought was the cornerstone of your teachings (as you seem to talk about them in every live stream you do)? You made an important comment in the video… that when you were a child, you didn’t know what lucid dreaming was and you weren’t doing daily reality checks or journaling or techniques … you were simply observing that moment when your dreams began. I guess we all just need to become children again 🤔🙃😊
I think you've misunderstood a little here, the point is that these are artificial ways of inducing behaviours - not unnecessary, but inferior and more rigid to the alternative. Try watching again, it's a subtle but important point.
@@DanielLoveOrg Yes, I see your point… you were asking the question “How do I recognize that I’m dreaming?” as an organic thought process during the day. In a sense I ask myself the same question, not directly but it’s inferred when I do my own WILD approach which is similar to yours, although the mindset is abit different in some ways. I suppose it’s different because we have our own unique set of beliefs, so exploring lucidity organically will produce slightly different mindsets. But as I mentioned before, I don’t do any reality tests during the day or when I’ve entered the dream … mainly because although on occasion I have noticed a gap in consciousness occurring before the dream starts, there is usually no break in consciousness from the waking state into the dream itself during my WILDs… and I don’t actually experience many DILDs Also, I’m not lucid dreaming every night, I do have life distractions and I do value my non-lucid dreams as well, so I admit I do have room for improvement Again, all in all this is an important video… I’ll recommend it 👍 And I think I’ll watch it a third time 😬
His last two videos have unironically been a cut above the rest, if this is the type of videos he's going to release under his new name then I am more than excited
The part when you say that you shouldn't say to yourself "when is the dream going to start" or something like that is so accurate to me😅 I will try not to think like that
And so the midway between LD techniques and flow-let go is ... a hybrid ... technique. A technique, in which you don´t mind over the result, to become lucid in your dreams. You just do, without doing. Simply be aware of your (inner) senses. That´s SSILD. Not like WILD, where you put pressure to stay lucid. Or with MILD, where you visualize, that you become lucid and farther force it with Mantras, that you must and will become lucid.
Do you advise against taking melatonin if you are trying to have a Lucid Dream? I seem to see an equal amount of people for and against it when I try to research it.
I think part of my issue is knowing dreams are just me in an alternate or parallel universe, so to lucid would be playing god... and I would never want that kind of power, so it would never happen. I think I like the idea of being able to do some things, and maybe explore more freely, but I do not want to mess with those other realities. If that makes sense.
I have a question and I'm hoping you might be able to answer it. Is it possible to use lucid dreaming as a way to manifest things or situations into our lives? For example, lets say I need a new couch, but I can't afford it. Do you think it's possible to combine visualization, faith, and lucid dreaming to make it a reality? I'm a student of Neville Goddard and his lectures seem to point to this. Not that I only want to lucid dream if it brings me results or anything. I genuinely enjoy lucid dreaming and OBEs for the sake of the fun experiences I have, and that I get to work through some of life's challenges. But I've just never tried to combine it with manifestation, and the thought didn't cross my mind until recently. So I'm just curious if you've had any experience in this area. Thanks 🙏
no that would not work. sorry. the mind and dreams are hallucinations and chemical reactions. nothing to do with magic. faith or reality manipulation. it's controlled hallucinations behind close eyelids. lucid dreaming won't help you get a new couch get a job or get a better paying job. and buy a couch. b
I always know I am in a dream and recently had a strange dream that a crazy joker character tried to hurt me and I said, this is a dream, you can't hurt me here. I used to think everyone could do this, did not know it was a thing. I also dream about people who used to live in my home but are not alive anymore.
Hello:) I watched the video several times now. Just to get everything:) When you do the morning nap have you slept your full sleeping hours like e.h. 7.5 h before or do you sleep a shorter time stay some time awake and that do the nap ?
This is where I recommend people use the ART technique to assess the best timing, the choose accordingly. Over time this becomes second nature and you just intuitively know if you should return to sleep or stay awake a while.
I like you.. ur articulate clear precise .. effective...thanku 😊 If u only understood how to disect the corruption of religions and assist in guiding people into nosis ur voice would be a Bridge
Daniel, i got a quick question: i was looking around your website because i wanted to check out your book "are you dreaming", maybe even buy it, but i couldnt find a digital version for it. I remember seeing one on amazon a while back, but now the only one i see there is the paperback. Am i just looking in the wrong place, or has it been taken down from amazon? Also, if i recall correctly, it was a kindle version. Does that mean i need to have a kindle to read it, or does that work on other devices? If you could provide me some info on this, i would highly appreciate that
I think you were probably on the wrong tab, amazing defaults to paperbacks. Here's a direct link: www.amazon.com/Are-You-Dreaming-Exploring-Comprehensive-ebook/dp/B00AZO9TY4 You can also get the pdf version here: www.thelucidguide.com/shop?Collection=Lucid%20Dreaming%20Books
Ive been lucid dreaming for 36 years. I’m 39 now. I don’t know why I do and honestly I don’t want to. I wish I never did. Seeing beings of light and temples made of water and meeting dead family members is freaky. I paint and draw them now because it’s to much to keep internal so I have to get them out. I hate it, I lucid dream almost 4 times a week it sucks
Interesting thing is when I'm really frustrated and fed up about not being able to lucid dream after doing all kinds of techniques and ridiculous amounts of reality checks all day, give up and just sleep, BOOM spontaneous lucid dream like crazy! Flying in the air, swimming down oceans and meeting giant sea creatures etc etc 😅
The easiest way to answer this isn't with a number but a statement, which is: I can lucid dream whenever I choose to do so. That will vary depending on circumstances, but the overly simplified answer would be "every night" - but of course life isn't ever that straightforward
I have tried many 10s probably 100s of times and have never ever suceeded to have a Lucide dream. My problem is, very fast I fall into a sleep AND I rarely see dreams in general. If I have a dram I try to remember as much as possible through out the day sometimes even write it down. Anyway, that said, if I very rarely have a dreams does that mean most likrely I ill never be able to have a lucid dream?
@@staariniex1 Keep trying you'll lucid dream. To me it was easy, I did it in a few days but everyone is different. Now I Lucid dream 4/5 times a month without doing anything except some reality checks 2/3 times a day
After I went to my bed I observe my thouths. I begin to hear "fake" sound or I am in another pace doing something else. When I become conscius of that it "surprises" me and then I am back to reality. An half our is passed and i get a bit of insomnia. Dose Anyone have an advice for me? Sorry for the grammar, I am italian.
It's funny because I've noticed that I have habits in my dreams that I have irl for example snapchatting my mates about what I'm doing and they snapchat me back as well but sometimes the mate in my dream is some random celebrity and I just don't question it and then I wake up and I'm like damn why was I not suspicious that David Tennant was my mate haha
Best video of yours till now 🤍I was struggling to have lucid dream even applying all the techniques I really needed to hear this ,from today I am not going to have dream I goin be one by myself ✨️
❤ This video has been made possible through the kind support of: 👽 @TheDeadofNightAmbience 👽@FireboltJB 👽@jimvanhall217 👽@stevenrice7297 👽 (YOUR NAME HERE WITH A SUPER THANKS)
Most people sadly see their dreamworld as external to themselves. It's like when one talks about going into the nature, and to reach nature they have to use different techniques to get there, be it by foot or by car. But what they fail to realize is that nature as well as their dreamworld exists within them. By constantly looking outside of themselves for answers, they isolate themselves from nature and from their inner world of dreams.
Yea in the big picture of it all, everything is within
Guilty. But I´m on my way.
This is honestly the best lucid dreaming video I ever seen on this channel and on internet.
This might be the most valuable video on lucid dreaming I have watched so far. The amount of valuable insights and perspectives in these 17 minutes, might as well have changed my approach to lucid dreaming forever. Thank you, Daniel! Your work matters a lot, and I am sure many share the same sentiment. To anyone reading this, I wish you a wonderful dream life
Brudda it hasnt even been 17 minutes yet, how u watch the whole thing?
@@RandomStuff-b7e I am a channel memeber, I get early access to videos. I get how you go confused
@@midaslucky4363 oh ok, thanks for explaining
Man, you really are the real deal. There's nothing like actual experience and wisdom this channel is a blessing. I can't wait to have my first lucid dream!
I was spontaneously lucid decades before I even heard the term as well. Most techniques don't help a lot. I still spontaneously do it far more than intentionally. But one thing is crucial. Recognizing your dream patterns. Like any time I meet old friends from school, I KNOW I'm dreaming. Anytime I can "leap". Anytime everything is dark and hard to see... etc. Regular reality checks do seem helpful as well.
Man. After watching your video, I went to bed trying to mindfully observe the moment I fell asleep, and while I was dreaming, I was still meditating, but like on auto-pilot. It was weird.
I didn't lucid dream, but I definitely experienced something new.
@@endlessnameless7004 nice gonna try tonight
My comment seems to have disappeared, as I cannot find it. This video presents a new path - at least for me - and, like any new path before me, I pause and reflect on it. In this case, it touches on one of my weaknesses: doing without doing, letting go. I cannot begin to comprehend this, at least not yet, but my love for lucid dreaming prevents me from turning away simply because I do not understand it right now. Intellectually, I grasp it, but in practice... no. I served in the special forces for several years, and now I work in the corporate world - everything is driven by goals and objectives. My lucid dreaming practices follow the advice given on this channel to the letter: establish lucid dream goals and pathways. And now, this video... I am truly lost, for the moment, with all of this. Daniel, will there be further guidance to help deprogram the standard goal-oriented mindset and practically reshape our approach to this whole concept? Thank you for all your work.
This is so right. I found techniques somewhat helpful at the initial stages of my practice. But then they started to get in the way especially when I got worked up when I failed and wondered if I was doing them wrong. But as soon as I relaxed my practice, I started having more lucid dreams. An organic approach is my way now. Sometimes I just think how nice it would be to have a lucid dream and then leave it (no obsession) only to be surprised with lucidity in a dream a couple of days later. 😄
have you had a lucid dream?
@0mcfishy364 So many. Been practising since 2008. 🙂
@@ArlindoPhilosophicalArtist how, i cant
This rings true. Several years ago, i got into lucid dream techniques after having a handful of them by accident. I wanted to have them deliberately.
I practiced reality checks, journaled and struggled implementing wake back to sleep. While i did get more lucid dreams with these techniques, they were very hit and miss and i felt like i was just going through the motions, especially with the reality checks.
The few times I had lucid dreams seem to come after not trying for a while. I was also having irregular sleep patterns and digestive issues at the time. Indigestion lends itself to it for some reason
Amazing video Daniel, I started to fight with myself for being so strict because of the desire I had to have lucid dreams, one day after not being able to sleep I got angry and said well enough trying for today and I fell asleep, that same night I had 2 lucid dreams that Although they were somewhat short, but enough to understand that if I took off that pressure it would be better for me!
This is how the protagonist in my fantasy novel learns to fly(accidentally in a dream no less.)
Letting go of the ego, simply existing and being, allowing the mind to just flow as it will, albeit with awareness and a touch of intention.
Great video!
Great video as always. My favorite part is the idea of making it organic. I've been trying to do that with school subjects and finally got there for today, resulting in my most productive day in recent memory. One thing I love about this channel is that the principles of the concepts involved in lucidity often have carryover to other areas of life
My experience is that, when we live moment by moment in the now, without past or future and so without thought, we are present and now i get lucid dreams every time, because m aware of the now always. 🌹🌹🌹🙏
I think I made lucid dreaming feel like a job early on, trying to figure out what things I needed to do and trying to follow them 100%, which led to this feeling of "pressure". It felt like I was tricking my mind (and also that my mind was, in turn, trying to trick me - like I was my own enemy) into trying to like doing things in order to get a reward. Gradually, I stopped being so rigid, but I felt the "reward" part start to become a job - I needed to meet my weekly "quota" of lucids, I needed "meaningful" dream goals. Although I'm purely talking from a results-based mentality, all of that combined started to cause my lucidity to plummet and me to feel burnt out from the whole topic, like I was just following along due to the "pressure" to do so.
I had an interest in dreams due to a particular dream (or a few days of dreams) where the dreams were particularly vivid and had waking affects on me. I had lost that core motivation for a while because it felt like I had to fit a rigid (or "right") mold and "I" wasn't that. It felt like a 9-5 of masquerading of a "true" lucid dreamer. I "knew" the lessons but didn't "understand" or live through them.
With that being said, yea, I probably need to assess some things and pull apart what is me and what isn't. It's an on going process but so is lucid dreaming and sometimes, going back to your roots is beneficial. Great video as always!
P.S. - the whole "recipe" talk was driving me crazy! I hadn't ate today and every time the word was brought up, my stomach was growling. Time to have some lunch I suppose!
Wow. Great video! Challenging to the typical mindset, which means a lot of food for thought! I'm not sure I get all of it, but that just means I'll want to listen to this one multiple times. If it was easy to wrap my head around all this, it wouldn't be as significant, I imagine.
You have the best channel Daniel. Very informative.
Very kind of you to say
Great! This is the type of insights and direct information we all wanted. And, this is the reason your videos are now getting more views, I'm very happy to see that.
I'm really liking your newest videos. They are really informative and enjoyable. Thanks!
"Okay brain, what's happening now?" love it :) Thanks, Daniel. I've been metacognating on and off for years trying to develop visualization. Not being a visualizer, it was a wild experience first realizing that the subvocalization in my head was not the most basic form of thought; they were not even thoughts, but mere expressions of thought; consciously silencing that voice is difficult and uncomfortable, but I find I can better observe my mind when I'm not "speaking" every thought I have.
I have left using techniques long ago. Yet i am able to lucid dream frequently. And as time is passing my mind is accepting more creative dreams. For lucid dreams as well as normal dreams. Both are awesome. I love you Danial . Its not about lucid dream its about lucid mind ❤
Your content just keeps getting better and better, thanks for your dedication :)
I have certainly occasionally fell into the trap of doing my dream journal reluctantly, just to log another day so I don't break the chain. Maybe that is just necessary sometimes, as I won't always feel super enthusiastic about journaling, and might struggle to find every dream fascinating every single day, depending on my mood, other things going on in my life, etc. But I imagine that on those days, even if I can't muster up the enthusiasm, doing the journal anyway, without enthusiasm, is better than skipping it that day, right? I'll just focus on fostering that enthusiasm so that most days I am excited about my dream journal practice.
i totally feel you about the Not Wanting to Journal because getting Lazy or Life gets in the way. i'm the same. the worst parts of Dreamjournaling for me is waking up, getting my journal, lay on my back because i'm too tired to sit and feeling uncomfortable but then sometimes i fall right back asleep in another dream so i have a dreamjournal open for two dreams. sometimes i oversleep and then i tend to almost forget the dream because i'm hasty to start the day wich is beginning with Breakfast - Writing - reading. but if i had a Lucid Dream then i have motivation to fill up three or four pages. i need to get back into the journal part again and stop slacking that part.
another reason i sometimes hate dreamjournaling is because my writing sucks, and not only ugly unreadable writing but i also write very slow. so writing a dream down is very time consuming.
@@netabolt6546 my writing is sloppy when I am wide awake, but when I’m groggy and trying to write fast before I forget something… well… Sometimes it seems like I am inventing my own shorthand or hieroglyphics. 😆 It is often tempting to use my phone to write, but not only does that preclude any sketching, but any time saved or clarity of letters gained is sometimes offset by typos or interesting auto”correct/suggest” errors that can leave me baffled later. And yes, sometimes when trying to remember dreams, I get sleepy again. I find that if I can’t immediately remember anything, it can help me to wake up more if I focus on the “dream/memory fishing” practice of interrogating myself (“Did I go to place X… Did I see person A, B, or C…. Did I feel this that or the other thing…”) helps wake me up and jog my memory centers up as it does so, instead of just waiting for memories to come back to me, which does tend to put me back to sleep.
I’d say that most of the time I am enthusiastic about my journaling, and most of my dreams are interesting to me, but sometimes certain dreams are a bit boring, and I’m not getting into it. I guess that just means I need to get more interesting in my waking life, if I can, to inspire more interesting dreams.
@@netabolt6546 My hands are developing arthritis so writing as soon as I wake up is extremely difficult so I've found a cheap voice recorder works better for me. I don't use the record function on my phone either as the glare of the screen, even for a short time makes it hard for me to go back to sleep.
Bro seriously made me to recognise my childhood dream controlling method😭
For what it's worth, Ecclesiastes in the Bible also talks about letting things happen and accepting your circumstances. Moving forward, I want to keep track of what I've done throughout the day at the end of the day, so that I can practice memory, observation, and insight about my own life.
Thank you ... really, it is one of your unique gifts to share this kind of high quality content, keep going in this professional style! It is very much appreciated🖖
When im lucid. I sometimes say out loud "Spawn..." or "play..." so it can be more believable in the dream
Loved it, Daniel. Thank you!
Thank you, hugely appreciated! I hope your channel is going well?
@@DanielLoveOrg Brilliant, thank you! Almost at 100K subscribers. Very proud, happy, and grateful about that 😊😊😊
I think this may just be THE lucid dreaming video. I believe no other video on this website understands and explains lucid dreaming for what it is
Thank you Daniel. Great approach and fantastic information as usual. The only fellow worth learning from on UA-cam! Greatly appreciated. Like the new approach to the channel . Your enthusiasm is infectious! And GOD damnit I will make a Fri**ING Sunday stream one day!!!
Thank you so much Steven! Really glad you're enjoying the new style, it's definitely far more rewarding to forget the algorithm and go in depth!
Would be great to have you at one of the streams!!!
due to anxiety to fall asleep (paranoid thoughts, thinking about my phobia's and bad flashing memories) i have a hard time in trying WILD technicques so with me its always Mild as i read myself to sleep (or play 3DS games) to rest my mind for obsessive and sometimes intrusive thoughts. i'm not good at Lucid Dreaming every week but every month or two months i still have Lucid Dreams. The not so good part of this is that i get Lucid Dreaming more chances when i drank a beer (i only drink one beer, three in the whole weekends, one per night) late at night, the later i drink my alcohol the weirder my dreams get and so the more chances of Lucid Dreams. as well as the days i could'nt sleep at all due to stress or loud neighbours or because of pain, then the nights after were i fell asleep insanely fast the REM Rebound gives me extreme nightmares or very weird but vivid dreams, then the chances of getting Lucid is bigger indeed. its not a good way to try beeing lucid whilst i'm drinking beer but pretty much half of my Lucid Dreams are monday's or Sundays, the times were i was drinking One Beer late at night and had like a fuzzy mind, but i guess the REM Rebound is probably the issue of bad dreams after drinking and its not that i drink to get drunk, just one beer to have a chill moment, relaxing and watching youtube etc...
the latest Lucid Dream was probably somewere in September were i was flying again, through mars, the sort of wishing fullfilment. i think the next Lucid Dream i'm going to talk to my Dreamlings and ask them deep questions, That, or i'll change in another animal. i already did that at some point in a Lucid dream were i was transforming myself in a huge Crow. maybe even try find the ocean or a deep puddle and diving whilst i still could breath (i tried that somany times in Lucid dreams before but i always felt scared. maybe its the irrational fear of still not getting to breath or just my Fear of the Dark (wich is not my worst fear but i sleep with the light on so its still an issue). when its dark i think about the darkest things possible that could happen.
i also read your other book Lucid The Tao of Dreaming. but i feel like i need to reread it again but way way slower as i read it in one day and in the beginning of the book you wrote that it needs to be read slow and not back to back wich is what i done but not a big issue since i'll going to reread it soon but then only one page per night. its a good and easy to read book.
as allways, a great video with so much depth about it.
“ building a map to understand the difference”
Succinct👌
I'm loving these videos. I think they help explain better the complexity of lucid dreaming. Thank you!
One who sleepwalks throughout life cannot expect to be awake within dreams
I am loving the new format Daniel . Absolutely superb video , really spoke to me on this one. BTW, I saw you in one of my dreams and ofcourse became lucid straightaway. We even had a conversation about it haha. Also again just a couple of nights ago I saw you again and didnt immediately become lucid thiis time, but once l climbed some dreamstairs just after talking to you , I became lucid )
Amazing, thank you Francis, I'm really glad you're enjoying the new format!
I love these kinds of dreams, and absolutely well done for not letting the trigger slip past!
Hey Daniel keep it up i really thank u again for your good calming videos but i wonder why have you changed your channel name? I really liked lucid dreaming portal with the spacy intro it gave your videos an extra vibe with the green portal greetings a fan😃❤️
Stopping your obsesive need for controlling every situation and watching the meaning of every intention as it unfolds.
When you decrease resistance, ej thinking that sometuing should be a cenrtain right way, then a better paths will be revealed.
Wonderful concepts! I had a couple of spontaneous Lucid Dreams before. However, they were very short. But that's OK. At least, I had them. Thank you Daniel!
I'm really liking the new, more measured (more thoughtful? more substantive?) approach in your channel...
... though I'll confess I do kind of miss the old "Lucid Dream Portal" name and logo.
The new style has helped nudge me over the top to finally, actually become a member.
I've been thinking of lucid dreaming kind of wrong. I have been fascinated by the subject but I've been trying to force my way into lucid dreams and I've gotten no results from it. This reminds me of how my first lucid dream was a night that I didn't try any technique or practice, I just let it happen. I'm going to change how I think of lucid dreaming as whole, that it is something you let happen and I'm gonna be more mindful during the day. Just like the Boy Scout motto says, I will be prepared.
I didn't follow any recipe for a lucid dream. I only became very interested in lucid dream topics, and one night, I add my first lucid dream not too long ago from when I became interested.
Daniel, I've been having this weird thing happen to me where I think about doing a reality check while I fall asleep and I do one. I had happen 3 times in a row last night. I would lie there and then all of a sudden my brain would be like lets do a RC. Then I find out I'm dreaming. I honestly don't know what's going on. Perhaps you can shed some light on this? It's like an automatic thought.
Firstly, thank you for being brilliant. But onto the question.... This is actually great news, your mind is integrating practice onto it's default mode. This is similar to what I discuss in this video, it's what we're aiming for. As you progress it will become more a part of who you are and less structured, and lucidity will become second nature. So, nothing to worry about, you're just transitioning into a more natural state of questioning reality
Thank you, Daniel! Inspiring!
I tried to catch when my dreams start after watching this and noticed after meditating when my minds drifted to hypnogogia, and we knew that meant a dream was close, but then we lost consciousness for a bit in a sort of half nap, but I’m back and will keep trying that later. ❤
@@max_the_mantis5173 any updates?
you actually described how I've been approaching lucid dreaming ever since the start. It's like there's a wall I keep trying to push through, but the wall is only there because I've been percieving dream lucidity as something almost un-achieveable. How do you keep your mind on dreams throughout the day, though? it's like as soon as I wake up a switch is flipped and all my focus is on the waking world. I have a strong interest in dreams but it's almost never on my mind until I'm ready for sleep, and I think that affects my ability to lucid dream. especially because most of my dreams are non-lucid and I think im awake in them, so I'm just focused on the "waking world" still
I wanted to fly in my lucid dream so I just said I'm going to tonight. I did. Funny thing is that I realized I had been doing it and had forgotten
Hi Daniel. Love the new focus on the wider reality and consciousness instead of pandering to good algorithms by youtube with techniques and everything else.
I have a question - seeing that you said in some of your videos that you can lucid dream whenever you are in the proper conditions and at will in the proper context - would you be able to make a video relating your findings in comparison to Frank Kepple Astral Pulse post - in particular - FRANK'S MODEL OF THE WIDER REALITY with the 4 types of Focus and I know that his model was based on a ground basis for Robert Monroe gateway program but I was wondering if there is any correlation or not between you and him. I realize that maybe it is too much of a discontinuity in the material from what you presented before but I thought to ask anyway.
At some point in time I concentrated and did all of the major technique and I was able to lucid dream a few times; nowadays I wake up randomly between 4-6 am in the morning - stay for a bit and then go to sleep again (and I realize it is WBTB) but now whenever I am in the dream spontaneously I am able to realize I am dreaming by making the sort of questions that you presented in this video - but at this point for me it comes naturally - what does not come naturally though is that even though I am awake and realize in the dream - I cannot focus enough and bring let's say a more richer experience - meaning I always want to fly (and still the laws of physics at least for me do not disappear in my dream) instead of exploring the cosmos or the mind - but I guess this is due to the lack of practice - and me being in the middle of life with many responsibilities that are taking all of my main physical life focus.
But when I was doing it in the beginning when I was much younger and I had a lot of time - I had amazing lucid dreams - one of them I still remember to these days - in which I was able to have a ROTE experience which to this day leaved me in AWE at the awesomeness of the dream - meaning that I knew all of the people in the dream and everything seemed so familiar and it made perfect sense - but when I woke up I couldn't explain and unpack the memories but in the dream I JUST KNEW - this is one of the experiences that still leaves me puzzled - it almost feels like a different life - in fact even when I woke up for a few moments I was a bit disoriented in that I didn't know which life was primary :)
Good day,
Ozzy
You may want to learn how to stabilize your dreams
This is the best your video. Thank you.
You have changed my approach on LD. Until now I was struggling to get a lucid dream I was struggling to "Do a technique right". I had too many worries in my brain and I was afraid I am doing it wrong. I did all the research on forums servers sites videos but with each information i got a new fear came, "what if I'm not doing like the guy in the video said", "what if I'm not doing everything the guide in the forum said" and so on. From now on I will be open to learn about myself and I will learn, I will observe and ask questions. Thank you!
Really glad to help, and thank you for taking the time to comment. Stay lucid!
Very nice video:) Thank you:)
You described that when you lay down in bed you try to figure out how you feel and what you mind is doing etc. Sadly my hypersensitivity would not allow me to fall back asleep. I absolutely have to distance from myself e.g thing of a film or series etc. Do you think that a good practice over the day can compensate this?
Focus on the "doing without doing" part, this isn't an active process, it's not trying it's a very subtle for of metacognition. But yes, daytime practice tunes the mind for this :)
@@DanielLoveOrg Thank you :)
Thank you so much
nothing really to do with the video but i might be go buy are you dreaming by YOU so yes:D
I’ve been trying to lucid dream, and when I get to the point where I recognize that I’m dream I tend to wake up in sleep paralysis or I wake up and my mind is awake but my body is asleep and I’m not sure what to do, sometimes I’m kinda in denial that it’s happening but I know that my mind is awake because I can’t move my body. When I find out I’m dreaming I always say “I’m dreaming” and I can’t help it but after I say it I “wake up” not quite sure why though and since my body won’t move I feel as if the body is asleep but the mind is awake. Also for me personally I’ve noticed that in my regular dreams I can breath underwater and it seems like for me that, that might be the best way to to lucid dream and even if I’m not lucid I just start to breath underwater but once I do that I kinda have that realization that I’m dreaming. I feel like if I could make myself dream that I’m underwater it might be my chance to lucid dreaming whenever I want, but the only thing is, once I get to to point where I’m aware I wake up. Any tips?
After realising you are dreaming and waking up in sleep paralysis, attempt to exit your body. See what happens.
Another interesting video. This is similar to what I do but for slightly different reasons. I’ve mentioned before that I don’t do reality checks, there is no need as my mindset doesn’t require it to experience WILDs.
I’m just curious Daniel, are you suggesting in this video that one would no longer need to do reality checks, which I thought was the cornerstone of your teachings (as you seem to talk about them in every live stream you do)? You made an important comment in the video… that when you were a child, you didn’t know what lucid dreaming was and you weren’t doing daily reality checks or journaling or techniques … you were simply observing that moment when your dreams began.
I guess we all just need to become children again 🤔🙃😊
I think you've misunderstood a little here, the point is that these are artificial ways of inducing behaviours - not unnecessary, but inferior and more rigid to the alternative. Try watching again, it's a subtle but important point.
@@DanielLoveOrg I will watch it again, thanks.
@@DanielLoveOrg Yes, I see your point… you were asking the question “How do I recognize that I’m dreaming?” as an organic thought process during the day.
In a sense I ask myself the same question, not directly but it’s inferred when I do my own WILD approach which is similar to yours, although the mindset is abit different in some ways.
I suppose it’s different because we have our own unique set of beliefs, so exploring lucidity organically will produce slightly different mindsets.
But as I mentioned before, I don’t do any reality tests during the day or when I’ve entered the dream … mainly because although on occasion I have noticed a gap in consciousness occurring before the dream starts, there is usually no break in consciousness from the waking state into the dream itself during my WILDs… and I don’t actually experience many DILDs
Also, I’m not lucid dreaming every night, I do have life distractions and I do value my non-lucid dreams as well, so I admit I do have room for improvement
Again, all in all this is an important video… I’ll recommend it 👍
And I think I’ll watch it a third time 😬
Commenting to boosy - very helpful video!
Question. What type of mind set should I be having if Im performing IMP?
The same as outlined in this video. I intend to do a deeper exploration of mindset in a later video.
@@DanielLoveOrg thanks
Great video, made me use my brain
His last two videos have unironically been a cut above the rest, if this is the type of videos he's going to release under his new name then I am more than excited
The part when you say that you shouldn't say to yourself "when is the dream going to start" or something like that is so accurate to me😅 I will try not to think like that
And so the midway between LD techniques and flow-let go is ... a hybrid ... technique. A technique, in which you don´t mind over the result, to become lucid in your dreams. You just do, without doing. Simply be aware of your (inner) senses. That´s SSILD. Not like WILD, where you put pressure to stay lucid. Or with MILD, where you visualize, that you become lucid and farther force it with Mantras, that you must and will become lucid.
Do you advise against taking melatonin if you are trying to have a Lucid Dream? I seem to see an equal amount of people for and against it when I try to research it.
I think part of my issue is knowing dreams are just me in an alternate or parallel universe, so to lucid would be playing god... and I would never want that kind of power, so it would never happen. I think I like the idea of being able to do some things, and maybe explore more freely, but I do not want to mess with those other realities. If that makes sense.
I already didn't do any techniques for sleeping
Thank you Jim, you're a star!!!
BE the dream
@@Lamchop44 what does that mean
I have a question and I'm hoping you might be able to answer it. Is it possible to use lucid dreaming as a way to manifest things or situations into our lives? For example, lets say I need a new couch, but I can't afford it. Do you think it's possible to combine visualization, faith, and lucid dreaming to make it a reality? I'm a student of Neville Goddard and his lectures seem to point to this.
Not that I only want to lucid dream if it brings me results or anything. I genuinely enjoy lucid dreaming and OBEs for the sake of the fun experiences I have, and that I get to work through some of life's challenges. But I've just never tried to combine it with manifestation, and the thought didn't cross my mind until recently. So I'm just curious if you've had any experience in this area.
Thanks 🙏
no that would not work. sorry. the mind and dreams are hallucinations and chemical reactions. nothing to do with magic. faith or reality manipulation. it's controlled hallucinations behind close eyelids.
lucid dreaming won't help you get a new couch get a job or get a better paying job. and buy a couch. b
I always know I am in a dream and recently had a strange dream that a crazy joker character tried to hurt me and I said, this is a dream, you can't hurt me here. I used to think everyone could do this, did not know it was a thing. I also dream about people who used to live in my home but are not alive anymore.
Hello:) I watched the video several times now. Just to get everything:) When you do the morning nap have you slept your full sleeping hours like e.h. 7.5 h before or do you sleep a shorter time stay some time awake and that do the nap ?
This is where I recommend people use the ART technique to assess the best timing, the choose accordingly. Over time this becomes second nature and you just intuitively know if you should return to sleep or stay awake a while.
@@DanielLoveOrg Thanks:) I hope I can read it soon :)
I like you.. ur articulate clear precise .. effective...thanku 😊
If u only understood how to disect the corruption of religions and assist in guiding people into nosis ur voice would be a Bridge
Daniel, i got a quick question: i was looking around your website because i wanted to check out your book "are you dreaming", maybe even buy it, but i couldnt find a digital version for it. I remember seeing one on amazon a while back, but now the only one i see there is the paperback. Am i just looking in the wrong place, or has it been taken down from amazon? Also, if i recall correctly, it was a kindle version. Does that mean i need to have a kindle to read it, or does that work on other devices? If you could provide me some info on this, i would highly appreciate that
I think you were probably on the wrong tab, amazing defaults to paperbacks. Here's a direct link:
www.amazon.com/Are-You-Dreaming-Exploring-Comprehensive-ebook/dp/B00AZO9TY4
You can also get the pdf version here:
www.thelucidguide.com/shop?Collection=Lucid%20Dreaming%20Books
@@DanielLoveOrg Ah i see, thank you, imma buy it then :)
Ive been lucid dreaming for 36 years. I’m 39 now. I don’t know why I do and honestly I don’t want to. I wish I never did. Seeing beings of light and temples made of water and meeting dead family members is freaky. I paint and draw them now because it’s to much to keep internal so I have to get them out. I hate it, I lucid dream almost 4 times a week it sucks
what is happening NOW?
Interesting thing is when I'm really frustrated and fed up about not being able to lucid dream after doing all kinds of techniques and ridiculous amounts of reality checks all day, give up and just sleep, BOOM spontaneous lucid dream like crazy! Flying in the air, swimming down oceans and meeting giant sea creatures etc etc 😅
Thanks.
How often do u lucid dream in a week Daniel ?
The easiest way to answer this isn't with a number but a statement, which is: I can lucid dream whenever I choose to do so. That will vary depending on circumstances, but the overly simplified answer would be "every night" - but of course life isn't ever that straightforward
@@DanielLoveOrg thank you
I have tried many 10s probably 100s of times and have never ever suceeded to have a Lucide dream. My problem is, very fast I fall into a sleep AND I rarely see dreams in general. If I have a dram I try to remember as much as possible through out the day sometimes even write it down. Anyway, that said, if I very rarely have a dreams does that mean most likrely I ill never be able to have a lucid dream?
@@staariniex1 Keep trying you'll lucid dream. To me it was easy, I did it in a few days but everyone is different. Now I Lucid dream 4/5 times a month without doing anything except some reality checks 2/3 times a day
I tried twice and twice had wet dreams.. ergh .. I would rather paint a picture than have to change my bed sheets
After I went to my bed I observe my thouths. I begin to hear "fake" sound or I am in another pace doing something else. When I become conscius of that it "surprises" me and then I am back to reality. An half our is passed and i get a bit of insomnia. Dose Anyone have an advice for me? Sorry for the grammar, I am italian.
These are called hypnagogic hallucinations, and can lead to a "hypnic jerk". Which is what you're describing.
It's funny because I've noticed that I have habits in my dreams that I have irl for example snapchatting my mates about what I'm doing and they snapchat me back as well but sometimes the mate in my dream is some random celebrity and I just don't question it and then I wake up and I'm like damn why was I not suspicious that David Tennant was my mate haha
आप शिव जी के बारे में पढ़े वो गुरु है ,मेडिटेशन के।
Best video of yours till now 🤍I was struggling to have lucid dream even applying all the techniques I really needed to hear this ,from today I am not going to have dream I goin be one by myself ✨️
i dont have lucid dreams no more 😢
🙏
👍