This is Part 1 of the BIG “Lucid Living Topic”
Part 2
Hello Everyone -
In the last few weeks on this board I have noticed, here and there, many mini-discussions on the idea of Lucid Living. Seeing that I’ve been mildly unsuccessful since I started my lucid quest in November last year, I am posting this topic in hopes to further my research and find the right way for me to lucid dream.
I have had a one decent low-level lucid dream, and a few ‘lucid moments’ (you know, you realize you’re dreaming, then you wake up before you can do anything about it). I do RC’s every day and have read a few books on Lucid Dreaming. I check the message board every day and keep a very large and up-to-date dream journal. I use and have tried many techniques listed here and in other resources with little success.
So what is the problem? I’m not frustrated by any means, I know this is a skill that takes time to develop and cultivate. We need resources, like this message board, to help each other out.
Back to my discussion of Lucid Living.
I have found a very common theme, which should be no surprise, during each of my lucid ‘events’. They all were triggered by me recognizing something out of place, something odd. I would not even necessarily need to do an RC (I’ve only done this ONCE in a dream).
Another point I wanted to bring up was “beginner’s luck”. It seems that very often, someone hears or reads about lucid dreaming. They then have a successful lucid dream or dreams with little or no effort within a week, but are unable to replicate it in most cases if they develop an interest to pursue lucid dreaming seriously.
What do these two things tell me? Awareness. It’s all boils down to awareness. Many of you know this, but what, exactly, does it mean?
That brings me to the concept of Lucid Living that has been thrown around this board. Basically, it stems from the idea that we should be constantly in a state of heightened awareness of our environment around us. We need to pay more attention to the things that are happening that are stimulating our senses. With a greater awareness of what real life consists of, we can take on the philosophy that dreams are another form of real life, just one that we are not bound by rules in.
Being constantly aware of our environment will lead us to being constantly aware whether we are or are not in dreams. When something odd happens, we notice it. This is basically breaking down the barrier of dream acceptance by changing the way we view our lives. We, as Lucid Living beings, can easily recognize the smallest inconsistency of our enviornment and cross-reference it to our knowledge of waking life, giving us instant access to an acceptance of lucidity, the highest-awareness. We don’t have to rely on random success with reality checks or hopes that we can learn to fall asleep consciously, while messing up our sleep cycles.
What do you think? I am having trouble understanding exactly how to implement such a lifestyle. I have been meditating for about a year, and it has helped me in so many ways, one of those being a more detailed awareness of my environment. I am planning on implementing a similar scheme while trying my hand at Lucid Living. I want to come to the point where I am constantly aware of my environment, giving me a greater chance of deciding when something is out of place enough to be dreaming. Using this, I can increase my internal knowledge of environmental oddities eventually leading to a seamless flow between waking and dreaming life.
Any thoughts, ideas, criticisms are appreciated. Thanks for listening!