Are you dreaming yet??? Are you dreaccing yet??? Are yiu dreaming yte???
Hiall, I just came across this site with a lucid dream pill called Lucidia Dreams, go google and you’ll find the link. I also found another belgian page with a similar pill with the exact same ingredients.
I’d like to ask you if anyone has tried it? Or just as importantly, if someone would want to try it and see how it works?
Unfortunately it’s not allowed to buy in my country, GRRR!
If you feel eager to express points of views on wether this works or not based on assumptions and opinons, then I beg of you to please restrain from posting. Thank you!
All other posts are highly welcome and appreciated!
I googled up the product, and its ingredients. Nothing in it is illegal here in Norway. The problem could be that it isn’t yet approved as health food?
I seriously doubt the working of these pills. (Or any other kind of mixture that should enhance LDing).
I think that mental preperation is a lot better in creating LD’s. I’ve been LD’ing for several years, but just yesterday I wrote a dream ‘to do’ list. Before going to sleep I fixated my thoughts on this list, resulting in a very nice LD.
Like in laberge’s book: expectectaion, concentration and awareness during the day are key to LD’s, not pills or garlic and vinegar.
There is another pill which i will not name or link to that contains an extract the FDA has approved to treat Alzheimers. It is made from the Red Spider Lily (Lycoris radiata) and also contains B6, B5, Melatonin and Choline (A required nutrient to the body’s production of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine).
I would like to hear any success stories NOT from the company’s website before ordering it since it is kind of pricey.
Well, if you search this forum for B-vitamins, Melatonin and Choline you will get many positive reports. In that sense it should be fairly safe to assume that this brilliant dreams product you speak of will produce interesting results.
Unfortunately I can’t order Melatonin and Choline products in my country so I have to look for alternative options, in this case such as the Lucidia Dream. Which is priced at $49.95 for three months of lucid dream nights!!
Someone pleaase want to try it out?
I’ve contacted the authorities about the ingredients, and if it’s ok I will get it and post the results for sure…
hmm, this sounds really interesting…has no one on this forum tried this?
edit: I checked out the website and it seems very professional. Perhaps a bit too shiny though, it doesn’t get into the nitty-gritty of how the product really works. I haven’t been able to find any other information on the internet. It would be really nice if someone on here would do a test on these (I don’t have the money).
Yeah I’m seeing what Enamored_Spirit says. The site talks about what it can do for you (lucid dreaming…enhancing dreams…etc), but after every paragraph it shouts out “ORDER LUCIDIA TODAY!!!”…lol. but really that isn’t my main concern…
This pill looks like every other sleep pill (Lunesta…all those). I just think they are saying that it also allows you to lucid dream because they want to make it seem better than all the other pills. It’s like those diet pills…lol. Everybody makes them now and everybody tries to make theirs look the best.
Even with all that in mind…I too would like to see some1 test this. Maybe we could all pitch in a dollar and have a member try it out.
I volunteer! (It’d have to be in euros or ££££s though, as opposed to dollars )
Actually, I think you’re probably better off taking 2 or 3 tablespoons of (soya~) lecithin granules a day, this breaks down into choline & then (helped by the action of various B vitamins, especially B5) produces Acetylcholine.
(Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter asscoiated with REM sleep, and with memory, I think?)
The active ingredient in Red Spider Lily (great name!)also acts to increase levels of A~choline, just less directly (by blocking the action of some other neuro agent which itself breaks down A~choline, or something similar).
If you take too much of the active ingredient Red Spider Lily contains, it can have side effects (sweating, neurological effects, etc - I was reading about this last night, I’ll try to find some links again later & edit this post).
The most ‘natural’ (and probably safest and least expensive) way of boosting A~choline levels would therefore seem to be taking lecithin (granules or capsules) in conjunction with B vitamins… ?
Answers.com doesn’t mention this, but Acetylcholine also has a crucial role in maintaining REM sleep, and therefore (by this) in facilitating dreaming (I read somewhere last night that higher levels of A~choline are associated wirh more prolonged & vivid dreams, can’t find the link now though )
Galantamine is a main ingredient in another dream pill I’ve come across too called dreamamins Lucid Dreamer. Which just again suggests that this should be something most likely to have a good effect on it’s purposed task.
It contacted the authorities over here about the ingredients I mentioned above and it is NOT allowed. That’s it, I’m moving!!
But untill then, are y’all so broke? I mean for the gain of at least better dream recall and vividness, this shouldn’t be a question. I’m surprized there haven’t been people trying this out before.
Well, I’ve looked into it a bit more, and I’m fairly convinced it’s a scam. The website lists the ingredients, along with a description of each. But the things is, most or all of the ingredients seem to deal with gastric or digestive types of functions, I don’t see anything even related to dreams, sleep cycle, or mental processess of any kind. A quick internet search yielded no positive results. I tried to contact their customer service, requesting more info on how the product actually works and its overall practical effectiveness, but when I attempted to submit the message, I got a 404 page not found. I tried several more times with no luck. Alll in all, it seems a bit too shady to me, despite its professional exterior (which can be faked with just a little effort nowadays. heck, the photos are probably just stock images). Oh well, should’ve known…
I believe that if someone truly believes the pill will give them a lucid dream, it will. It’s called the placebo affect. If you’re REALLY good at will power, you can over-ride your conscious thought processes and force yourself into a sort of placebo affect that will MAKE you believe it will work (both consciously and subconsciously), so it will. I do this to myself a lot. The way I see it is if you’re tricked into believing it will happen, it will. So why believe it won’t happen just because you’re tricking yourself? Make any sense to you? If it does, then you’ve just discovered my secret. Good job.
This is kind of random… but I just made a post saying you don’t need a magic pill to induce lucid dreams… then I saw this topic. Well, I thought it was funny anyway. Maybe I am just easilly amused.