(ebook version 1.0—please increment version number if you
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Thanks! The Toad)
Stephen LaBerge, Ph. D.and Howard Rheingold
BALLANTINE BOOKS •
Afterword:
The Adventure Continues
Appendix:
Supplementary Exercises
Notes
Index
1: The World of Lucid Dreaming
Your present state of consciousness
2: Preparation
for Learning Lucid Dreaming
Cataloging your dreamsigns
Goal setting for success
Scheduling time for lucid dreaming
Progressive relaxation
Sixty-one-point relaxation
3: Waking Up in the Dream World
Critical state-testing technique
Power of resolution technique
Intention technique
Reflection-intention technique
Prospective memory training
MILD technique
Autosuggestion technique
4: Falling Asleep Consciously
Power of visualization: White dot technique
Power of visualization: Black dot technique
Dream lotus and flame technique
Count yourself to sleep technique
The twin bodies technique
The one body technique
The no body technique
5: The
How schemas take us beyond the information given
6: Principles and Practice of Lucid
Dreaming
The spinning technique
The dream television
Lucid dream incubation
Spinning a new dream scene
Strike the set, change the channel
7: Adventures and Explorations
How to script your own adventure
You are the hero
8: Rehearsal for Living
Lucid dream workout
Playing to the dream audience
9: Creative Problem Solving
Lucid dream problem solving
Building a lucid dream workshop
10: Overcoming Nightmares
Conversing with dream characters
Redreaming recurrent nightmares
11: The Healing Dream
Seeking opportunities for integration
12: Life Is a Dream:
Intimations
of a Wider World
Seeking
the highest
Afterword:
The Adventure Continues
Appendix: Supplementary Exercises
Understanding the value of the will Strengthening your will Candle concentration
Visualization training
We cannot say how much we owe to our predecessors; without
the efforts of countless others, this work could not have been accomplished.
Thanks to them all, known and unknown.
We especially wish to thank all the people who wrote to us
about their experiences with lucid dreaming, especially those whose reports we
used. It would have been impossible to obtain permissions from everyone, so we
have used initials for attributions rather than full names.
Thanks also to Joanne Blokker, Charles Brandon, the Fetzer
Institute, Dr. Oscar Janiger, the Monteverde Foun-dation, and Jonathan Parker
of the Institute for Human De-velopment for financial and other support which
made this book possible. Drs. William Dement and Phil Zimbardo provided
professional encouragement. Our agent, John Brockman, earned his percentage
many times over. Laurie Cook, Dorothy LaBerge, Michael LaPointe, K. Romana
Machado, and Judith Rheingold all read drafts of the book and made valuable suggestions.
Cheryl Woodruff’s perspicacious editing did much to make the book more human
and intelligible.
Mushkil Gusha made the usual contribution. Finally, we
gratefully acknowledge that Lynne Levitan deserves to be a coauthor for all the
work she put into the book.
I realized I was dreaming. I raised my arms and began
to rise (actually, I was being lifted). I rose through black sky that blended
to indigo, to deep purple, to lavender, to white, then to very bright light.
All the time I was being lifted there was the most beautiful music I have ever
heard. It seemed like voices rather than instruments. There are no words to
describe the JOY I felt. I was very gently lowered back to earth. I had the
feeling that I had come to a turning point in my life and I had chosen the
right path. The dream, the joy I experienced, was kind of a reward, or so I
felt. It was a long, slow slide back to wakefulness with the music echoing in
my ears. The euphoria lasted several days; the memory, forever. (A. F.,
I was standing in a field in an open area when my wife
Pointed in the direction of the sunset. I looked at it and thought, “How odd;
I’ve never seen colors like that before.” Then it dawned on me: “I must be
dreaming!” Never had I experienced such clarity and perception— the colors were
so beautiful and the sense of freedom so exhilarating that I started racing
through this beautiful golden wheat field waving my hands in the air and
yelling at the top of my voice, “I’m dreaming! I’m dreaming!” Suddenly, I
started to lose the dream; it must have been the excitement, I instantly woke
up. As it dawned on me what had just happened, I woke my wife and said, “I did
it, I did it!” I was conscious within the dream state and I’ll never be the
same. Funny, isn’t it? How a taste of it can affect one like that. It’s the
freedom, I guess; we see that we truly are in control of our own universe. (D. W.,
Iam studying to become a professional musician (French
horn), and I wished to remove my fear of performing in front of people. On
several occasions I placed myself in a state of self-hypnosis/daydreaming by
relaxing my entire body and mind before going to sleep. Then I focused on my
desire to have a dream in which I was performing for a large audience by myself
but was not nervous or suffering from any anxiety. On the third night of this
experiment, I had a lucid dream in which I was performing a solo recital
without accompaniment at Orchestra Hall in
Strange, marvelous, and even impossible things regularly
happen in dreams, but people usually don’t realize that the explanation is that
they are dreaming. Usually doesn’t mean always and there is a highly
significant exception to this generalization. Sometimes, dreamers do correctly
realize the explanation for the bizarre happenings they are experiencing, and lucid
dreams, like those recounted above, are the result.
Empowered by the knowledge that the world they are
experiencing is a creation of their own imagination, lucid dreamers can
consciously influence the outcome of their dreams. They can create and
transform objects, people, situations, worlds, even themselves. By the
standards of the familiar world of physical and social reality, they can do the
impossible.
The world of lucid dreams provides a vaster stage than
ordinary life for almost anything imaginable, from the frivolous to the
sublime. You could, if you chose, revel at a saturnalian festival, soar to the
stars, or travel to mysterious lands. You could join those who are testing
lucid dreaming as a tool for problem solving, self-healing, and personal
growth. Or you could explore the implications of teachings from ancient
traditions and re-Ports from modern psychologists that suggest that lucid
dreams can help you find your deepest identity—who you really are.
Lucid dreaming has been known for centuries, but has until
recently remained a rare and little-understood phe-noinenon. My own scientific
and personal explorations, together with the findings of other dream
researchers around the world, have just begun to shed light on this unusual
state of consciousness. Recently, this new re-
search field has captured the attention of the population outside
the world of scientific dream research because studies have shown that given
proper training, people can learn to have lucid dreams.
But why are people interested in learning to be conscious
in their dreams? According to my own experience, and the testimony of thousands
of other lucid dreamers, lucid dreams can be extraordinarily vivid, intense,
pleasurable, and exhilarating. People frequently consider their lucid dreams
as among the most wonderful experiences of their lives.
If this were all there were to it, lucid dreams would be
delightful, but ultimately trivial entertainment. However, as many have already
discovered, you can use lucid dreaming to improve the quality of your waking
life. Thousands of people have written to me at Stanford telling how they
are using the knowledge and experience they have acquired in lucid dreams to
help them get more out of living.
Although the outlines of a practical art and science of
lucid dreaming are just beginning to emerge and the systematic use of lucid dreaming
as a tool for psychological self-exploration is still in its infancy, most
people can safely use the available knowledge about lucid dreaming to conduct
their own explorations. Probably the only people who should not experiment
with lucid dreaming are those who are unable to distinguish between waking
reality and constructions of their imagination. Learning lucid dreaming will
not cause you to lose touch with the difference between waking and dreaming. On
the contrary, lucid dreaming is for becoming more aware.
In Lucid Dreaming, I collected the available
knowledge on the subject from both ancient and modern sources.
Since that book’s publication, some ten thousand people have
written to me describing their experiences and discoveries, and requesting
more practical information about lucid dreaming. In response to those requests,
I decided to collaborate on a new book with Howard Rheingold. Howard has
written extensively on topics such as creativity, consciousness, and
dreamwork.
Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming is a
self-teaching curriculum, a step-by-step method for learning to have and use
lucid dreams. You can learn at your own pace, and to your own depth, how to explore
your lucid dreams and use them to enrich your life. You will read a rich
variety of examples of actual lucid dreams excerpted from letters to the
Stanford program, like the three quoted at the beginning of this chapter. While
the kind of “anecdotal evidence” offered by these nonprofessional dream
explorers cannot replace the carefully controlled experimentation that is
required for testing scientific theories, it does offer invaluable inspiration
for continued exploration of the world of lucid dreaming.
Since Lucid Dreaming, my research team has
continued its laboratory work at
This book strives to present, in a step-by-step manner,
everything you need to know in order to learn the skill of lucid dreaming. All
the many techniques and exercises presented work for some people, but how
effective each exercise will be for you depends on your individual psychology
and physiology. Experiment with the exercises, test them for yourself, and see
what works best for you.
The basic structure of the book is as follows: You will be
guided through preparations for learning to have lucid dreams, provided with
plainly spelled out techniques for learning lucid dreaming, and then shown how
lucid dreaming can be applied to your life. If you practice diligently, the
lucid dream induction techniques should significantly increase your frequency
of lucid dreaming. Chapter 5 presents the relevant scientific background and
theory to help you understand the basis for the applications. The remaining
chapters are devoted to describing how you can use lucid dreaming to enhance
your life, both waking and sleeping. Examples selected from our compendium of
lucid dreams illustrate what others have achieved, to model for you some of the
potentials of lucid dreaming.
As far as we know, this is the first time that detailed
instructions on lucid dreaming have been widely available to the general
public. However, you are not likely to learn lucid dreaming by quickly skimming
through this book. Like most anything else worth learning, lucid dreaming
requires effort. Motivation is an essential pre requisite; you have to really
want to do it and make suf-ficient time to practice. If you persevere with the
exercises and procedures, we are confident that you will increase your
proficiency at lucid dreaming.
This chapter reviews reasons for learning to become lucid
in your dreams and describes the contents of this book.
Chapter 2: “Preparation for Learning Lucid Dreaming” provides necessary background information on sleep and helps you overcome any reservations you might have about lucid dreaming that could inhibit your progress. Next, it helps you get acquainted with your dreams. You will learn how to begin a dream journal and how to increase your dream recall. You should be able to recall at least one dream per night before attempting lucid dream induction techniques. When you have a dream journal with several entries, you will be ready to build a catalog of dreamsigns. These are the characteristic features of dreams that you can use as signposts to lucidity.
Chapter 3: “Waking Up in the Dream World” discusses techniques for realizing you are dreaming from within the dream. The two major techniques presented are the reflection-intention technique, which is based on the practice of questioning whether you are awake or dreaming, and MILD, the technique I used to learn to lucid dreams at will. MILD trains you to remember to notice when you are dreaming.
Chapter 4: “Falling Asleep Consciously” describes
techniques for entering the lucid dream state directly from the waking state.
Chapter 5: “The
Chapter 6: “Principles and Practice of Lucid Dreaming” shows you how to gain control over the dream: how to remain in a lucid dream, how to awaken when you wish and how to manipulate and observe the dream world. In addition to explaining methods of exercisingpower over the dream, we discuss the benefits inherent in taking an open, flexible, and noncommanding role in lucid dreams.
Chapter 7: “Adventures and Explorations” shows how you can
use lucid dreaming for wish fulfillment and the satisfaction of your desires.
Examples and suggestions are provided to help you explore new worlds or enact
exciting adventures in your dreams, and show how you can tie your dream
adventures into your personal self-development.
Chapter 8: “Rehearsal for Living” explains how lucid
dreaming can be a practical tool for preparing for your waking life. Lucid
dreaming can be used as a “flight simulator” for life, a way in which you can
test new ways of living, as well as particular skills. Practice in the dream
state can contribute to enhanced experience, improved performance, and deepened
understanding in waking life.
Chapter 9: “Creative Problem Solving” discusses lucid
dreaming as a fruitful source of creativity for art, science, business, and
personal life. Diverse examples show how people have used lucid dreaming to
find a name for a soon-to-be-born child, to repair cars, and to understand
abstract mathematical concepts.
Chapter 10: “Overcoming Nightmares” helps you use lucid
dreaming to face and overcome fears and inhibitions that may be preventing you
from getting the most out of your life. Lucid dreamers can overcome nightmares,
and in so doing learn how to make the best of the worst situations imaginable.
Chapter 11: “The Healing Dream” shows how lucid dreamers
can achieve more integrated, healthier personalities. Lucid dreams can help
those who have unresolved conflicts from past or present relationships, or with
deceased friends or family members. Also, in lucid dreams, we can learn mental
flexibility. Because nothing can harm us in dreams, we can try to solve our
problems in unusual or unheard of ways. This helps us to increase our
repertoire of possible behaviors in the waking world, thereby decreasing the
probability of getting stuck in situations we don’t know how to cope with.
Chapter 12: “Life Is a Dream: Intimations of a Wider
World” takes a step beyond the application of lucid dreaming to your everyday
life, and shows how lucid dreams can be used to attain a more complete understanding
of yourself and your relation to the world. In the dream you are who you “dream
yourself to be”, and understanding this can help you see to what extent your
waking self is limited by your own conceptions of who you are. Examples of
transcendental experiences in lucid dreams will show you a direction that you
might wish to explore in your own inner worlds.
The book ends with an afterword (“The Adventure
Continues”) inviting you to join the Lucidity Institute, a membership society
devoted to advancing knowledge on the nature and potentials of lucid dreaming.
Before we get into the specifics of how to have lucid
dreams, let’s take a closer look at the reasons for learning to awaken in your
dreams. Do the potential benefits jus-fy the time and effort required for
mastering lucid dreaming? We think so, but read on and decide for yourself.
Proverbially, and undeniably, life is short. To make matters worse, we must spend between a quarter and half of our lives asleep. Most of us are in the habit of virtually sleepwalking through our dreams. We sleep, mindlessly, through many thousands of opportunities to be fully aware and alive.
Is sleeping through your dreams the best use of your
limited lifespan? Not only are you wasting part of your finite store of time to
be alive, but you are missing adventures and lessons that could enrich the rest
of your life. By awakening to your dreams, you will add to your experience of
life and, if you use these added hours of lucidity to experiment and exercise
your mind, you can also improve your enjoyment of your waking hours.
“Dreams are a reservoir of knowledge and experience, “
writes Tibetan Buddhist Tarthang Tulku, “yet they are often overlooked as a
vehicle for exploring reality. In the dream state our bodies are at rest, yet
we see and hear, move about, and are even able to learn. When we make good use
of the dream state, it is almost as if our lives were doubled: instead of a
hundred years, we live two hundred.”2
We can carry not only knowledge but also moods from the
lucid dream state to the waking state. When we awaken laughing with delight
from a wonderful lucid dream, it isn’t surprising that our waking mood has been
brightened with feelings of joy. A young woman’s first lucid dream, which she
had after reading an article about lucid dreaming, provides a vivid example.
Upon realizing she was dreaming, she “tried to remember the advice in the
article, “ but the only thing that came to mind was a notion of her own:
“ultimate experience.” She felt herself taken over by a “blissful sensation of
blending and melting with colors and light” that continued, “opening up into a
total ‘orgasm ‘ “Afterward, she “gently floated into waking consciousness” and
was left with “a feeling of bubbling joy” that persisted for a week or more. 3
This carryover of positive feeling into the waking state
is an important aspect of lucid dreaming. Dreams, remembered or not, often
color our mood upon awakening, sometimes for a good part of a day. Just as the
negative aftereffect of “bad” dreams can cause you to feel as if you got up on
the wrong side of the bed, the positive feelings of a pleasant dream can give
you an emotional uplift, helping you to start the day with confidence and
energy. This is all the more true of inspirational lucid dreams.
Perhaps you are still thinking, “My dream life is interesting
enough as it is. Why should I make an effort to enhance my awareness of it?” If
so, consider the traditional mystical teaching that holds that most of
humanity is asleep. When Idries Shah, the preeminent Sufi teacher, was asked to
name “a fundamental mistake of man’s, “ he replied, “To think that he is alive,
when he has merely fallen asleep in life’s waiting room.”4
Lucid dreaming can help us understand Shah’s words. Once
you have had the experience of realizing that you are dreaming and that your
possibilities are far greater than you had thought, you can imagine what a
similar realization would be like in your waking life. As Thoreau put it, “Our
truest life is when we are in dreams awake.”
If you haven’t yet had a lucid dream, you may find it
difficult to imagine what it is like. Although you have to experience it to
really know what it is like (“’Those who taste, know”), it is possible to get
an idea of the experience by comparing lucid dreaming to a presumably more
familiar state of consciousness: the one you are in right now! The following
experiential exercise will guide you through a tour of your everyday waking
state of con-ciousness. Spend about one minute on each of the steps.
Become aware of what you see: notice the richly varied and
vivid impressions—shapes, colors, movement, dimensionality, the entire visible
world.
Become aware of what you hear: register the various sounds
taken in by your ears—a diverse range of intensities, pitches, and tonal qualities,
perhaps including the commonplace miracle of speech or the wonder of music.
Become aware of what you touch: texture (smooth, rough,
dry, sticky, or wet), weight (heavy, light, solid, or empty), pleasure, pain,
heat and cold, and the rest. Also note how your body feels right now and
compare that to the many other ways it feels at other times, tired or
energetic, stiff or limber, painful or pleasant, and so on.
Become aware of what it is like to taste: taste a number
of different foods and substances, or remember and vividly imagine their
tastes.
Become aware of what you smell: the odor of warm bodies,
earth, incense, smoke, perfume, coffee, onions, alcohol, and the sea. Remember
and imagine as many of them as you can.
Attend to your breathing. A moment ago you probably were
not consciously aware of your breathing even though you have inhaled and
exhaled fifty times while doing this exercise. Hold your breath for a few
seconds. Let it out. Now take a deep breath. Notice that being conscious of
your breathing allows you to alter it deliberately.
Become aware of your feelings. Remember the difference
between anger and joy, serenity and excitement, and as many other emotions as
you care to feel. How real do emotions feel?
Become aware of your thoughts. What have you been thinking
while doing this exercise? What are you thinking right now? How real do
thoughts seem?
Become aware of the fact that your world always includes you.
As William James noted, it is / see, / hear, / feel, I think that is
the basic fact of experience. 5 You are not what you see, hear,
think, or feel; you have these experiences. Perhaps most essentially,
you are who is aware. You are always at the center of your multidimensional
universe of experience, but you are not always consciously aware of yourself.
Briefly repeat the exercise with the following difference: At the same time you
attend to each of the various aspects of your experience, be aware that it is you
who is noticing these things (“I see the light...”).
Finally, become aware of your awareness. Normally,
awareness focuses on objects outside ourselves, but it can itself be an object
of awareness. In the light of ordinary experience, we seem to be distinct and
limited centers of awareness, each alone in our inner worlds. In the light of
eternity, mystics tell us, we are ultimately all one—the unlimited awareness
that is the source of being. Here, experience cannot be adequately expressed by
language.
How does your renewed appreciation of the richness of your
ordinary waking state of consciousness relate to the experience of lucid
dreaming? Much of what you just observed about your present experiential world
applies as well to the dream world. If you were dreaming, you would experience
a multisensory world as rich as the world you are experiencing right now. You
would see, hear, feel, taste, think, and be, just as you are now.
The crucial difference is that the multisensory world you
experience while dreaming originates internally rather than externally. While
awake, most of what you perceive corresponds to actually existing people,
objects, and events in the external world. Because the objects of waking
perception actually exist independently of your mind, they remain relatively
stable. For example, you can look at this sentence, shut the book for a moment,
and reopen to the same page, and you will see the same sentence.
But, as you will see in chapter 3, the same is not true
for dreaming. Because there is no stable external source of stimulation from
which to build your experiential world, dreams are much more changeable than
the physical world.
If you were in a lucid dream, your experience of the world
would be even more different from waking life. First of all, you would know it
was all a dream. Because of this, the world around you would tend to rearrange
and transform even more than is usual in dreams.”Impossible” things could
happen, and the dream scene it-self, rather than disappearing once you know it
to be “unreal, “ might increase in clarity and brilliance until you found
yourself dumbfounded with wonder.
If fully lucid, you would realize that the entire dream
world was your own creation, and with this awareness might come an exhilarating
feeling of freedom. Nothing external, no laws of society or physics, would
constrain your experience; you could do anything your mind could conceive. Thus
inspired, you might fly to the heavens. You might dare to face someone or
something that you have been avoiding; you might choose an erotic encounter
with the most desirable partner you can imagine; you might visit a deceased
loved one to whom you have been wanting to speak; you might seek self-knowledge
and wisdom.
By cultivating awareness in your dreams, and learning to
use them, you can add more consciousness, more life, to your life. In the
process, you will increase your enjoyment of your nightly dream journeys and
deepen your understanding of yourself. By waking in your dreams, you can waken
to life.
Many people experience lucid dreams after reading or
hearing about lucid dreaming for the first time. This may be akin to beginner’s
luck: they heard it could be done, and so they did it. As a result of indulging
your curiosity about lucid dreaming by buying this book, you may already have
had a lucid dream or two, but you probably have not learned how to have lucid
dreams whenever you want. This chapter will provide you with background
knowledge and skills that you will need for practicing the lucid dreaming
techniques in the following chapters.
Before you set out to explore the world of lucid dreaming,
you need to know some basic facts about your brain and body in sleep. Then, it
may help you to know about the origins of common “mental blocks” that prevent
people from committing themselves to the task of becoming aware in their
dreams.
Your lucid dream training will start with keeping a dream journal and improving your dream recall. Your preparation for Learning Lucid Dreaming journal will help you discover what your dreams are like. The next step will be to use your collection of dreams to find peculiarities (dreamsigns) that appear often enough in your dreams to be reliable signposts of the dream state. Your list of dreamsigns will help you succeed with the lucid dream induction techniques presented in chapters 3 and 4.
When you are familiar with your ordinary dreams, and have
learned how to become more or less lucid at will, you will be ready to try out
some of the applications described in the later chapters of this book. But
first, it is important that you focus your mind on learning the preliminary skills
and background information required for becoming a lucid dreamer. You cannot
write poetry until you learn the alphabet.
People are mystified
by the need for sleep. Why do we turn ourselves off for eight hours out of twenty-four? Some likely answers are to restore the body
and mind, and to keep us out of trouble during the dark hours. But to call
sleep a mystery begs an even larger question: What does it mean to be awake? A
basic definition of being awake is to be aware. Aware of what? When we
speak of sleep and wakefulness, we are referring to awareness the outside
world. Yet, while asleep and unaware for the most part of the outside world,
one can still be aware (and thus “awake”) in a world within the mind. There are
degrees of wakefulness. Lucid dreamers are more aware of their real
situation—they know they are dreaming thus we can say they are “awake in their
dreams.”Exponents of traditional methods for achieving higher consciousness
speak of “awakening, “ meaning increasing one’s awareness of one’s place in the
cosmos.
But how does anyone or
anything come to be “aware”?
Awareness in biological organisms is a function of the
brain. The sensory organs detect information (light, sound, heat, texture,
odor) in the world and transmit it to the brain. The brain interprets the
information and synthesizes it into a conception of what is happening in the
outside world.
The brains with which we experience our worlds, whether
dreaming or awake, are the product of biological evolution. During the past
thousands of millions of years, living organisms have competed in Mother
Nature’s life-and-death game of “Eat or Be Eaten: Survival of the Fittest.” The
simplest one-celled organisms don’t know until they bump into something whether
it is predator or prey. If it is food, they engulf it. If it is a predator,
they are eaten. This is obviously a dangerously ignorant way to try to stay
alive.
Since knowing what is going on around you obviously has
enormous survival value, creatures gradually evolved sense organs that allowed
them to predict whether they should approach or avoid something in their
environment without having to bump into it. Over billions of generations,
organisms developed increasingly sophisticated nervous systems and correspondingly
reliable and precise capacities for perceiving the environment and controlling
their actions.
Our brain maintains an up-to-date model of what’s going
on in the world and predicts what may happen in the future. Prediction requires
using previously acquired information to go beyond the information currently
available. If you are a frog and a small dark object flies by, information
built into your frog brain through evolution allows it to predict that the
object is edible and—zip! you have eaten a fly. Or if a large shadow suddenly
falls on your lily pad, information (also acquired through evolution) allows
your frog brain to predict danger, and—plop’ Frogs do not see the same world we
do—the complex patterns of color, light, shade, and movement that w can
identify as trees, flowers, birds, or ripples in water. The frog’s world is
probably composed of simple elements like “small flying object” (food), “large
approaching object” (danger), “pleasant warmth” (sunlight), or “attractive
sound” (frog of the other sex). Although the human brain is far more complex
than that of the frog, it works on the same basic principles. Your brain
accomplishes its world-modeling task so well that you ordinarily aren’t aware
that it is modeling anything. You look with your eyes, and you see. The experience
of visual perception seems as straightforward as looking out a window and
simply seeing what is there. Nonetheless, seeing, hearing, feeling, or
perceiving through any other sense is a process of mental modeling, a
simulation of reality. The contents of your consciousness, that is, your
current experiences, are constructed and depend on your present
purposes, what you are doing and what relevant information is currently
available.
If you are awake and engaged in some kind of activity
(walking, reading, etc. ), your brain is actively processing external sensory
input from the environment, which, together with your memory, provides the raw
material from which you construct a model of the world. While awake and active,
the model accurately reflects your relationship to the external world.
If you are awake but physically inactive, the balance of
input moves from the external to the internal. To a certain extent your
thinking becomes independent of external stimuli, your mind wanders, you
daydream. With part of your mind you are modeling worlds that might be rather
than the current actual environment. Still, you tend to maintain a reduced
model of the external world and your attention can easily be drawn back to it,
if, for some sign of danger appears.
In the case of sleep, so little sensory input is available
from the outside world that you stop maintaining a conscious model of it. When
your sleeping brain is activated enough to construct a world model in your
consciousness, the model is mostly independent from what is happening in your
environment—in other words, a dream. The sleeping brain isn’t always creating a
multidimensional world model. Sometimes it seems to be merely thinking, or
doing very little. The differences in mental activity during sleep depend
largely upon differences in the state of the sleeper’s brain.
Sleep is not a uniform state of passive withdrawal from
the world, as scientists thought until the twentieth century. There are two
distinct kinds of sleep: a quiet phase and an active phase, which are
distinguished by many differences in biochemistry, physiology, psychology, and
behavior. Changes in brain waves (electrical activity measured at the scalp),
eye movements, and muscle tone are used to define the two states. The quiet
phase fits fairly well with the commonsense view of sleep as a state of restful
inactivity—your mind does little while you breathe slowly and deeply; your
metabolic rate is at a minimum, and growth hormones are released facilitating
restorative processes. When awakened from this state, people feel disoriented
and rarely remember dreaming. You can observe this state in your cat or dog,
when it is quietly sleeping in a moderately relaxed posture (in the case of
cats, the “sphinx” posture) and breathing slowly and regularly. Incidentally,
this is the phase of sleep in which sleeptalking and sleepwalking occur.
The transition from quiet to active sleep is quite
dramatic. During the active sleep phase, commonly called rapid eye movement or
REM sleep, your eyes move rapidly about (under closed lids, of course), much as
they would if you were awake. Your breathing becomes quick and irregular, your
brain burns as much fuel as it does when you’re awake, and you dream vividly.
If you’re male, you probably will have an erection; if you’re female, increased
vaginal blood flow. While all this activity is happening in your brain, your
body remains almost completely still (except for small twitches), because it is
temporarily paralyzed during REM sleep to prevent you from acting out your
dreams.
The “sleep paralysis” of REM sleep doesn’t always turn off
immediately upon awakening; this is why you may have experienced waking up and
not being able to move for a minute. Sleep paralysis can seem a terrifying
experience, but actually it is quite harmless, and indeed, can even be useful
for inducing lucid dreams (see chapter 4). You can get a good view of
“paradoxical sleep, “ as REM sleep is called in Europe, when you see your cat
or dog sleeping totally collapsed, breathing irregularly, twitching, showing
eye movements, and in the case of dogs, tail wagging, whimpering, growling, and
barking. This is when people justifiably say, “Look, Spotto is dreaming!”
Quiet sleep is itself divided into three substages. Stage
1 is a transitional state between drowsy wakefulness and light sleep,
characterized by slow drifting eye movements and vivid, brief dreamlets called
hypnagogic from Greek, meaning “leading into sleep”) imagery. Normally, you
quickly pass through Stage 1 into Stage 2 which is bona fide sleep and is
characterized by unique brain wave patterns called “sleep spindles” and
K-complexes.” Mental activity at this point is sparse, mundane, and thoughtlike. Typically after twenty to thirty minutes, you
sink deeper into “delta sleep, “ so named after the regular large, slow brain
waves that characterize this stage of quiet sleep. Very little dream content is
reported from delta sleep. Interestingly, this state of deep and dreamless
sleep is highly regarded in some Eastern mystical traditions as the state in
which we establish contact with our innermost consciousness. According to Swami
Rama “It is when the inner world can be suffused with the full light of the
highest universal consciousness. The ego state of waking consciousness drops
away. Moreover, the personal aspects of the unknown mind are temporarily
abandoned. The memories, the problems, the troubled dream images are left
behind. All the limitations of the personal unconscious are drowned out in the
full light of the highest consciousness.”1
After gradually entering the deepest stage of delta sleep
and lingering there for thirty or forty minutes, you come back up to Stage 2.
Approximately seventy to ninety minutes after sleep onset, you enter REM sleep
for the first time of the night. After five or ten minutes of REM, and possibly
following a brief awakening in which you would likely remember a dream, you
sink back into Stage 2 and possibly delta, coming up again for another REM
period approximately every ninety minutes, and so on through the night.
While learning and practicing lucid dreaming, you should
keep in mind two elaborations on this cycle: (1) the length of the REM periods
increase as the night proceeds and (2) the intervals between REM periods decrease
with time of night, from ninety minutes at the beginning of the night to
perhaps only twenty to thirty minutes eight hours later. Finally, after five or
six periods of dreaming sleep you wake up for perhaps the tenth or fifteenth
time of the night (we awaken this many times on an average night, but we
promptly forget it happened, just as you may forget a conversation with someone
who calls you in the middle of the night).
Having completed your tour of a night’s journey through
sleep, you may wonder in which stage of sleep lucid dreaming occurs. How we
found the answer to this question is a story that deserves retelling.
What if you slept, and what if in your sleep you dreamed,
and what if in your dream you went to heaven and there you plucked a strange
and beautiful flower, and what if when you awoke you had the flower in your
hand? Ah, what then? (Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
Throughout history, poets, philosophers, and other
dreamers have been challenged by the fantastic idea of bringing something back
from the dream world—something as substantial and real as Coleridge’s
flower—something to prove that the dream was as real as this life.
In the late 1970s, when I began my Ph. D. study on lucid
dreams at Stanford, I found myself challenged by a seemingly even more hopeless
task: proving that lucid dreaming is real. The experts at the time were
convinced that dreaming with consciousness that you were dreaming was a
contradiction in terms and therefore impossible. Such philosophical reasoning
could not convince me, since I had experienced lucid dreams—impossible or not.
I had no doubt that lucid dreaming was a reality, but how
could I prove it to anyone else? To do so I needed to bring back evidence from
the dream world as proof that I had really known I was dreaming during sleep.
Simply reporting I had been lucid in a dream after awakening wouldn’t prove
that the lucidity had occurred while I was actually asleep. I needed some way
to mark the time of the lucid dream on a record showing that I had been asleep.
I knew that earlier studies had demonstrated that the
direction of dreamers’ physical eye movements during REM was sometimes exactly
the same as the direction that they reported looking in their dreams. In one remarkable
example reported by pioneer sleep and dream researcher Dr. William Dement, a
dreamer was awakened from REM sleep after making a series of about two dozen
regular left-right-left-right eye movements. He reported that he was dreaming
about a table tennis game-just before awakening he had been watching a long
volley with his dream gaze.
I also knew from my own experience that I could look in
any direction I wished while in a lucid dream, so it occurred to me that I
ought to be able to signal while I was having a lucid dream by moving my eyes
in a prearranged, recognizable pattern. To test this idea, I spent the night
at the Stanford Sleep Laboratory. I wore electrodes that measured my brain
waves, eye movements, and muscle tone, which my colleague Dr. Lynn Nagel
monitored on a polygraph while I slept.
During the night I had a lucid dream in which I moved my
eyes left-right-left-right. The next morning, when we looked through the
polygraph record, we found the eye movement signals in the middle of a REM
period. At this writing, dozens of other lucid dreamers have also successfully
signaled from lucid dreams, and these dreams have occurred almost exclusively
during REM sleep.
This method of communication from the dream world has
proven to be of inestimable value in the continued study of lucid dreams and
dream physiology. The fact that lucid dreamers could remember to perform previously
agreed upon actions in their dreams and that they could signal to the waking
world made an entirely new approach to dream research possible.
By using trained lucid dreamers, we were able to develop
the eye movement signaling technique into a powerful methodology. We have found
that oneironauts can carry out all kinds of experimental tasks, functioning
both as subjects and experimenters in the dream state The oneironautical
approach to dream research is illustrated by a series of studies conducted at
the Stanford Sleep Research Center that have begun to map out mind body
relationships during dreaming.
Mind/brain/body relationships during dreaming One of the
earliest experiments conducted by my research team tested the traditional
notion that the experience of dream time is somehow different from time in the
waking world. We approached the problem of dream time by asking subjects to
make an eye movement signal in their lucid dreams, estimate a ten-second
interval (by counting one thousand and one, one thousand and two, etc. ), and
then make another eye movement signal. In all cases, we found time estimates
made in lucid dreams were within a few seconds of estimates made in the waking
state and likewise quite close to the actual time between signals. From this
we have concluded that in lucid dreams, estimated dream time is very nearly
equal to clock time; that is, it takes just as long to do something in a dream
as it does to actually do it.
You may be wondering, then, how you could have a dream
that seems to last for years or lifetimes. I believe this effect is achieved in
dreams by the same stage trick that causes the illusion of the passage of time
in the movies or theater. If, on screen, stage, or dream, we see someone
turning out the light as the clock strikes midnight, and after a few moments
of darkness, we see him turning off an alarm as the bright morning sun shines
through the window, we’ll accept (pretend, without being aware that we are
pretending) that many hours have Passed even though we “know” it was only a few
seconds.
The method of having lucid dreamers signal from the dream
world by means of eye movements has demonstrated a strong relationship between
the gazes of dreamers in the dream and their actual eye movements under closed
lids. Researchers interested in this question, but not using lucid dreamers to
study it, have had to rely on chance occurrence of highly recognizable eye
move-
ment patterns readily matchable to subjects’ reported
dream activities. As a result, they usually have obtained only weak
correspondences between dreamed and actual eye movements. The implication of
the strong tie between the movements of the dream eyes and the movements of
the actual eyes is that we use the same visual system to look around in the
dream world as we do to see the waking world.
One of the most dramatic demonstrations of the correspondence
between physiology and dream activity came from studies of lucid dream sex. In
1983 we undertook a pilot study to determine the extent to which subjectively
experienced sexual activity during REM lucid dreaming would be reflected in
physiological responses.
Since women report more orgasms in dreams than men do, we
began with a female subject. We recorded many different aspects of her physiology
that would normally be affected by sexual arousal, including respiration, heart
rate, vaginal muscle tone, and vaginal pulse amplitude. The experiment called
for her to make specific eye movement signals at the following points: when
she realized she was dreaming, when she began sexual activity (in the dream),
and when she experienced orgasm.
She reported a lucid dream in which she carried out the
experimental task exactly as agreed upon. Our analysis revealed significant
correspondences between the dream activities she reported and all but one of
the physiological measures. During the fifteen-second section of her
physiological record which she signaled as the moment of orgasm, her vaginal
muscle activity, vaginal pulse amplitude, and respiration rate reached their
highest values of the night, and they also were considerably elevated in
comparison to the rest of the REM period. Contrary to expectation, heart rate
increased only slightly.
Since then, we have carried out similar experiments with
two male lucid dreamers. In both cases, respiration
howed striking increases in rate. Again, there were no significant
elevations of the heart rate. Interestingly, although both oneironauts
reported vividly realistic orgasms in their lucid dreams, neither actually
ejaculated, in contrast to the “wet dreams” commonly experienced by adolescent
males, which frequently are not associated with erotic dreams.
The experiments just reviewed supported the conclusion
that the events you experience while asleep and dreaming produce effects on
your brain (and, to a lesser extent, your body) much the same as if you were to
experience the corresponding events while awake. Additional studies uphold this
conclusion. When lucid dreamers hold their breaths or breathe fast in a dream,
they really do hold their breaths or pant. Furthermore, the differences in
brain activity caused by singing versus counting in the waking state (singing
tends to engage the right hemisphere and counting, the left) are nearly
duplicated in the lucid dream. In short, to our brains, dreaming of doing
something is equivalent to actually doing it. This finding explains why dreams
seem so real. To the brain, they are real.
We are continuing to study the connection between dreamed
actions and physiology, with the goal of producing a detailed map of mind/body
interactions during dreaming sleep for all measurable physiological systems.
Such a map could prove to be of great value for experimental dream psychology
and for psychosomatic medicine. Indeed, since dream activities produce real
Physiological effects, lucid dreaming may be useful for Militating the
functioning of the immune system (more on this in chapter 11). In any case, the
physiological effects caused by dreaming show that we cannot dismiss dreams as
idle children of the imagination. Although the tendency of our culture has been
to ignore dreams, dream experiences are as real to us as waking life. If we
seek to improve our lives, we would do well to include our dream lives in our
efforts.
I have received numerous letters from people with an
interest in lucid dreaming who feel restricted because, as one writer put it, “I
can’t talk to anyone about this; they all think I’m nuts and look at me oddly
if I even try to explain what I do in my dreams.” Our culture offers little
social support to those interested in exploring mental states. This resistance
probably has its roots in the behaviorist perspective in psychology, which
treated all animals, including humans, as “black boxes” whose actions were
entirely dependent on external inputs. The contents of the “mind” of an animal
were considered unmeasurable and hence out of the bounds of scientific study.
Since the late 1960s, however, science has once again
begun to explore the realm of conscious experience. The study of lucid dreaming
is an example. However, cultural understanding normally lags behind scientific
understanding.
To help you realize that lucid dreams can have a
significant and valuable effect on your life, this book includes many personal
accounts from lucid dreamers. If you happen to live in a place where you feel
you cannot share your dream life, these examples should give you some feeling
of connection with others who are exploring their dreams. In addition, in the
afterword you will find an invitation to share your experiences with us.
Q. Might lucid dreaming be dangerous for some people?
A. The
overwhelming majority of lucid dreams are positive, rewarding experiences,
much more so than ordinary dreams (to say nothing of nightmares).
Nevertheless, there probably will be some people who find the experience of
lucid dreaming frightening and, in some cases, extremely disturbing. For this
reason we cannot recommend lucid dreaming to everyone. On the other hand, we
are confident that for people no more than “normally neurotic, “ lucid dreaming
is completely harmless. Different people will use lucid dreaming for different
purposes; it makes little sense to warn the typical explorer of the dream
world away from lucid dreaming because some might use it in a less than optimal
manner. If, after reading the first six chapters of this book, you 11 have
serious reservations about lucid dreaming, then we recommend that you not
continue.”To thine own self be true.“ Just make sure that it is really your self
to which you are being true. Don’t allow others to impose their personal fears
on you.
Q. I am afraid that if I learn to induce lucid dreams,
all my dreams will become lucid. Then what will I do?
A. The philosopher
P. D. Ouspensky experienced conflicting emotions regarding “half-dream states,
“ as he called lucid dreams: “The first sensation they produced was one of
astonishment. I expected to find one thing and found another. The next was a
feeling of extraordinary joy which the ‘half-dream states, ‘ and the possibility
of seeing and understanding things in quite a new way, gave me. And the third
was a certain fear of them, because I very soon noticed that if I let them take
their own course they would begin to grow and expand and encroach both upon
sleep and upon the waking state.”2
I experienced exactly the same fear when I first began
attempting to induce lucid dreams. My efforts were soon met with impressive
success; after a few months, I was having more and more lucid dreams at what
suddenly seemed an alarmingly rapid rate of increase. I became afraid that I
wouldn’t be able to control the process: “What if all my dreams become
lucid? I’m not wise enough to consciously direct all of my dreams. What if I
make mistakes?” And so on.
However, I found that the moment I entertained this
worrisome line of thinking, I stopped having lucid dreams. Upon calm
reflection, I realized that without my consent there was really very little
chance that all my dreams would become lucid. As both Ouspensky and I had
forgotten, lucid dreaming takes effort. Lucid dreams occur only rarely unless
you go to sleep with the deliberate and definite intention to become
conscious, or lucid, in your dreams. Thus, I understood that I would be able
to regulate (and limit, if necessary) the frequency of my lucid dreams. In
fact, after a decade of experience with more than a thousand lucid dreams, I
rarely have more than a few per month unless I have a conscious desire to have
more.
Q. Since I believe that dreams are messages from the
unconscious mind, I am afraid that consciously controlling my dreams would
interfere with this important process and deprive me of the benefits of dream
interpretation.
A. As chapter 5 will explain, dreams are not
letters from the unconscious mind, but experiences created through the
interactions of the unconscious and conscious mind. In dreams, more unconscious
knowledge is available to our conscious experience. However, the dream is not
at all the exclusive realm of the unconscious mind. If it were, people would
never remember their dreams, because we do not have waking access to what is
not conscious.
The person, or dream ego, that we experience being in the
dream is the same as our waking consciousness. It constantly influences the
events of the dream through its expectations and biases, just as it does in
waking life. The essential difference in the lucid dream is that the ego is
aware that the experience is a dream. This allows the ego much more freedom of
choice and creative responsibility to find the best way to act in the dream.
I don’t think that you should always be conscious that you
are dreaming any more than I think that you should always be conscious of what
you are doing in waking life. Sometimes self-consciousness can interfere with
effective performance; if you are in a situation (dream or waking) in which
your habits are working smoothly, you don’t need to direct your action
consciously. However, if your habits are taking you in the wrong direction
(whether dreaming or waking), you should be able to “wake up” to what you are
doing wrong and consciously redirect your approach.
As for the benefits of dream interpretation, lucid dreams
can be examined as fruitfully as nonlucid ones. Indeed, lucid dreamers
sometimes interpret their dreams while they are happening. Becoming lucid is
likely to alter what would have otherwise happened, but the dream can still be
interpreted.
Q. Sometimes in lucid dreams I encounter situations of otherworldliness, accompanied by feelings of the preence of great power or energy. At these times my consciousness expands far beyond anything I have experienced in waking life, so that the experience seems much more real than the reality I know, and I become terrified. I cannot continue these dreams for fear that I will never awaken from them, since the experience seems so far out of the realm of waking existence. What would happen if I was unable to awaken myself from these lucid dreams? Would I die or go mad?
A. Despite the
seemingly horrific nature of this concern, it amounts to little more than fear
of the unknown. There is no evidence that anything you do in a dream could
affect your basic brain physiology in a way that is harmful. And, as intense
as a dream may be, it can’t last any longer than the natural course of REM
periods—at most an hour or so. Of course, since explorations of the world of
dreams have really just begun, there are bound to be regions as yet uncharted.
But you should not fear to pioneer them. The feeling of intense anxiety that
accompanies the sudden onset of strange experiences in dreams is a natural
part of the orientation response: it is adaptive in the waking world for a
creature in a new situation or territory to look first for danger. However, the
fear is not necessarily relevant to what is happening. You need not fear
physical harm in your dreams. When you find yourself in the midst of a new
experience, let go of your fear and just see what happens. (Chapter 10 covers
the theory and practice of facing fears in dreams. )
Q. They say that if you die in your dream, you really
will die. Is this true?
A. If it were true, how would anybody know? There
is direct evidence to the contrary: many people have died in their dreams with
no ill effects, according to the reports they gave after waking up—alive.
Moreover, dreams of death can become dreams of rebirth if you let them, as is
illustrated by one of my own dreams. After a mysterious weakness quickly spread
through my whole body, I realized I was about to die of exhaustion and only had
time for one final action. Without hesitation, I decided that I wanted my last
act to be an expression of perfect acceptance. As I let out my last breath in
that spirit, a rainbow flowed out of my heart, and I awoke ecstatic. 3
Q. If I use my
lucidity in a dream to manipulate and dominate the other dream characters, and
magically alter the dream environment, won’t I be making a habit of behavior
that is not likely to benefit me in waking life ?
A. Chapter 6 discusses an approach to lucid dreams that
will help you establish ways of behaving that will be useful to you in waking
life. This is to control your own actions and reactions in the dream, and not
the other characters and elements of the dream. However, this does not mean
that we believe it harmful if you choose to enjoy yourself by playing King or
Queen of Dreamland. In fact, if you normally feel out of control of your life,
or are an unassertive person, you well may benefit from the empowered feeling
engendered by taking control of the dream.
Q. Won’t all these
efforts and exercises for becoming lucid lead to loss of sleep ? And won’t I
feel more tired after being awake in my dreams? Is it worth sacrificing my alertness
in the daytime just to have more lucid dreams ?
A. Dreaming lucidly is usually just as restful as dreaming
nonlucidly. Since lucid dreams tend to be positive experiences, you may actually
feel invigorated after them. How tired you feel after a dream depends on what
you did in the dream—if you battled endlessly and nonlucidly with frustrating
situations, you probably will feel more tired than if you realized in the dream
that it was a dream and that none of your mundane concerns were relevant. You
should work on learning lucid dreaming when you have time and energy to devote
to the task. The exercises for increasing dream recall and inducing lucid
dreams probably will require that you spend more time awake during the night
than usual, and possibly that you sleep longer hours. If you are too busy to
allot more time to sleeping or to sacrifice any of the little sleep you are
getting, it’s probably not a good idea for you to work on lucid dreaming right
now. Doing so will add to your current stress, and you probably won’t get very
good results. Lucid dreaming, at least at first, requires good sleep and mental
energy for concentration. Once you learn the techniques, you should be able to get
to a point at which you can have lucid dreams any time you wish just by
reminding yourself that you can do so.
Q. I am afraid that
I may not have what it takes to have lucid dreams. What if, after doing all of
the exercises you suggest and devoting a lot of time to it, I still can’t learn
to have lucid dreams? If I put all that time into it, and don’t get any
results, I will feel like a failure.
A. One of the
greatest stumbling blocks in learning almost any skill is trying too hard.
This is especially the case with lucid dreaming, which requires that you sleep
well and have a balanced state of mind. If you find you are losing sleep while
struggling to have lucid dreams without result, let go of your efforts for a
while. Relax and forget about lucid dreaming for a few days or a few weeks.
Sometimes you will find that after you let go, lucid dreams will appear.
Q. Lucid dreams are
so exciting and feel so good that real life pales by comparison. Isn’t it
possible to get addicted to them and not wish to do anything else?
A. It may be possible for the die-hard escapist whose life
is otherwise dull to become obsessed with lucid dreaming. Whether or not this
deserves to be called addiction is another question. In any case, some advice
for those who find the idea of “sleeping their life away” for the sake of lucid dreaming is to consider applying
what they have learned in lucid dreams to their waking lives. If lucid dreams
seem so much more real and exciting, then this should inspire you to make your
life more like your dreams—more vivid, intense, pleasurable, and rewarding. In
both worlds your behavior strongly influences your experience.
Q. I am currently undergoing psychotherapy. Is it okay
for me to try lucid dreaming ? Can it assist in my therapy ?
A. If you are in psychotherapy and want to
experiment with lucid dreaming, talk it over with your therapist. Not every
therapist will be well informed about lucid dreaming and its implications for
therapy, so make sure your therapist understands what you are talking about and
is familiar with the current information. Chapters 8, 10, and 11 of this book
offer ideas of how lucid dreaming may be instrumental in psychotherapy. If your
therapist doesn’t think that lucid dreaming would be a good idea for you at this
time, follow his or her advice. If you disagree, you should either trust the
judgment of your current therapist on this issue or find another therapist,
ideally one who knows how to help you to work with your lucid dreams
therapeutically.
It has been said that “everything is dependent upon
remembering, “ and this is certainly true of lucid dreaming. 4
Learning to remember your dreams is necessary if you want to learn how to dream
lucidly. Until you have excellent dream recall, you won’t stand much chance of
having many lucid dreams. There are two reasons for this. First, without
recall, even if you do have a lucid
dream, you won’t remember it. Indeed, we all probably have
lost numerous lucid dreams among the many thousands of dreams we have
forgotten in the normal course of our lives. Second, good dream recall is
crucial because to become lucid you have to recognize that your dream is a
dream, while it is happening. Since they are your dreams that you are trying to
recognize, you have to become familiar with what they are like.
You know what a dream is, in general terms. But dream
stories are not always easy to distinguish from accounts of events that
actually happened. Dreams in general seem like life, with certain notable
exceptions. These exceptions are violations of your expectations about the
behavior of the world. So, you need to get to know what your dreams are like,
and in particular, what is dreamlike about them. You can accomplish this by
collecting your dreams and analyzing them for dreamlike elements.
Before it will be worth your time to work on lucid dream
induction methods, you should be able to recall at least one dream every night.
The following suggestions will help you attain this goal.
The first step to good dream recall is getting plenty of
sleep. If you are rested, you will find it easier to focus on your goal of
recalling dreams, and you won’t mind taking the time during the night to record
them. Another reason to sleep longer is that dream periods get longer and
closer together as the night proceeds. The first dream of the night is the
shortest, perhaps only ten minutes in length, while after eight hours of sleep,
dream periods can be forty-five minutes to an hour long.
You may have more than one dream during a REM (dream)
period, separated by short arousals that are most often forgotten. It is
generally accepted among sleep researchers that dreams are not recalled unless
the sleeper awakens directly from the dream, rather than after going on to
other stages of sleep.
If you find that you sleep too deeply to awaken from your
dreams, try setting an alarm clock to awaken you at a time when you are likely
to be dreaming. Since REM periods occur at approximately ninety-minute
intervals, good times will be multiples of ninety minutes from your bedtime.
Aim for the later REM periods by setting the alarm to go off at four and a
half, six, or seven and a half hours after you go to sleep.
Another important prerequisite to recalling dreams is motivation.
For many people it is enough to intend to remember their dreams and remind
themselves of this intention just before bed. Additionally, it may help to tell
yourself you will have interesting, meaningful dreams. Keeping a dream journal
by your bed and recording your dreams as soon as you awaken will help
strengthen your resolve. As you record more dreams, you will remember more.
Suggestions for keeping a dream journal are given below.
You should get into the habit of asking yourself this
question the moment you awaken: “What was I dreaming?” Do this first or you’ll
forget some or all of your dream, due to interference from other thoughts.
Don’t move from the position in which you awaken, as any body movement may make
your dream harder to remember. Also, don’t think of the day’s concerns,
because this too can erase your dream recall. If you remember nothing, keep
trying for several minutes, without moving or thinking of anything else.
Usually, pieces and fragments of the dream will come to you. If you still can’t
remember any dream, you should ask yourself: “What was I just thinking?” and
“How was I just feeling?” Examining your thoughts and feelings often can
provide the necessary clues to allow you to retrieve the entire dream.
Cling to any clues of what you might have been experiencing,
and try to rebuild a story from them. When you recall a scene, ask yourself
what happened before that, and before that, reliving the dream in reverse. It
doesn’t take long to build enough skill at this to trigger a detailed replay of an entire dream simply by
focusing your attention on a fragment of memory. If you can’t recall anything,
try imagining a dream you might have had—note your present feelings, list your
current concerns to yourself, and ask yourself, “Did I dream about that?” If
after a few minutes all you remember is a mood, describe it in your journal
(see below). Even if you don’t remember anything in bed, events or scenes of
the day may remind you of something you dreamed the night before. Be ready to
notice this when it happens, and record whatever you remember.
In developing dream recall, as with any other skill,
progress is sometimes slow. Don’t be discouraged if you don’t succeed at first.
Virtually everyone improves through practice. As soon as you recall your
dreams at least once per night, you’re ready to try lucid dreaming. It
probably won’t take long to reach this stage of readiness. And a significant
percentage of people who get this far will already be experiencing lucid
dreams.
Get a notebook or diary for writing down your dreams. The
notebook should be attractive to you and exclusively dedicated for the purpose
of recording dreams. Place it by your bedside to remind yourself of your
intention to write down dreams. Record your dreams immediately after you
awaken from them. You can either write out the entire dream upon awakening from
it or take down brief notes to expand later.
Don’t wait until you get up in the morning to make notes
on your dreams. If you do, even if the details of a dream seemed exceptionally
clear when you awakened in the night, by morning you may find you remember nothing
about it. We seem to have built-in dream erasers in our minds which make dream
experiences more difficult to recall than waking ones. So, be sure to write
down at least a few key words about the
dream immediately upon awakening from it.
You don’t have to be a talented writer. Your dream journal
is a tool, and you are the only person who is going to read it. Describe the
way images and characters look and sound and smell, and don’t forget to
describe the way you felt in the dream—emotional reactions are important clues
in the dream world. Record anything unusual, the kinds of things that would
never occur in waking life: flying pigs, or the ability to breathe underwater,
or enigmatic symbols. You also can sketch particular images in your journal.
The drawing, like the writing, does not have to be fine art. It’s just a way
for you to make an intuitive and memorable connection with an image that might
help you attain lucidity in future dreams.
Put the date at the top of the page. Record your dream
under the date, carrying over for as many pages as required. Leave a blank
page following each dream description for exercises you will do later.
If you remember only a fragment of a dream, record it, no
matter how unimportant it might seem at the time. And if you recall a whole
dream, title your journal entry with a short, catchy title that captures the
subject or mood of the dream.”The Guardian of the Spring” or “Riot in the
Classroom” are examples of good descriptive titles.
When you begin to accumulate some raw material in your
dream journal, you can look back at your dreams and ask yourself questions
about them. The use of dream symbols for self-analysis is not the purpose of
this book, but many different techniques are available for working with dream
journals. 5
There are many different methodologies for interpreting
dreams. Lucid dreaming is a state of awareness, not a theory, and as such it
can be applied equally to many different kinds of dreamwork. No matter which
kind of analysis you might perform on the contents of your dream journals, you
will find that lucid dreaming skills can increase your understanding of the way
in which your mind creates symbols. This in turn can empower your effort toward
integration of the different parts of your personality (see chapter 11).
Furthermore, reading over your journal will help you become familiar with what
is dreamlike about your dreams so you can recognize them while they are still
happening—and become lucid.
I was standing on the pavement outside my
Now the pavement was not of the ordinary type, but consisted
of small, bluish-grey rectangular stones, with their long sides at right-angles
to the white curb. I was about to enter the house when, on glancing casually at
these stones, my attention became riveted by a passing strange phenomenon, so
extraordinary that I could not believe my eyes—they had seemingly all changed
their position in the night, and the long sides were now parallel to the curb!
Then the solution flashed upon me: though this glorious
summer morning seemed as real as real could be, I was dreaming! With the
realization of this fact, the quality of the dream changed in a manner very
difficult to convey to one who has not had this experience. Instantly, the
vividness of life increased a hundred-fold. Never had sea and sky and trees
shone with such glamourous beauty; even the commonplace houses seemed alive and
mystically beautiful. Never had I felt so absolutely well, so clear-brained,
so inexpressibly “free”! The sensation was
exquisite beyond words; but it lasted only a few minutes and I awoke. 6
Thanks to a strange little detail—the apparently changed
position of the cobblestones—a single out-of-place feature in an otherwise
convincingly realistic scene, this dreamer was able to realize that he was
dreaming. I have named such characteristically dreamlike features
“dream-signs.” Almost every dream has dreamsigns, and it is likely that we all
have our own personal ones.
Once you know how to look for them, dreamsigns can be like
neon lights, flashing a message in the darkness: “This is a dream! This is a
dream!” You can use your journal as a rich source of information on how your
own dreams signal their dreamlike nature. Then you can learn to recognize your
most frequent or characteristic dream-signs—the specific ways your dream world
tends to differ from your waking world.
When people realize they are dreaming, it is often because
they reflect on unusual or bizarre occurrences in their dreams. By training
yourself to recognize dream-signs, you will enhance your ability to use this
natural method of becoming lucid.
People don’t become lucid more often in the presence of
dreamsigns because of a normal tendency to rationalize and confabulate—they
make up stories to explain what is going on, or they think, “There must be some
explanation.” Indeed, there must be, but too rarely does such a half-awake
dreamer realize what it actually is. If, on the other hand, the dreamsign
occurs in the dream of someone who has learned to recognize it, the result is a
lucid dream.
In a dangerous part of
I once awoke from a dream in which my contact lens, having
dropped out of my eye, was multiplying like some sort of super-protozoan, and I
resolved that in future dreams like this I would notice the mutant lens as a
dreamsign. And indeed, I have become lucid in at least a dozen dreams by
recognizing this particular oddity. Each of us has his or her own individual
dreamsigns, though some are familiar to most of us, like the case of going to
work in your pajamas. The illustrative inventory of dreamsigns below can help
you look for your personal dreamsigns, but remember that your dreamsigns will
be as unique as you are.
The dreamsign inventory lists types of dreamsigns organized
according to the way people naturally seem to categorize their experiences in
dreams. There are four primary categories. The first one, inner awareness,
refers to things that dreamers (egos) perceive as happening within themselves,
such as thoughts and feelings. The other three categories (action, form, and
context) classify elements of the dream environment. The action category
includes the activities and motions of everything in the dream world—the dream
ego, other characters, and objects. Form refers to the shapes of things,
people, and places, which are often bizarre and frequently transform in dreams.
The final category is context. Sometimes in dreams the combination of
elements—people, places, actions, or things, is odd, although there is nothing
inherently strange about any item by itself. Such strange situations are context
dreamsigns. Also included in the context category are events like finding
yourself in a place preparation for Learning Lucid Dreaming you are unlikely to
be, meeting other characters in unusual places, finding objects out of place,
or playing an unaccustomed role.
Each category is divided into subdivisions and illustrated
with examples from real dreams. Read the inventory carefully so that you
understand how to identify dreamsigns. Then, the next exercise will guide you
through the process of collecting your own. The lucid dream induction
techniques in the following chapters will make use of the dreamsign targets
that you come up with in this exercise.
The Dreamsign Inventory
INNER AWARENESS
You have a peculiar thought, a strong emotion, feel an
unusual sensation, or have altered perceptions. The thought can be one that is
unusual, that could occur only in a dream, or that “magically” affects the
dream world. The emotion can be inappropriate or oddly overwhelming.
Sensations can include the feeling of paralysis, or of leaving your body, as
well as unusual physical feelings and unexpectedly sudden or intense sexual
arousal. Perceptions may be unusually clear or fuzzy, or you may be able to
see or hear something you wouldn’t be able to in waking life.
‘ “I’m trying to figure out where the house and
furnishings are from, and I realize this is an odd thing to be thinking
about.”
·
“When I thought I didn’t want to crash, the car
swerved back on the road.”
·
“When I found the door locked, I ‘wished’ it
open.” Emotions ‘ “I am
filled with extreme anxiety and remorse.”
·
“I was
rhapsodized over G.”
·
“I am so unbelievably angry at my sister that I
throw something a woman gave her into the sea.”
·
“I seem to lift ‘out of body, ‘ am caught in the
covers, but shake free.”
·
“A strong wave of sexual arousal comes over me.”
·
“It feels like there’s a giant hand squeezing my
head.” Perceptions
·
“Somehow I could see perfectly without my
glasses.”
·
“Everything looks as though I have taken LSD.”
·
“I somehow can hear two men talking even though
they are far away.”
ACTION
You, another dream character, or a dream thing (including
inanimate objects and animals) do something unusual or impossible in waking life.
The action must occur in the dream environment, that is, not be a thought or
feeling in the dreamer’s mind. Malfunctioning devices are examples of object
action dreamsigns.
·
“I’m riding home on a unicycle.”
·
“I was underwater, yet I was breathing.”
·
“Doing pull-ups got easier and easier.” Character
action
·
“The staff throws slime worms at the audience.”
·
“D kisses me passionately in front of his wife.”
·
“The hairdresser refers to a blueprint to cut my
hair.” Object action
·
“The bologna lights up.”
·
“A large flashlight floats past.”
·
“The car accelerates dangerously, and the brakes
don’t work.”
Your shape, the shape of a dream character, or that of a
dream object is oddly formed, deformed, or transforms. Unusual clothing and
hair count as anomalies of form. Also, the place you are in (the setting) in
the dream may be different than it would be in waking life.
·
“I am a man.” (dreamed by a woman)
·
“I am embodied in a stack of porcelain plates.”
·
“I am Mozart.” Character form
·
“Her face changes as I look at her.”
·
“A giant with a Creature from the Black
Lagoon type of head walks by.”
·
“Contrary to reality, G’s hair is cut short.” Setting
form
‘ “The edge of the beach is like a pier with
benches.”
·
“The drafting room was the wrong shape.”
·
“I get lost because the streets are not as I
remember them.”
“I see a tiny purple kitten.” “One of the purses
transforms completely.” “My car keys read
CONTEXT
The place or situation in the dream is strange. You niay
be somewhere that you are unlikely to be in waking life, or involved in a
strange social situation. Also, you or another dream character could be playing
an unaccustomed role. Objects or characters may be out of place, or the dream
could occur in the past or future.
EXAMPLES:
·
“We’re fugitives from the law.”
·
‘ ‘It was a James Bond type of dream, with me in
the starring role.”
·
“I’m
a commando behind enemy
lines in World War II.”
·
“My friend is assigned to be my husband.”
·
“My father is behaving like R, my lover.”
·
“Reagan, Bush, and Nixon are flying jets.” Character
place
·
“My coworkers and former high school friends are
together.”
·
“Madonna was seated on a chair in my room.”
·
“My brother, who is dead, was in the kitchen
with me.”
·
“My bed was in the street.”
·
“There was a phone in my room.”
·
“The wall had cream cheese and vegetables in
it.” Setting place
·
“I’m in a colony on Mars.”
·
“I’m in an amusement park.”
·
“I’m on the ocean, by myself, at night.” Setting
time
·
“I am in grade school.”
·
“I’m at my twenty-fifth high school reunion.”
·
“I’m with my horse in his prime.” Situation
·
“I’m in an odd ceremony.”
·
“A commercial is being filmed at my house.”
·
“Two families have been brought together to get
to know each other.”
EXERCISE: CATALOGING YOUR DREAMSIGNS
1.
Keep a dream journal
Keep a journal in which you record all of your dreams.
When you have collected at least a dozen dreams, proceed to the next step.
2.
Catalog your dreamsigns
While continuing to collect dreams, mark the dreamsigns in
your dream reports. Underline them, and list them after each dream description.
3.
Classify each dreamsign using the dreamsign inventory
Next to each dreamsign on your list, write the name of its
category from the dreamsign inventory. For instance, if you dreamed of a person
with the head of a cat, this would be a form dreamsign.
4. Pick
target dreamsign categories
Count how many times each dreamsign category (inner
awareness, action, form, or context) occurs and rank them by frequency.
Whichever occurs most often will be your target dreamsign category in the next
step. If there is a tie between categories, pick the one that appeals to you.
5.
Practice looking for dreamsigns -while you are awake
Make a habit of examining your daily life for events that
fit under your dreamsign category. For instance, if your target category is
action, study how you, other people, animals, objects, and machines act and
move. Become thoroughly familiar with the way things usually are in waking
life. This will prepare you to notice when something unusual happens in a
dream.
Lucid dreaming is a kind of mental performance, and you
can enlist the aid of psychological techniques developed for enhancing performance
to improve your lucid dreaming skills. Sports psychologists have conducted a
considerable amount of research on improving performance. One of the most
powerful tools to emerge from their work is the theory and practice of goal
setting. 7
Goal setting works. Researchers who reviewed more than 100
studies concluded that “the beneficial effect of goal setting on task
performance is one of the most robust and replicable findings in the
psychological literature.”8 Furthermore, the research has revealed many
details about the right way to go about setting goals.
Here, adapted from one researcher’s findings on goal
setting are some tips about the right way to approach learning the skill of
lucid dreaming. 9
EXERCISE: GOAL SETTING FOR SUCCESS
1. Set
explicit, specific, and numerical goals
Goals are personal, and are related to both your potential
and your demonstrated abilities. Depending on your level of achievement, you
might want to remember one dream every night or two dreams every night, or to
have at least one lucid dream within the next week or month. When I started my
dissertation research, I set myself a goal to increase the number of lucid
dreams I had each month. This made it easy for me to evaluate my performance in
terms of specific goals.
2. Set
difficult but realistic goals
For many people, to have a lucid dream is a difficult but
realistic goal. For more advanced oneironauts, a more appropriate goal might be
to learn how to fly or to face scary characters. Your performance will increase
in proportion to the ambition of your goals, as long as you keep them within
the range of your ability.
3. Set
short-range as well as long-range goals
Set short-term goals, like remembering a certain number of
dreams or performing a certain number of stated tests per day (see chapter 3).
Also, plan longer-range goals, such as having at least one lucid dream per
month. Set dates by which you would like to achieve a certain level of
proficiency, for example, “I want to have four lucid dreams by June 1.”
4. Record
and evaluate your progress
When you reach a goal you have set, such as having twelve
lucid dreams in one month, record this achievement. When you reach a goal, set
a new one. Or, if you are getting frustrated because you are far from attaining
your goals, set yourself less demanding and more realistic aims. Keep notes and
statistics in your dream journal. A chart may provide a more visible record of
your progress.
Many lucid dreamers have reported that their lucid dreams
happen most frequently after dawn, in the late morning hours of sleep. A
partial explanation for this is that there is more REM sleep in the second half
of the night than in the first. Additionally, analysis of the time of
occurrence of lucid dreams in the laboratory showed that the relative
likelihood of lucid dreaming continuously increases with each successive REM
period. 10
To illustrate what this means, let’s say that ordinarily
you sleep for eight hours. In the course of the night, you probably will have
six REM periods, with the last half occurring in the last quarter of the night.
According to our research, the probability of your having a lucid dream during
these last two hours of sleep is more than twice as great as the probability of
your having a lucid dream in the previous six hours. This also means that, if
you were to cut two hours from your ordinary sleep time, you would halve your
chances of lucid dreaming. Likewise, if you normally get only six hours of
sleep, you could double your chances of lucid dreaming by extending your sleep
by two hours.
The conclusion is obvious: If you want to encourage the
occurrence of lucid dreams, extend your sleep. If you are serious about lucid
dreaming, and can find the extra time, you should arrange at least one morning
a week in which you can stay in bed for several hours longer than usual.
Even though most people enjoy sleeping late, we don’t all
have the time to do it. If you find that you just cannot afford to spend more
time in bed, there is a simple secret to increasing your frequency of lucid
dreaming that requires no more time than the usual number of hours you sleep.
The secret is to rearrange your sleep time. If you normally
sleep from
Some lucid dreaming enthusiasts make rearranged sleep a
regular part of their lucid dream induction ritual. For example, Alan Worsley
reports that when he wants to induce
lucid dreams, he goes to bed at
Redistributing sleep can be a remarkably powerful way to
facilitate lucid dreaming. Be sure to try it. For the small amount of effort,
you will be more than amply rewarded. Here is an exercise to get you started.
EXERCISE: SCHEDULING TIME FOR LUCID DREAMING
Before going to bed, set your alarm to awaken you two to three
hours earlier than usual, and go to sleep at your normal time.
When your alarm goes off, get out of bed immediately. You
are going to stay awake for two or three hours. Go about your business until
about a half hour before returning to bed.
For the half hour before you return to sleep think about
what you want to accomplish in your lucid dream: where you want to go, who you
want to see, or what you want to do. You can use this time to incubate a dream
about a particular topic (see chapter 6). If you are working on any of the
applications in later chapters of this book, this is a good time to practice
the exercises for the applications.
After two or three hours have passed since you awakened,
make sure your sleeping place will be quiet and undisturbed for the next couple
of hours. Go to bed, and practice the induction technique that works best for
you. Techniques are provided in the next two chapters.
Set your alarm or have someone awaken you if you like, but
be sure to give yourself two hours to dream. You are likely to have at least
one long REM period in this time, perhaps two.
The morning hours are ideal for lucid dreaming for another
reason. Although it takes us an hour to an hour and a half to get to REM sleep
at the start of the night, after several hours of sleep we often can enter into
REM only a few minutes after having been awake. Sometimes we can awaken from a
dream and reenter it moments later. These facts make possible another type of
lucid dream—the wake-initiated lucid dream, which is discussed in chapter 4.
Before you are ready to practice techniques for inducing
lucid dreams, you need to be able to put yourself into a state of attentive
relaxation, with alert mind and deeply relaxed body. The two exercises
described below will show you how. They are important for helping you to clear
your mind of the day’s worries so that you can focus on lucid dream induction.
Lucid dreaming requires concentration, which is nearly impossible to
achieve with a distracted mind and tense body. Before going on to the next chapter,
master these essential techniques.
EXERCISE: PROGRESSIVE RELAXATION
1. Lie
down on a firm surface
If you can’t lie down, sit in a comfortable chair. Close
your eyes.
2. Attend
to your breathing
Pay attention to your breathing and allow it to deepen. Take
a few complete breaths by moving your diaphragm down slightly while inhaling,
pushing the abdomen out and drawing air into the lungs from the bottom up.
Allow yourself to sigh deeply on the exhale, letting tension escape as you do
so.
3.
Progressively tense and relax each muscle group
Tense and then relax all the muscle groups in your body,
one at a time. Begin with your dominant arm. Bend your hand backward at the
wrist, as if you are trying to place the back of the hand on your forearm. Hold
it tight for five to ten seconds. Pay attention to the tension. Release the
tension and relax. Note the difference. Tense and relax again. Pause for twenty
to thirty seconds as you take a deep abdominal breath, then exhale slowly. Repeat
the procedure for the other hand. Then repeat the
tension-relaxation-tension-relaxation sequence for your forearms, upper arms,
forehead, jaws, neck, shoulders, abdomen, back, buttocks, legs, and feet. Pause
between each major muscle group, take a deep breath, and release more tension
in a sigh.
4. Let go
of all tension
After you have worked through all muscle groups, let them
go limp. Wherever you feel tension, perform an additional tense-and-relax
sequence. Cultivate the image of tension flowing out of your body like an
invisible fluid. Every time you tense and relax, remind yourself that the
relaxation is greater than the tension that preceded it.
(Adapted from Jacobsen. 12)
EXERCISE: 61-POINT RELAXATION
1. Study the figure
Figure 2. 1 illustrates 61 points on the body. To do this
exercise, you need to memorize the sequence of points. (This is not difficult,
because the points are arranged in a simple pattern. ) They begin at the
forehead, travel down and up your right arm, then across to your left arm, down
your torso, down and up your right and left legs, then back up your torso to
the forehead.
Begin at your forehead. Focus your attention between your
eyebrows and think of the number one. Keep your attention fixed at Point 1 for
several seconds until you feel that your awareness of the location is clear and
distinct. Think of your self being located at this point. Before moving on to
the next point, you should feel a sense of warmth and heaviness at this spot.
In the same manner, successively focus your attention on
each of the first thirty-one points. Proceed slowly, and imagine your self
being located at each point as you reach it. Feel the sense of warmth and
heaviness before moving on. Do not allow your mind to wander. At first you may
find this difficult to do; you will discover that at times you suddenly will
forget that you are doing the exercise and start daydreaming or thinking about
something else. If you lose your place, return to the beginning or the last
numbered point you attended to, and continue. Practice with thirty-one points
until you can attend to them all in sequence without daydreaming or losing
track.
When you can attend to thirty-one points in sequence,
repeat Steps 1 and 2 with all sixty-one points. Practice this until you can do
all points without losing your focus. Now you are ready to use this exercise
with lucid dream induction techniques.
(Adapted from Rama. 13)
(Adapted from
Exercise Without Movement by Swami Rama [Himalyan Institute,
Before beginning the
exercises in this chapter you should recall at least one dream per night. You
also should have recorded a dozen or more dreams in your journal, from which
you will have extracted a number of personal dreamsigns. You are now ready to
learn techniques designed to help you have your first lucid dream, if you
haven’t had one yet. With some effort these same techniques can help you to
learn to have lucid dreams at will.
Before going
further, I’d like to offer a piece of advice which may prevent some frustration.
Sometimes people develop mental blocks that effectively prevent them from
intentionally inducing lucid dreams. Typically, they think of lucid dreaming as
a very difficult state to achieve. Believing this seems to make it so. However,
I’ve learned how to have lucid dreams at will, so I know that it can be done,
and 1 also know that it’s easy—once you know how. My experience with teaching
hundreds of people how to have lucid dreams suggests that almost everyone who
diligently practices these techniques succeeds. No one can say how long it will
take you to learn to have lucid dreams; this depends on your dream recall, motivation,
how much you practice, and a
factor we can call “talent for lucid dreaming.” Even though I was highly
motivated and was having three or four lucid dreams per week, it took me two
and a half years to reach the point at which I could have a lucid dream anytime
I wanted. But then, I had to invent my own methods. You have the great
advantage of being able to work with techniques that have been tested and
refined by other lucid dreamers.
Don’t be
discouraged if you don’t succeed right away. And don’t give up! Virtually
everyone who stays with it improves through practice. Lucid dreaming is easier
than you may think.
The next two
chapters will present a wide variety of techniques for stimulating lucid
dreams. The emphasis is on techniques that work best for most people. However,
there are variations as to which method will be most useful for you, due to
individual differences in physiology, personality, and life-style. For example,
the techniques described in chapter 4 are most readily (but not exclusively)
cultivated by people who fall asleep rapidly. Therefore, we have striven for
completeness and have described most of the known lucid dream induction techniques.
You should try any that appeal to you. Once you understand the principles and
practice of lucid dream in-duction, you may choose to develop your own method
by combining features of the techniques we have described. In any case,
experiment, observe, and persevere: you will find a way.
If practicing
mental exercises is a new idea to you, you may be uncertain about your ability
to use them successfully. In the appendix is an exercise, called “Strengthening
Your Will, “ designed to help you learn how to achieve things through mental
effort. Practicing this exercise will improve your success with all of the
induction techniques in this book.
Pause
now to ask yourself the following question: “Am I dreaming or awake, right
now?” Be serious. Really try to answer the question to the best of your ability
and be ready to justify your answer.
Now
that you have an answer, ask yourself another question: “How often do I ask
myself whether I am dreaming or awake during the course of an average day?”
Unless you are a philosophy major or are already practicing lucid dreaming
induction techniques, the answer is probably never. If you never ask this
question while awake, how often do you suppose you will ask it while you are
dreaming? Again, because the things you habit-ally think about and do in dreams
are the same things you habitually think about and do while awake, the answer
will probably be never.
The critical faculty
A
part of your mind has the job of “reality testing, “ that is, determining
whether stimuli are of internal or external origin. Oliver Fox called this
critical reflective system “the critical faculty” and he regarded it as
typically “asleep” in ordinary dreams. He also believed this faculty to be
fundamental to the attainment of lucidity. In order to become lucid in a dream,
wrote Fox:
... we must arouse the
critical faculty which seems to a great extent inoperative in dreams, and here,
too, degrees of activity become manifest. Let us suppose, for example, that in
my dream I am in a cafe. At a table near mine is a lady who would be very attractive—only,
she has four eyes. Here are some illustrations of these degrees of activity of
the critical faculty:
(1) In the dream it
is practically dormant, but on waking I have the feeling that there was
something peculiar about this lady. Suddenly, I get it—“Why, of course, she had
four eyes!”
(2) In the dream I
exhibit mild surprise and say, “How curious that girl has four eyes! It spoils
her.” But only in the same way that I might remark, “What a pity she had broken
her nose! I wonder how she did it.”
(3) The critical
faculty is more awake and the four eyes are regarded as abnormal; but the phenomenon
is not fully appreciated. I exclaim, “Good Lord!” and then reassure myself by
adding, “There must be a freak show or a circus in the town.” Thus I hover on
the brink of realization, but do not quite get there.
(4) My critical faculty
is now fully awake and refuses to be satisfied by this explanation. I continue
my train of thought, “But there never was such a freak! An adult woman with
four eyes—it’s impossible. I am dreaming.”1
The challenge,
then, is how to activate the critical faculty before bed so that it remains
sufficiently primed to function properly when it is needed to explain some
strange occurrence in a dream.
Paul Tholey has
recently derived several techniques for inducing lucid dreams from over a
decade of research involving more than two hundred subjects. Tholey claims
that an effective method for achieving lucidity (especially for beginners) is
to develop a “critical-reflective attitude” toward your state of consciousness.
This is done by asking yourself whether or not you are dreaming while you are
awake. He stresses the importance of asking the “critical question” (“Am I
dreaming or not?”) as frequently as possible, at least five to ten times a day,
and in every situation that seems dreamlike. The importance of asking the
question in dreamlike situations is that in lucid dreams the critical question
is usually asked in situations similar to those in which it was asked during
the day. Asking the question at bedtime and while falling asleep is also
favorable. We have incorporated these hints into the following adaptation of
Tholey’s reflection technique.
Pick five to ten different
occasions during the day to test your state. These should be circumstances that
are similar in some ways to your dreams. Any time you come in contact with
something that resembles a dreamsign, test your state. Whenever anything
surprising or unlikely occurs or anytime you experience unusually powerful
emotions, or anything dream like, test your state. If you have recurrent
dreams, any situations related to the recurrent content are ideal. For
example, if you have recurrent anxiety dreams featuring your fear of heights,
you should do a state test when you cross a bridge or visit a room near the top
of a tall building.
For example, Joe
Dreamer decides to test his state whenever
1. He steps into an elevator (source of many of
his anxiety dreams).
2. He speaks to his boss.
3. He sees an attractive woman.
4. He reads a typographical error.
5. He goes to the bathroom. (He’s noticed that
bathrooms are often quite strange in his dreams. )
Ask yourself the
critical question as often as possible (at least the five to ten specific times
you selected in Step 1): “Am I dreaming or awake?” Don’t just automatically
ask the question and mindlessly reply, “Obviously, I’m awake, “ or you will do
the same thing when you actually are dreaming. Look around for any oddities or
inconsistencies that might indicate you are dreaming. Think back to the events
of the last several minutes. Do you have any trouble remembering what just
happened? If so, you may be dreaming. For guidance on correctly answering the
critical question, please see the suggestions in the following section.
(Adapted from Tholey’s reflection technique. 2)
Tips on state
testing
As most people
know from firsthand experience, dreamers don’t always reason clearly. While
wondering whether or not they’re dreaming, they sometimes mistakenly decide
that they are awake. This could happen to you if you try to test reality in the
wrong way. For example, you might conclude in a dream that you couldn’t be
dreaming
because everything
seems so solid and vividly real. Or you might pinch yourself, according to the
classical test. This rarely—and never in my experience—awakens you from your
dream, but instead produces the convincing sensation of a pinch!
When dreamers
share their realization or suspicion that they are dreaming with other dream
figures, they frequently encounter protests and arguments to the contrary, as
in the following example:
One lucid dream was
about a former residence I lived at when I was in high school. The house had a
garden, which was the nicest feature of the yard. A very close friend of mine
was there. As I sat looking at the house with my present-day consciousness I
realized that the house, although it seemed intact, had actually been razed
about seven years ago. Yet there it was in front of me, as clear as day. Right
away I knew I was in the dream space and turned to my friend and asked him to
wake up, that we were in a dream and if only he would realize that, we would be
able to go anywhere or do whatever we wanted. Well, he wouldn’t listen to me
and he kept saying that it was real and that I had been reading too many Carlos
Castaneda books. He told me that instead I should read the Gospel. (P. K.,
The moral here is
not to take anyone else’s word for it: test your own reality! Trying to fly is
a more reliable test used by many lucid dreamers. The easiest way to do this is
to hop into the air and attempt to prolong your time off the ground. If you
stay airborne for even a split second longer than normal, you can be sure
you’re dreaming.
Use the same test
each time you do a state check. In my experience, the best test is the
following: find some writing and read it once (if you can), look away, then
reread it, checking to see if it stays the same. Every time I have tried this
in my own lucid dreams the writing has mutated in some way. The words may no
longer make sense or the letters may turn into hieroglyphics.
An equally
effective state test, if you normally wear a digital watch, is to look at its
face twice; in a dream, it will never behave correctly (that is, with the
numbers changing in the expected manner) and usually won’t show anything that
makes sense at all (maybe it is displaying Dream Standard Time). Incidentally,
this test works only with digital and not with old-style analog watches, which
can sometimes tell dream time quite believably. Once when I decided to do a
state test I looked at my watch and found it had been converted to a fairly
realistic analog watch. But I didn’t remember trading in my digital watch for
the Mickey Mouse watch that was on my wrist, so I figured I must be dreaming.
Be careful with this test; you might find yourself coming up with some absurd
rationalization for why you can’t read the correct time, such as “maybe the
battery is wearing down” or “the light is too dim to see the face.”
In general, if
you want to distinguish dreaming from waking, you need to remember that
although dreams can seem as vividly real as waking life, they are much more
changeable. In most instances, all you have to do is look around critically,
and in a dream you will notice unusual transmutations.
State testing is
a way to find out the truth of your situation when you suspect you might be
dreaming. As such, you usually will employ it as the final step in becoming
lucid. With practice, you will find yourself spending less time testing
dreamsigns, and instead pass more frequently from suspecting you’re dreaming to
knowing you’re dreaming. You may discover that anytime you feel the genuine
need to test reality, this in itself is proof enough that you’re dreaming,
since while awake we almost never seriously wonder if we’re really awake. 3
This is the last word in state testing: Anytime you find yourself
seriously suspecting that you just might
be dreaming, you probably are!
The idea of
cultivating a state of mind while awake for the purpose of carrying it into the
dream state as a means of inducing lucid dreams has been used by Tibetan Buddhists
for more than a thousand years. The origin of these techniques is shrouded in
the mists of the past. They are said to derive from the teachings of a master
called La-wapa of Urgyen in
The Tibetan
teachings were passed down from generation to generation to present times,
when we have The Yoga of the Dream State, a manuscript first compiled in the
sixteenth century and translated in 1935, which outlines several methods for
“comprehending the nature of the dream state” (that is, inducing lucid dreams).
5 Most the Tibetan techniques were evidently tailored to the skills
of practiced meditators. They involve such things is complex visualizations of Sanskrit
letters in many-petaled lotuses while carrying out special breathing and
concentration exercises. In the future, when thousands of People achieve high
expertise in the oneironautical skills discussed in this book, perhaps we will
be advanced enough to learn more from our Tibetan predecessors. For now, the
essence of the Tibetan techniques is distilled for you in this and the next
chapter.
For beginning
lucid dreamers, the most relevant Tibetar technique is called “comprehending it
by the power of resolution, “ which consists of “resolving to maintain unbroken
continuity of consciousness” throughout both the waking and dream states. It
involves both a day and a night practice.
During the day,
“under all conditions” think continuously that “all things are of the
substance of dreams” (that is, that your experience is a construction of your
mind) and resolve that you will realize their true nature.
2.
Night practice
At night, when
about to go to sleep, “firmly resolve” that you will comprehend the dream
state—that is, realize that it is not real, but a dream. (Optional exercise:
Pray to your guru that you will be able to comprehend the dream state. This
option will probably need to be modified for most people. If you have a guru,
go ahead and pray. If you don’t have a guru but do pray, then pray as usual.
You can also substitute a symbolic figure associated in your mind with lucid
dreaming. If you neither pray nor have a guru, either skip the instruction or
ask help from the wisest part of yourself. )
Commentary
Because we dream
of things that have concerned us recently, it is likely that if you spend
enough time thinking during the day that “everything is of the substance of dreams,
“ then eventually you will entertain that thought while you are dreaming. (Adapted
from Evans- Wentz. 6)
Twenty years ago
I attended Tarthang Tulku’s workshop on Tibetan Buddhism at the Esalen
Institute in
Rinpoche would
indicate the world around us with a casual sweep of the hand and portentously
announce: “This... dream!” Then he would laugh some more and pointing at me or
some other person or object, rather mysteriously it seemed, he would insist:
“This dream!” followed by more laughter. Rinpoche managed to get the idea
across to us (how, I don’t really know; I wouldn’t rule out telepathy,
considering how very few words were exchanged) that we were to attempt to think
of all our experiences as dreams and to try to maintain unbroken continuity of
consciousness between the two states of sleep and waking. I didn’t think I was
doing very well with the exercise, but on my way back to
A few nights
later, I had the first lucid dream I remember since the serial adventure
dreams I had when I was five years old. In the dream:
It was snowing
gently. I was alone on the rooftop of the world, climbing
I interpreted the
dream as suggesting that I wasn’t yet prepared for the rigors of Tibetan dream
yoga. But it was also a starting point, and I continued to have lucid dreams
occasionally for eight years before I began to cultivate lucid dreaming in
earnest. Incidentally, my impulsive behavior when I became lucid is typical of
beginners. If I were to have such a dream now, I would not precipitously jump
off the mountain. Instead, I would fly to the top of the mountain and find out
if I was climbing it for any reason besides “because it was there.”
Few Westerners
are likely to feel at home with the Eastern idea of a guru, but the idea of
intention should be familiar enough. Although most people report occasional
spontaneous lucid dreams, lucid dreaming rarely occurs without our intending
it. Consequently, if we want to have lucid dreams more frequently, we must
begin by cultivating the intention to recognize when we are dreaming. If you
are not initially successful in your efforts, take heart from the Tibetan
exhortation that it takes no fewer than twenty-one efforts each morning to
“comprehend the nature of the dream state.”
Paul Tholey has
experimented extensively with a variation on the ancient Tibetan technique of inducing
lucid dreams through the power of resolution. 7 Here is my adaptation
of Tholey’s method.
In the early
morning hours, or during an awakening in the latter pan of your sleep period,
clearly and confidently affirm your intention to remember to recognize the
dream state.
Imagine as
vividly as possible that you are in dream situations which would typically
cause you to realize that you are dreaming. Incorporate several of your most
frequently occurring or favorite dreamsigns in your visualizations.
In addition to
mentally practicing recognizing dream-signs, resolve to carry out some
particular chosen action in the dream. A good choice would be an action that is
itself a dreamsign. For example, see yourself flying in your dream and
recognizing that you are dreaming. While doing this be sure to firmly resolve
to recognize the next time you are dreaming.
Commentary
The reason for
setting an intention to do a particular action in the dream is that dreamers
sometimes remember to do the action without first having become lucid. Then
upon reflection, they remember: “This is what I wanted to do in my dream.
Therefore, I must be dreaming!” The intended action should be a dreamsign, because
you’re more likely to become lucid if you find yourself doing your dream
action.
Tholey’s
Combined Technique
Tholey has
claimed that critical state testing has the single most effective technique
for inducing lucid dreams out of the several he has discussed.” His combined
technique is based on critical state testing, and includes elements of his
intention and autosuggestion techniques. He doesn’t make it clear whether or
not the combined technique is superior to the reflection technique, but we
believe that it is likely to be more effective. Tholey conjectures, apparently
referring to the combined technique,
... that whoever
consistently follows the advice given can learn to dream lucidly. Subjects who
have never previously experienced a lucid dream will have the first one after a
median time of 4 to 5 [weeks], with great interindividual deviation. Under the
most favorable circumstances the subject will experience his first lucid dream
during the very first night, under unfavorable circumstances only after
several months. Practice in attaining the critical-reflective frame of mind is
only necessary in the beginning phase, which may last a number of months. Later
on, lucid dreams will occur even if the subject has not asked himself the
critical question during the day. The frequency of lucid dreams then depends to
a large extent on the will of the subject. Most subjects who consistently
follow the above advice experience at least one lucid dream every night. 9
I have modified
Tholey’s combined technique in view of my own experience.
REFLECTION-INTENTION TECHNIQUE
Choose in advance
certain occasions when you intend to remember to test your state. For example,
you might decide to ask, “Am I dreaming?” when you arrive home from work, at
the beginning of each conversation you have, every hour on the hour, and so on.
Choose a frequency of state testing that feels comfortable. Use imagery to help
you remember to ask the question. For instance, if you intend to ask it when
you arrive at home, see yourself opening the door and remembering your intention.
Practice the
exercise a dozen times or more during the day at your selected times and also whenever
you find yourself in a situation which is in any way dreamlike, for example,
whenever something surprising or odd happens or you experience inappropriately
strong emotions or find your mind (and especially memory) strangely unresponsive.
Ask yourself, “Am
I dreaming or awake?” Look around you for any oddities or inconsistencies that
might indicate you are dreaming. Think back to the events of the last several
minutes. Do you have any trouble remembering what just happened? If so, you
may be dreaming. Read some text twice. Don’t conclude that you are awake unless
you have solid proof (for example, the writing stays the same every time you
look at it).
After having
satisfied yourself that you’re awake, tell yourself, “Okay, I’m not dreaming,
now. But if I were, what would it be like?” Imagine as vividly as possible that
you are dreaming. Intently imagine that what you are perceiving (hearing,
feeling, smelling, or seeing) is a dream: the people, trees, sunshine, sky and
earth, and yourself—all a dream. Observe your environment carefully for your
target dreamsigns from chapter 2. Imagine what it would be like if a dreamsign
from your target category were present.
As soon as you are
able to vividly experience yourself as if in a dream, tell yourself, “’The next
time I’m dreaming, I will remember to recognize that I’m dreaming.”
Decide in advance
what you would like to do in your next lucid dream. You may wish to fly or talk
to dream characters or try one of the applications suggested later in this
book.
Now, continue the fantasy begun in Step 2 and imagine that after having become lucid in your present environment, you now fulfill your wish: Experience yourself doing whatever you have chosen to do. Firmly resolve that you will remember to recognize that you are dreaming and to do what you intend in your next lucid dream. (Adapted from Tholey. 10)
Commentary
At first you may
find it strange to question the very foundations of the reality you are
experiencing, but you undoubtedly will find that taking a critical look at the
nature of reality a few times a day is an enjoyable habit to cultivate. In our
workshops we have distributed business cards with the words am i dreaming?
printed on them. You can write this question on the back of a business
card and stick it in your pocket. Take it out and read it, and perform a
reality test by looking away from the card and then looking at it again very
quickly. If the words scramble, you are dreaming.
Once you
establish a systematically critical attitude in your waking life, sooner or
later you will decide to try a state test when you are actually dreaming. And
then you will be awake in your dream.
Ten years ago, I
developed an effective method of lucid dream induction while investigating the
feasibility of learning to have lucid dreams at will for my Ph. D. dissertation
work.”
Before trying
induction procedures, I remembered less than one lucid dream per month. While
using autosuggestion during the first sixteen months of my study (the
technique is presented below), I recalled an average of five lucid dreams per
month with a range of one to thirteen. (The month in which I had thirteen
lucid dreams using autosuggestion happened while I was doing my first
laboratory studies of lucid dreaming, which incidentally illustrates the
powerful effect of motivation on the frequency of lucid dreaming. ) However,
during the period I was using autosuggestion to induce lucid dreams, I had no
understanding of how I was doing it! All I knew was that I was telling myself
before bed: “Tonight, I will have a lucid dream.” But how? I had no idea. And
having no idea meant that there was little I could do to make it happen.
Without understanding the process involved, I stood little chance of learning
to have lucid dreams at will.
Nevertheless, I
gradually observed a psychological factor that correlated with the occurrence
of my lucid
dreams: the presleep intention to remember
to recognize I was dreaming. Once I knew how I was trying to induce lucid
dreams, it became much easier to focus my efforts. This clarification of
intention was followed by an immediate increase in the monthly frequency of my
lucid dreams. Further practice and refinements led to a method whereby I could
reliably induce lucid dreams. With this new method, I had as many as four lucid
dreams in one night and as many as twenty-six in one month. I now could have a
lucid dream on any night I chose and had accomplished my goal of showing that
it is possible to bring access to the lucid dream state under volitional
control. For people who were willing and able to learn my method, it was now
possible to enter the world of lucid dreaming almost at will.
Once I knew that
I was trying to remember to do something (that is, become lucid) at a later
time (that is, when next I’m dreaming), I was able to devise a technique to
help me accomplish that. How can we manage to remember to do something in a
dream? Perhaps we should start with a simpler question: How do we remember to
do things in ordinary life?
In everyday life
we remember most things we have to do by using some sort of external mnemonic
or memory aid (a grocery list, phone pad, string around the finger, memo by the
door, etc. ). But how do we remember future intentions (this is called
prospective memory) without relying on external reminders? Motivation plays an
important role. You are less likely to forget to do something that you really
want to do.
When you set
yourself the goal to remember to do something, you have made the goal one of
your current concerns and thereby have activated a goal-seeking brain system
that will stay partially activated until you have achieved it. If the goal is
very important to you, the system stays highly activated and you keep checking
to see if it’s time to do it, until it is time. 12 It never becomes
fully unconscious. But the more typical case is when, for example, you decide
to buy some tacks the next time you go to the store. This is hardly important
enough to keep on the front page of your mind, so you go to the store and
forget about your intention. That is, unless while at the store you just happen
to notice a box of tacks, or even a hammer which brings up tacks by
association.
This reveals the
other major factor involved in remembering to do things: association. When
facing the challenge of remembering to do something, we can increase the likelihood
of success by (1) being strongly motivated to remember and (2) forming mental
associations between what we want to remember to do and the future
circumstances in which we intend to do it. These associations are greatly
strengthened by the mnemonic (memory aid) of visualizing yourself doing what
you intend to remember.
Thinking of lucid
dream induction as a problem of prospective memory, I developed a technique
designed to increase my chances of remembering my intention to be lucid: the
Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams procedure, (MILD). 13 I have
revised the procedure for this book in light of my experience, both using the
technique myself to produce lucid dreams and teaching it to hundreds of
others. Please take note of the prerequisites discussed below.
To successfully
induce lucid dreams with MILD, you need to have certain capacities. First of
all, if you can’t reliably remember to carry out future intentions while awake,
there is little chance that you will remember to do anything while asleep. So
before attempting MILD, you need to prove to yourself that you can indeed remember
to do things while awake. If you are like most people, you are used to relying
on external reminders and therefore need practice in remembering intentions
using only your own mental power. The following is an exercise to help you
acquire the necessary skill to perform the MILD technique.
EXERCISE: PROSPECTIVE MEMORY TRAINING
This exercise is
designed to be practiced over an entire week. Below is a set of four target
events for each day of the week. When you get up in the morning, read only the
targets for that day. (Do not read the targets before the proper day. )
Memorize the day’s targets.
Your goal is to
notice the next occurrence of each event, at which time you will perform a
state test: “Am I dreaming?” So, if your target is, “The next time I hear a dog
bark, “ when you hear this next, note it and do a state test. You are aiming to
notice the target once—the next time it happens.
At the end of the
day, write down how many of the four targets you succeeded in noticing (you can
make a space in your dream journal to record your progress with this exercise).
If you realize during the day that you missed your first chance to notice one
of your targets, then you have failed to hit that target, even though you may
notice its occurrence later in the day. If you are certain that one or more of
the targets did not occur at all during the day, say so with a note in your
dream journal.
Practice the
exercise until you have tried all of the daily targets given below. If at the
end of the week, you are still missing most of the targets, continue until you
can hit most of them. Make up your own list of targets, keep track of your
success rate, and observe how your memory develops.
Daily Targets
SUNDAY:
The
next time I see a pet or animal
The next time look at my face in a mirror
The next time turn on a light
The next time see a flower
MONDAY:
The next time write anything down
The next time feel pain
The
next time I hear someone say my name
The
next time I drink something
TUESDAY:
The
next time I see a traffic light
The
next time I hear music
The
next time I throw something in the garbage
The
next time I hear laughter
WEDNESDAY:
The
next time I turn on a television or radio
The
next time I see a vegetable
The
next time I see a red car
The
next time I handle money
THURSDAY:
The
next time I read something other than this list
The
next time I check the time
The
next time I notice myself daydreaming
The
next time I hear the telephone ringing
FRIDAY:
The
next time I open a door
The next
time I see a bird
The
next time I use the toilet after
The
next time I see the stars
SATURDAY:
The
next time I put a key in a lock
The
next time I see an advertisement
The
next time I eat anything after breakfast
The
next time I see a bicycle
Before going to
bed resolve to wake up and recall dreams during each dream period throughout
the night (or the first dream period after dawn, or after 6 a. m. or whenever you find
convenient).
When you awaken
from a dream period, no matter what time it is, try to recall as many details
as possible from your dream. If you find yourself so drowsy that you are
drifting back to sleep, do something to arouse yourself.
While returning
to sleep, concentrate singlemindedly on your intention to remember to recognize
that you’re dreaming. Tell yourself: “Next time I’m dreaming, I want to
remember I’m dreaming.” Really try to feel that you mean it. Narrow your
thoughts to this idea alone. If you find yourself thinking about anything else,
just let go of these thoughts and bring your mind back to your intention to
remember.
At the same time,
imagine that you are back in the dream from which you have just awakened, but
this time you recognize that it is a dream. Find a dreamsign in the experience;
when you see it say to yourself: “I’m dreaming!” and continue your fantasy.
For example, you might decide that when you are lucid you want to fly. In that
case, imagine yourself taking off and flying as soon as you come to the point
in your fantasy that you “’realize” you are dreaming.
Repeat Steps 3
and 4 until your intention is set, then let yourself fall asleep. If, while
falling asleep, you find yourself thinking of anything else, repeat the
procedure so that the last thing in your mind before falling asleep is your
intention to remember to recognize the next time you are dreaming.
If all goes well,
you’ll fall asleep and find yourself in a dream, at which point you’ll remember
to notice that you are dreaming.
If it takes you a
long time to fall asleep while practicing this method, don’t worry: The longer
you’re awake, the more likely you are to have a lucid dream when you eventually
return to sleep. This is because the longer you are awake, the more times you
will repeat the MILD procedure, reinforcing your intention to have a lucid
dream. Furthermore, the wakefulness may activate your brain, making lucidity
easier to attain.
In fact, if you are
a very deep sleeper, you should get up after memorizing your dream and engage
in ten to fifteen minutes of any activity requiring full wakefulness. Turn on
the light and read a book. Get out of bed and go into another room. One of the
best things to do is to write out your dream and read it over, noting all
dreamsigns, in preparation for the MILD visualization.
Many people meet
with success after only one or two nights of MILD; others take longer.
Continued practice of MILD can lead to greater proficiency at lucid dreaming.
Many of our advanced oneironauts have used it to cultivate the ability to have
several lucid dreams any night they choose.
Patricia Garfield
has claimed that “using a method of self-suggestion, she obtained a classical
learning curve, increasing the frequency of prolonged lucid dreams from a
baseline of zero to a high of three per week.”14 She reported using
autosuggestion for five or six years, producing an average of four or five
lucid dreams per month. 15 As described above, I found very similar
results with this type of technique: during the first sixteen months of my
dissertation study in which I was using autosuggestion to induce lucid dreams,
I reported an average of 5. 4 lucid dreams per month. 16
Tholey also
reports experimenting with autosuggestion techniques, but unfortunately, he
provides few details aside from mentioning that the effectiveness of suggestive
formulae can be improved by employing special relaxation techniques. 17
He recommends that autosuggestions be given immediately before sleep, while in
a relaxed state, and cautions that an effort of will must be avoided.
The distinction
between effortful intention and noneffortful suggestion is interesting and
perhaps explains some of my early experiences with trying to induce lucid
dreams on demand. The first several times I tried to have lucid dreams in the
laboratory, I was using autosuggestion and I found that trying too hard
(effortful intention) was counterproductive. This was frustrating for me because
I was required to have a lucid dream that very night, while sleeping in the
laboratory. It was not enough to have the several lucid dreams a week that
autosuggestion produced; I needed to have them on the nights I was in the
laboratory. However, after I developed the MILD technique, I found I could try
hard and always succeed. This was because MILD involves effortful intention.
With autosuggestion I had had a lucid dream on only one out of six nights in
the lab; with MILD I had one or more lucid dreams on twenty out of twenty-one
nights spent in the sleep laboratory.
It should be
clear from this that (for me, at least) autosuggestion is less effective than
some other lucid dream induction techniques, such as MILD. However, due to its
noneffortful nature, it may offer modest advantages for anyone willing to
accept a relatively low yield of lucid dreams in exchange for a relatively
undemanding and effortless method. For people who are highly susceptible to
hypnosis, on the other hand, suggestion techniques may offer an effective
solution to the lucid dream induction problem, as we shall see when we discuss
posthypnotic suggestion.
AUTOSUGGESTION TECHNIQUE
While lying in
bed, gently close your eyes and relax your head, neck, back, arms, and legs.
Completely let go of all muscular and mental tension, and breathe slowly and
restfully. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and let go of your thoughts,
worries, concerns, and plans. If you have just awakened from sleep, you are
probably already sufficiently relaxed. Otherwise, you may use the progressive
relaxation exercise (page 53).
While remaining deeply relaxed, suggest to
yourself that you are going to have a lucid dream, either later the same night
or on some other night in the near future. Avoid putting intentional effort
into your suggestion. Do not strongly insist with statements like “Tonight I
will have a lucid dream!” You might find that if you don’t succeed after a
night or two following such misplaced certainty, you will rapidly lose faith in
yourself. Instead, attempt to put yourself in the frame of mind of genuinely
expecting that you will have a lucid dream tonight or sometime soon. Let
yourself think expectantly about the lucid dream you are about to have. Look
forward to it, but be willing to let it happen all in good time.
If autosuggestion
can increase your lucid dream frequency, then this effect may be greatly
enhanced by using hypnosis with a posthypnotic suggestion (PHS). Indeed Charles
Tart speculated that PHS may offer “the most powerful technique for content
control of dreams via presleep suggestion.”18 Lucidity may be viewed
as a kind of dream content, perhaps also subject to influence by PHS. I
experimented on three occasions with using PHS to have lucid dreams and was
successful twice. 19 I am only moderately hypnotizable. For highly
hypnotizable subjects, PHS might be a very productive technique and certainly
deserves study.
The only other
information available on the topic of the induction of lucid dreams by PHS
comes from a ground-breaking Ph. D. dissertation by clinical psychologist
Joseph Dane. Here we will focus on only one of the intriguing aspects of this
study. Two groups of fifteen college women, none of whom had ever had lucid
dreams, were hypnotized several times and then monitored in the laboratory for
one night each. One group (the PHS group) developed a personal dream symbol
from the dream imagery they pictured in the hypnotic state. Another group (the
control) was hypnotized but did not look for a personal dream symbol. Upon
being rehypnotized, the women in the PHS group visualized their symbols while asking
for help in producing a lucid dream later that night. In the course of a night
in the sleep laboratory, they reported lucid dreams that were longer and personally
more relevant and involving than those of the control group. Follow-up
indicated that the women in the PHS group continued to have more lucid dreams
than those in the control group. 20
The lucid dream
induction techniques discussed in this chapter involve learning to bring your
waking intention to become lucid into the dream. MILD, for example, is based on
the ability to remember to do things in the future: “When I am dreaming, I
will remember to notice that I am dreaming.” Still, it can be difficult enough
to remember to do things when we are awake, let alone when we are sleeping!
In recent years,
my research at Stanford has focused on helping dreamers to remember their
intentions. I reasoned that if dreamers could somehow be reminded when they
were dreaming by a cue from the external world, then at least half of their
task in becoming lucid would be done. All the individuals would have to do is
remember what the cue means.
Getting a cue
into a dream is not as difficult as it might sound. Although we are not
conscious of the world around us while asleep and dreaming, our brains continue
to monitor the environment through our senses. We are not entirely vulnerable
as we sleep—we tend to waken when we perceive novel and therefore potentially
threatening events. Because of this continuous unconscious monitoring,
occasionally pieces of the action around us enter our dreams (become
incorporated). My research team at Stanford has been searching for the type of
cue (stimulus) that would most readily be incorporated into dreams.
We began our experimentation
on cuing lucid dreams with perhaps the most obvious sort of reminder: a
tape-recorded message stating “This is a dream!”21 We monitored
brain waves, eye movements, and other physiological measures from four subjects
as they slept in the laboratory. When the subjects were in REM sleep, the tape
was played at a gradually increasing volume through speakers above their beds.
The subjects in this study were already proficient at lucid dreaming, and the
success rate for inducing lucid dreams was accordingly high. The tape was
played a total of fifteen times and produced five lucid dreams. Three of the
lucid dreams were initiated when the dreamers heard the phrase “This is a
dream” in their dreams. The other two lucid dreams occurred while the tape was playing,
but the subjects did not report hearing it in the dream.
The ten times the
tape failed to induce lucidity illustrate two major challenges in cuing lucid
dreams: the dreamer may either awaken or fail to recognize the meaning of the
cue. Eight times the tape simply awakened the subjects.
Even if the cue
is incorporated and the dreamer remains asleep, this alone does not guarantee
success. On two occasions the message entered the dreamer’s world, but the
dreamer lacked the presence of mind to realize what it meant. In one
particularly amusing case, the subject complained that someone in the dream
was insistently telling him, “You’re dreaming, “ but he paid no attention to
the advice! From this and our subsequent efforts to stimulate lucid dreams with
cues, we concluded that we can help people to realize when they are dreaming
by giving them reminders from the outside world. But would-be lucid dreamers
must still contribute to the effort by preparing their minds to recognize the
cues and remember what they mean. Thereafter, we began to use early versions of
the mental techniques in this book in conjunction with external cuing.
Our next cuing
experiment was conducted as an honors thesis by Robert Rich, an undergraduate
psychology student. Because an earlier study had shown that tactile stimuli
were incorporated into dreams more frequently than visual or auditory stimuli, 22
we decided to test * related stimulus as a cue to induce lucid dreams. We use
vibration applied through the mattress when the subject was in REM sleep. 23
In this study the
subjects extensively practiced mental preparation exercises. During the day
preceding the lab recording, they wore vibrators on their ankles that were set with
a timer to turn on several times during the day. Whenever the subjects felt the
vibration, they practiced an exercise combining state testing with a reminder
to themselves that when they felt the vibration in their dreams they would
recognize they were dreaming.
Eleven of the
eighteen subjects had lucid dreams during the one or two nights they spent in
the laboratory. They had a total of seventeen lucid dreams, eleven of which occurred
in association with the vibration. One of the ways subjects perceived the
vibration was as chaos in the dream world:
I started floating in the bed and the electrodes were puling
and then the walls started to move back and forth. Then Stephen appeared in the
corner. He said, “If weird things start happening, you know you’re
dreaming....”
This subject
realized that weird things were happening became lucid, and flew off to see the
stars. We were our way to finding an effective way to stimulate lucidity.
Vibration, though a relatively effective cue, posed a number of technical
difficulties, so we continued to instigate other types of stimuli, we next
tested light, since light rarely alerts humans to danger in their environment
while they are asleep. Thus, it might be readily incorporated into dreams
without leading to awakening. In one study we monitored the physiology of
forty-four subjects as they slept wearing modified swim goggles fitted with
arrays of red lights. 24 A few minutes after REM onset, when the
subjects were likely to be involved in a dream, we briefly switched on the
lights in the goggles. In later experiments we used a computer connected to the
goggles to detect REM sleep and switch on the light cue. This was the first
prototype of what later became the DreamLight™, 25 which is
described in the next section.
In this study
with light, twenty-four of the forty-four subjects had lucid dreams during the
nights they slept in the lab (most subjects spent only one night). Collectively,
the subjects spent fifty-eight nights in the lab and reported a total of fifty
lucid dreams. As one might expect, those who tended to have lucid dreams more
frequently had an easier time using the light to become lucid. Of the
twenty-five subjects who normally had at least one lucid dream per month,
seventeen (68 percent) had one or more lucid dreams in the lab, compared with
five of the nineteen (26 percent) who reported having less than one lucid dream
per month. However, of the three subjects in the study who had never before had
a lucid; dream, two had their first triggered by the light cue.
Other research
has shown that people who recall dreams at least once a night report having at
least one lucid dream a I month. 26
Therefore, it seems likely that for people who meet the prerequisite of
excellent dream recall, light cues are likely to be very helpful for inducing
lucid dreams.
The flashing red
lights from the goggles were incorporated into dreams in a remarkable variety
of ways. The dreamers had to be fully alert for any sudden or peculiar changes
in the lighting of their dreams. Here is one example of a light-induced lucid
dream:
A woman handed me some metal or white object that threw
light on my face, and I knew it was the cue. She was a beautiful blond woman
and I realized she was my dream character and I hugged her tightly, gratefully,
with great love for her, and I felt her dissolving into me....
Our research
results made it plain that we could help people to have lucid dreams in the
laboratory by using sensory cues. However, we wanted people to be able to use
this method at home, without having to take the sleep lab with them. We began
working on the DreamLight, a portable lucid dream induction device. Besides
being an effective cue to help people realize when they are dreaming, light
fit well into a design for a sleep mask that contained both REM detecting
sensors and flashing lights for cuing the dreamer.
In Lucid Dreaming
I wrote, “I believe it is probably only a matter of time before someone
perfects and markets an effective lucid-dream induction device; this is
currently one of the top priorities of my own research ... the technological
aid might make it easier for the beginner to get started, perhaps saving him or
her years of frustrated, misdirected effort.”27 Shortly after this
book was published, I began to work on designing such a device. The experiments
described above had shown that cuing lucid dreams with stimuli works in the
laboratory.
In September 1985
I received a letter from Darrel Dixon, an engineer in
On her second night
using the device one subject hadthe following dream:
I’m sitting in the
car outside a store The lights, goggles
go on. I feel them on my face. I wait for them to turn off before doing a
reality check. I reach up to take the goggles off... then the goggles aren’t
there anymore and, still sitting in the van, I decide to test reality by
reading a dollar bill. A word is wrong, so I conclude I am dreaming! I get out
and fly. It feels wonderful. The streets are bright and sunny, crisp and clear.
I fly up over a building and the sun gets in my eyes-it is the light washes out
the imagery, so I spin my body. I end up inside the store with friends, no
longer lucid and tell them about my
experience.
In the last
several years the Stanford research group has conducted several laboratory
studies using the DreamLight. And participants in two courses on lucid dreaming
have had the chance to experiment with the DreamLight at home.
In the study on
home use of the DreamLight we examined several different factors influencing
success with lucid dreaming, including various types and degrees of mental
preparation. In accordance with our findings in previous studies of cuing lucid
dreams, we found that mental preparation is extremely important to successful
lucid dream induction.
The DreamLight
used at home proved to be an effective aid in stimulating lucid dreams, but
not more so than practicing MILD. However, when the use of the DreamLight was
combined with practicing MILD the two appeared to interact synergistically to
produce the highest frequency of lucid dreams of all possible combinations.
Our first group test of the
DreamLight showed that people who practiced MILD while using the DreamLight had
five times as many lucid dreams as those not using any lucid dream induction
technique. 28 Mental
preparation is important when using the DeamLight, because if your mind isn’t
focused properly on the idea of recognizing a dream when you are in one, even
when you see the light cue in your dream, you may not realize what it means.
There is little chance of developing a device that will make you have lucid
dreams— you must bring something of yourself to the effort.
The variety of
experiences of the light
One of the
challenges to users of the DreamLight is to prepare themselves to recognize
whatever form the light cue may take within the dream. At times, the light from
the DreamLight mask looks the same in the dream as it does when you’re awake.
However, 80 percent of the time the light takes on aspects of the dream world,
becoming so seamlessly woven into the fabric of the dream that to recognize it
the dreamer must be fully alert to the possibility of a message from the other
world. If the dreamer is too immersed in the dream, when the signal comes
through the results can be amusing and illustrative of our tendency to
rationalize rather than think logically. or example, one subject reported the
following:
On a trip—we are
descending a mountain. Twice, covering my whole field of vision I see glorious,
brilliant patterns in reds, radiating from a central point—I call “Sufi
fireworks” and think that they must have been
produced to prevent us from seeing something. I feel 1know something
about the significance of this journey
that my companions do not.
Psychologist
Jayne Gackenbach has suggested that people fail to recognize the light when it
appears in a dream because they have some sort of psychological “resistance” to
the notion of becoming lucid on cue. 29 However, incorporations of
the light are much like dreamsigns. We all fail several times nightly to
realize that we are dreaming, despite the inevitable occurrence of impossibly
anomalous events that could only occur in dreams. This is not because we have
psychological blocks against becoming lucid, but because we have not sufficiently
prepared ourselves to recognize dreamsigns. When prepared to notice events that
could be caused by the flashing lights of the DreamLight, dreamers can be
remarkably astute in noticing the light and using it to become lucid:
I am in a tour group sitting in a theater watching a film
when the screen goes dark and then red in an abstract geometric pattern and I
realize that it is the DreamLight and I am dreaming.
The light
stimulus appears in dreams in many ways. DreamLight users have reported five
distinct types of incorporation:
· Unchanged
incorporations—The light appears in
the dream as it does when the DreamLight wearer is awake. For example: “I saw a
flashing light like the stimulus when I’m awake.”
· Incorporations
as dream imagery—The light becomes
part of the dream imagery. For example: “I noticed the room lights flashing.”
· Incorporations
as light superimposed on dream scene—
The light enters the dream as uniform illumination that does not seem to come
from a source in the dream imagery. For example: “Two flashes of light filled
my field of vision.”
· Incorporation
as a pattern superimposed on scene--The
light causes the dreamer to see brilliant patterns, sometimes geometric or
“psychedelic.” For example: “I see a beautiful pattern in gold and yellow with
diamonds within one another.”
·
Incorporation as pulsation in the dream scene—Instead of seeing the light, the dreamer seems
to see only the fluctuation caused by the flashing. For example: “I noticed a
vague flickering in the environment.”
Are light-induced
lucid dreams different from spontaneous ones?
Light-induced
lucid dreams are likely to differ from spontaneous lucid dreams in one obvious
way—light! Whether they differ in other ways will need to be researched.
Nevertheless, Gackenbach has suggested recently that “inducing lucidity
artificially may also adversely influence the quality of the lucid dream” and
result in experiences “that are not psychologically as evolved as those that
arise naturally.”30 With all due respect to my colleague, her
conclusions seem entirely unjustified. They were based on an extremely
questionable interpretation of a small amount of data from a single subject.
That data was from a pilot study reporting that eighteen light-induced lucid
dreams had less flying and more sex than a sample of eighteen spontaneous lucid
dreams from the same subject. 31 Gackenbach claimed that compared
with dream sex, flying is “more archetypical and represents a higher form of
dream lucidity.” The only evidence she cited for this notion was that dream
content from a straight-laced group of mid-western meditators had twenty times
as many references to flying as to sex. The point is moot anyway, because
reanalysis the original data showed that the subject had as much sex in
light-induced as in spontaneous lucid dreams. As for flying, several of the
subject’s spontaneous lucid dreams were initiated when she realized she was
flying. After adjusting for this confounding factor, there is no significant
difference in rates of flying in light-induced and spontaneous lucid
dreams.
A more reasonable
hypothesis regarding possible differences between spontaneous and light-induced
lucid dreams would be that dreamers might be less rational, less lucid, in the
latter. We might expect to find this, at least in the fast scenes of the lucid
dream, because to become lucid spontaneously, dreamers might require a more
coherent state of mind than they would need to become lucid on cue. We will
need to conduct more research to prove or disprove this hypothesis. However,
the reports of DreamLight users indicate that light-induced lucid dreams can be
as intense, exciting, and thoughtful as spontaneous ones. This is illustrated
by the following dreams reported by two intrepid oneironauts, Daryl Hewitt and
Lynne Levitan, who have assisted us greatly in developing the DreamLight by
testing each new model we design:
In my dream the
light mask flashed. I recognized it as such, knew that I was dreaming, and gave
the eye movement signal. The setting was the sleep lab. I wanted to get
outside, and after a short time I found a locked glass door. I tried to pass
through like a ghost, but finally just threw my body against it and broke
through. I found an open area among the trees and joyfully leaped into the air
and floated. I soared into the sky. It was a glorious experience. I flew over
mountains only to see other mountains looming still higher, lost in clouds.
Sometimes I swooped into deep valleys, through forests. Gradually it became
dark, and the heavens filled with stars. I floated up very high in the sky,
above the mountains. I could see the Milky Way and the moon. I chose a larger
star and began spinning, holding the intention of reappearing near it. As I
spun I cartwheeled through the sky ecstatically. I was so excited I could feel
my heart pounding. The light flashed again, and I made the eye movement signal
indicating that I was still lucid. I awoke a minute or two later. (D. H.,
I dreamt of
returning to the site of an earlier dream—a strange park area that had become a
version of
So far we have
succeeded in devising an apparatus that, when used in combination with mental
concentration, can improve one’s chances of having a lucid dream fivefold or
more. This sounds good, but we cannot yet say that by using the DreamLight you
will be able to have lucid dreams. Thus, we continue our work.
With further
research into the initiation of lucidity in dreams, and the states of brain and
body that accompany lucidity onset, we should be able to greatly enhance our
ability to stimulate lucid dreams. And, of course, we want to pass that
knowledge on to you, the oneironauts. If you want to know more about the
DreamLight, and stay up-to-date on our progress, see the invitation in the
afterword.
Wake-Initiated Lucid Dreams (WILDS)
In the last chapter we talked about strategies for inducing lucid dreams by carrying an idea from the waking world into the dream, such as an intention to comprehend the dream state, a habit of critical state testing, or the recognition of a dreamsign. These strategies are intended to stimulate a dreamer to become lucid within a dream.
This chapter presents a completely different set of approaches
to the world of lucid dreaming based on the idea of falling asleep
consciously. This involves retaining consciousness while wakefulness is
lost and allows direct entry into the lucid dream state without any loss of reflective
consciousness. The basic idea has many variations. While falling asleep, you
can focus on hypnagogic (sleep onset) imagery, deliberate visualizations, your
breath or heartbeat, the sensations in your body, your sense of self, and so
on. If you keep the mind sufficiently active while the tendency to enter REM
sleep is strong, you feel your body fall asleep, but you, that is to
say, your consciousness, remains awake. The next thing you know, you will find
yourself in the dream world, fully lucid.
These two different strategies for inducing lucidity result
in two distinct types of lucid dreams. Experiences in which people consciously
enter dreaming sleep are referred to as wake-initiated lucid dreams (WILDs),
in contrast to dream-initiated lucid dreams (DILDs), in which people
become lucid after having fallen asleep unconsciously. 1 The two
kinds of lucid dreams differ in a number of ways. WILDs always happen in association
with brief awakenings (sometimes only one or two seconds long) from and
immediate return to REM sleep. The sleeper has a subjective impression of
having been awake. This is not true of DILDs. Although both kinds of lucid
dream are more likely to occur later in the night, the proportion of WILDs also
increases with time of night. In other words, WILDs are most likely to occur
the late morning hours or in afternoon naps. This is strikingly evident in my
own record of lucid dreams. Of thirty-three lucid dreams from the first REM
period of the night, only one (3 percent) was a WILD, compared with thirteen
out of thirty-two (41 percent) lucid dreams from afternoon naps. 2
Generally speaking, WILDs are less frequent than DILDs; in
a laboratory study of seventy-six lucid dreams, 72 percent were DILDs compared
with 28 percent WILDs. 3 The proportion of WILDs observed in the
laboratory seems, by my experience, to be considerably higher than the
proportion of WILDs reported at home. To take a specific example, WILDs account
for only 5 Percent of my home record of lucid dreams, but for 0 percent of my
first fifteen lucid dreams in the laboratory. 4
I believe there are two reasons for this highly significant difference:
whenever I spent the night in the sleep laboratory, I was highly conscious of
every time I awakened and I made extraordinary efforts not to move more than
necessary in order to minimize interference with the physiological recordings.
Thus, my awakenings from REM in the lab were more likely
to lead to conscious returns to REM than awakenings at home when I was
sleeping with neither heightened consciousness of my environment and self nor
any particular intent not to move. This suggests that WILD induction techniques
might be highly effective under the proper conditions.
Paul Tholey notes that, while techniques for direct entry
to the dream state require considerable practice in the beginning, they offer
correspondingly great rewards. 5 When mastered, these techniques
(like MILD) can confer the capacity to induce lucid dreams virtually at will.
The most common strategy for inducing WILDs is to fall
asleep while focusing on the hypnagogic imagery that accompanies sleep onset. Initially,
you are likely to see relatively simple images, flashes of light, geometric patterns,
and the like. Gradually more complicated forms appear: faces, people, and
finally entire scenes. 6 The following account of what the Russian
philosopher P. D. Ouspensky called “half-dream states” provides a vivid example
of what hypnagogic imagery can be like:
I am falling asleep. Golden dots, sparks and tiny stars
appear and disappear before my eyes. These sparks and stars gradually merge
into a golden net with diagonal meshes which moves slowly and regularly in
rhythm with the beating of my heart, which I feel quite distinctly. The next
moment the golden net is transformed into rows of brass helmets belonging to
Roman soldiers marching along the street below. I hear their measured tread and
watch them from the window of a high house in Galata, in Constantinople, in a
narrow lane, one end of which leads to the old wharf and the Golden Horn with
its ships and steamers and the minarets of Stamboul behind them. I hear their
heavy measured tread, and see the sun shining on their helmets. Then suddenly
I detach myself from the window-sill on which I am lying, and in the same
reclining position fly slowly over the lane, over the houses, and then over the
Ouspensky’s half-dream
states developed out of a habit of observing the contents of his mind while
falling asleep or in half-sleep after awakening from a dream. He notes that
they were much easier to observe in the morning after awakening than before
sleep at the beginning of the night and did not occur at all “without definite
efforts.”8
Dr. Nathan Rapport, an American psychiatrist, cultivatted an approach to lucid dreaming very similar to Oussky’s: “While in bed awaiting sleep, the experimenter interrupts his thoughts every few minutes with an effort to recall the mental item vanishing before each intrusion that inquisitive attention.”9 This habit is continued sleep itself, with results like the following:
Brilliant lights
flashed, and a myriad of sparkles twinkled from a magnificent cut-glass
chandelier. Interesting as any stage extravaganza were the many quaintly
detailed figurines upon a mantel against the distant, paneled wall adorned in
rococo. At the right a merry group of beauties and gallants in the most elegant
attire of Victorian
I thought, “Have I
here one of those mind pictures that are without motion?” As if in reply, one
of the young ladies gracefully waltzed about the room. She returned to the
group and immobility, with a smile lighting her pretty face, which was turned
over her shoulder toward me. The entire color scheme was unobtrusive despite
the kaleidoscopic sparkles of the chandelier, the exquisite blues and creamy
pinks of the rich settings and costumes. I felt that only my interest in dreams
brought my notice to the tints—delicate, yet all alive as if with inner
illumination. 10
While lying in bed, gently close your eyes and relax your
head, neck, back, arms, and legs.
Completelylet go of all muscular and mental tension, and breathe slowly
and resfully. Enjoy the feeling of
relaxation and let go of your thoughts, worries, and concerns. If you have just awakened from sleep, you are
probably sufficiently relaxed.
Otherwise, you may use either the progressive relaxation exercise (page
53) or the 61-point relaxation exercise (page 54) to relax more deeply. Let everything wind down, slower and slower,
more and more relaxed, until your mind becomes as serene as the calmest sea.
Gently focus your attention on the visual images that will gradually appear before your mind’s eye. Watch how the images begin and end. Try to observe the images as delicately as possible, allowing them to be passively reflected in your mind as they unfold. Do not attempt to hold onto the images, but instead just watch without attachment or desire for action. While doing this, try to take the perspective of a detached observer as much as possible. At first you will see a sequence of disconnected, fleeting patterns and images. The images will gradually develop into scenes that become more and more complex, finally joining into extended sequences.
When the imagery becomes a
moving, vivid scenario, you should allow yourself to be passively drawn into
the dream world. Do not try to actively enter the dream scene, but instead
continue to take a detached interest in the imagery. Let your involvement with
what is happening draw you into the dream. But be careful of too much
involvement and too little attention. Don’t forget that you are dreaming now!
Probably the most difficult part of this technique to master
is entering the dream at Step 3. The challenge is to develop a delicate
vigilance, an unobtrusive observer perspective, from which you let yourself be
drawn into the dream. As Paul Tholey has emphasized, “It is not desirable to
want actively to enter into the scenery, since such an intention as a rule
causes the scenery to disappear.”11 A
passive volition similar to that described in the section on autosuggestion in
the previous chapter is required: in Tholey’s words, “Instead of actively
wanting to enter into the scenery, the subject should attempt to let himself be
carried into it passively.”12 A Tibetan teacher advises a similar
frame of mind: “While delicately observing the mind, lead it gently into the
dream state, as though you were leading a child by the hand.”13
Another risk is that, once you have entered into the
dream, the world can seem so realistic that it is easy to lose lucidity, as
happened in the beginning of Rapport’s WILD described above. As insurance in
case this happens, Tholey recommends that you resolve to carry out a particular
action in the dream, so that if you momentarily lose lucidity, you may remember
your intention to carry out the action and thereby regain lucidity.
Another approach to the induction of WILDs, much favored
by the Tibetan tradition, involves deliberate visualization of a symbol while
focusing on hypnagogic imagery. The symbolic nature of the imagery probably
helps awareness to persist through the process of sleep onset. We will present
three variations on this technique, two from an ancient manual of teachings
dating from eighth-century
As you will see in the following exercises, yogic visualizations
relating to sleep are frequently situated in the throat. Yogic psychophysiology
holds that our bodies contain “subtle centers of awareness” called chakras. Seven
in number, they are located throughout the body, from the base of the spine to
the top of the head. One of these, the throat chakra, is said to regulate sleep
and wakefulness. The degree of activation of the throat chakra is reputed to
determine whether wakefulness, sleep, or dreaming occurs. 14 There
is an intriguing similarity between the functions ancient Eastern psychologists
have attributed to the throat chakra and the role modern Western physiologists
have established for the nearby brainstem in the regulation of states of sleep
and consciousness. 15 I would not dismiss without investigation the
claims of a group of such obviously disciplined and careful observers of the
human body and mind as the yogis, merely because they failed to follow modern
scientific methodology—a system of standards that hadn’t been invented when
yoga was developed. Instead, I look forward to scientific investigations of
more of these extraordinary ideas from the ancient East.
The Tibetan waking lucid dream induction techniques
provided in this chapter involve a special deep-breathing method (called
“pot-shaped” breathing because you ex-end your abdomen like a round pot). The
following exercise shows you how to practice “pot-shaped” breathing.
EXERCISE: RELAXED (“POT-SHAPED”) BREATHING
Because it is often too easy to fall asleep while lying down,
you may wish to perform the relaxation, meditation, and concentration
exercises presented in this book in a comfortable sitting position. The first
time you practice this exercise, however, you should lie on your back on a
firm surface. Loosen your clothing at neck and waist. Close your eyes. Rest
your hands lightly on your abdomen so that your thumbs rest on the bottom of
your rib cage and your middle fingers meet over your navel.
Take a long, slow inhalation, and follow it with a long,
slow exhalation. Then return to a breathing pattern that is just a Me slower
and deeper than normal, and notice your mid-section. Direct your attention to
your hands, and you will see that your diaphragm and belly muscles contribute a
great deal to both the intake and expulsion of breath from your lungs. Feel the
motions of your abdomen and notice how different groups of muscles expand and
contract as you rhythmically fill, then empty your lungs. Concentrate on the
point where your inhalation begins, at the juncture of your abdomen and the
bottom of the chest, filling your lungs from the bottom up. Simply pay
attention to the way your body feels as you breathe.
Allow your breath to find a calm but normal rhythm. Don’t
force it, but allow your diaphragm and solar plexus to contribute more to the
“pot-shaped” phase of your breathing—your abdomen should extend out roundly as
you inhale, like a pot. Think of yourself as inhaling nourishing energy in the
form of light, then sending the light through your body with your exhalation.
Feel this “light” (a. k. a. oxygen) flow from your lungs through your arteries
and capillaries to bring nutrients and energy to every cell in your body. (Adapted
from Hanh. 16)
WHITE DOT TECHNIQUE
A. Firmly resolve to
recognize when you are dreaming.
B. Visualize in your
throat (Point 2 in the 61-point relaxation exercise, page 54) the syllable ah,
red in color and vividly radiant (see Commentary below).
C. Mentally concentrate on the radiance of the ah. Imagine that the radiance illuminates and makes visible all things of the world showing them to be essentially unreal and of the nature of a dream.
A. Practice pot-shaped
breathing seven times (see relaxed [”pot-shaped”] breathing exercise above).
B. Resolve eleven
times to comprehend the nature of the dream state.
C. Concentrate your
mind upon a dot, colored bony white, situated between your eyebrows (Point 1 in
the 61-point relaxation exercise).
D. Continue to focus
on the dot until you find that you are dreaming.
According to yogic doctrine, each chakra has a special
sound or “seed syllable” associated with it. The seed syllable for the throat
chakra is ah, viewed as a symbolic embodiment of Creative Sound, the
power to bring a world (conceptual or otherwise) into being. This concept has a
certain similarity to the Gospel of St. John: “In the beginning was the
Word....”
The Yoga of the Dream State advises that if you
fail to recognize dreaming by means of the white dot technique, then try the
black dot technique, which immediately follows. (Adapted from Evans-Wentz. 17)
A. Meditate on the white dot between your eyebrows (Point
1 in the 61-point relaxation exercise, page 54).
A. Practice pot-shaped breathing 21 times
(see exercise above).
B. Make 21 resolutions to recognize the
dream.
C. Then, concentrate
your mind on a pill-sized black dot, as if “situated at the base of the
generative organ” (Point 33 in the 61-point relaxation exercise).
D. Continue to focus on the black dot until
you find that you are dreaming.
(Adapted from Evans-Wentz. ‘s)
Dream lotus background
The third visualization technique comes from Tarthang
Tulku, a Tibetan teacher living and working in the
The flame, Tulku explains, represents awareness: the same
awareness with which we experience both our waking life and dreams. 19
It therefore represents the potential for a continuity of awareness between
wakefulness and sleep, the preservation of consciousness through sleep onset
that we are trying to achieve.
In Buddhist iconography, the lotus represents the process
of spiritual unfoldment. The lotus grows out of the darkness of the mud and
above the surface of the swampy water, where it transcends earth and water,
unfolding its many-petaled blossom to receive the pure light. Those who attain
to spiritual understanding also grow out of the world and beyond it: their
roots are in the dark depths of the material world, but their “heads”
(understandings) are raised into the fullness of light. 20 As you
practice the following exercise, bear in mind the symbolic meaning of the
visualization.
DREAM LOTUS AND FLAME TECHNIQUE
1.
Relax completely
While lying in bed, gently close your eyes and relax your
head, neck, back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental
tension, and breathe slowly and restfully. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and
let go of your thoughts, worries, and concerns. If you have just awakened from
sleep, you are probably sufficiently relaxed. Otherwise, you may use either the
progressive relaxation exercise (page 53) or the 61-point relaxation exercise
(page 54).
2. Visualize
the flame in the lotus
As soon as you feel fully relaxed, visualize in your
throat (Point 1 in the 61-point relaxation exercise) a beautiful lotus flower
with soft, light-pink petals curling slightly inward. In the center of the
lotus, imagine a flame incandescent with reddish-orange light. See the flame
as dearly as possible: it is brighter at the edges than at the center. Gently
focus on the top of the flame, and continue to visualize it as long as
possible.
Observe how the image of the flame in the lotus interacts
with other images that arise in your mind. Do not try to think about,
interpret, or concern yourself with any of these images, but, under all
circumstances, continue to maintain your visualization.
Contemplate the flame in the lotus until you feel the image
and your awareness of it merge together. When this happens, you are no longer
conscious of trying to focus on the image, but simply see it. Gradually,
with practice, you will find that you are dreaming.
Unless you are lucky enough to have naturally vivid
imagery , you may find the preceding visualization difficult achieve with any
clarity and detail. If you do find it difficult, you should practice two
supplementary exercises (see appendix) before attempting to master this
technique. The first, the candle concentration exercise, involves concentrating
on an actual candle flame. It will strengthen your ability to concentrate and
provide a vivid sensory memory of a flame as a basis for the visualization. The
second, visualization training, will help cultivate your ability to produce
vivid and detailed imagery.
After you have mastered these two exercises, the dream lotus
and flame technique should be easier for you.
(Adapted from Tulku. 21)
You can also use any cognitive process that requires
minimal but conscious effort to focus your mind while falling asleep. Thus, in
what is now a familiar story, your body falls asleep while the cognitive
process carries your conscious mind along with it into sleep. The basic
approach requires that you lie in bed relaxed, but vigilant, and perform a
repetitive mental task. You focus your attention on the task while your perception
of the environment diminishes and gradually vanishes altogether as you fall
asleep. As long as you continue to perform the mental task, your mind will
remain awake. Ten years ago, as part of my doctoral dissertation research, I
developed the following technique for producing WILDs with this strategy. 22
COUNT YOURSELF TO SLEEP TECHNIQUE
While lying in bed, gently close your eyes and relax your
head, neck, back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental tension,
and breathe slowly and restfully. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and let go of
your thoughts, worries, and concerns. If you have just awakened from sleep, you
are probably sufficiently relaxed. Otherwise, you may use either the
progressive relaxation exercise (page 53) or the 61-point relaxation exercise
(page 54).
As you are drifting off to sleep, count to yourself, “1,
I’m dreaming; 2, I’m dreaming,..., “ and so on, maintaining a degree of
vigilance. You may start over after reaching 100 if you wish.
After continuing the counting and reminding process for
some time, you will find that at some point, you’ll be saying to yourself, “I’m
dreaming..., “ and you’ll notice that you are dreaming!
The “I’m dreaming” phrase helps to remind you of what you
intend to do, but it isn’t strictly necessary. Simply focusing your attention
on counting probably would allow you to retain sufficient alertness to
recognize dream images for what they are.
You can make rapid progress with this technique if you
have someone watch over you while you fall asleep. Your assistant’s job is to
wake you up whenever you show any sign of having fallen asleep, and to ask you
what number you reached and what you were dreaming.
The watcher’s task may sound difficult, but in fact it’s
quite easy to tell when you have fallen asleep. There are several observable
signs of sleep onset: with dim light, you can observe the movement of the eyes
under the closed lids. Slow pendular movements of the eyes from side to side
are a reliable sign of sleep onset, as are minor movements or twitches of the
lips, face, hands, feet, and other muscles. A third sign of sleep onset is
irregular breathing.
As you practice the exercise, your watcher should wake you
from time to time and ask for your count and dream report. At first you will
find that you will have reached, perhaps, “50, I’m dreaming...” and no further,
because at that point you started to dream and forgot to count. Resolve then
to try harder to retain consciousness and continue with the exercise. After a few dozen awakenings
over the course of an hour or so, the feedback will start to help. Sooner or
later, you’ll be telling yourself, “100, I’m dreaming...” and find that it is
really finally true! (Adapted from LaBerge.”)
If you focus on your body while falling asleep, you will
sometimes notice a condition in which it seems to undergo extreme distortions,
or begins to shake with mysterious vibrations, or becomes completely
paralyzed. All of these unusual bodily states are related to the process of
sleep onset and particularly REM sleep onset.
During REM sleep, as you will recall from chapter 2, all
the voluntary muscles of your body are almost completely paralyzed, except for
the muscles that move your eyes and those with which you breathe. REM sleep is
a psychophysiological state involving the cooperative activity of a number of
distinct special-purpose brain systems. For example, independent neural
systems cause muscular paralysis, blockade of sensory input, and cortical
activation. When these three systems are working together, your brain will be
in the state of REM sleep. and you will probably be dreaming.
Sometimes the REM systems don’t turn on or off at the same time. For example, you may awaken partially from REM sleep, before the paralysis system turns off, so that your body is still paralyzed even though you are otherwise awake. Sleep paralysis, as this condition is called, can occur while people are falling asleep (rarely) or waking up (more frequently). If you don’t know what’s happening, your first experience with sleep paralysis can terrifying. People typically struggle in a fruitless effort re or to fully wake up. In fact, such emotional panic reactions are completely counterproductive; they are likely to stimulate the limbic (emotional) areas of the brain and cause the REM state to persist.
The fact is, sleep paralysis is harmless. Sometimes when it
happens to you, you feel as if you are suffocating or in the presence of a
nameless evil. But this is just the way your half-dreaming brain interprets
these abnormal conditions: something terrible must be happening! The medieval
stories of incubus attacks (malevolent spirits believed to descend upon and
have sex with sleeping women) probably derived from fantastically
over-interpreted experiences of sleep paralysis. The next time you experience
sleep paralysis, simply remember to relax. 11 yourself that you are in the same
state now as you are several hours every night during REM sleep. It will ) you
no harm and will pass in a few minutes. Sleep paralysis is not only nothing to
be frightened of, it can be something to be sought after and cultivated. Whenever
you experience sleep paralysis you are on the threshold REM sleep. You have, as
it were, one foot in the dream state and one in the waking state. Just step
over and you’re in the world of lucid dreams. In the following exercises we
sent several techniques for taking that step.
THE TWIN BODIES TECHNIQUE
1. Relax completely
After awakening from a dream, lie on your back or right
side with your eyes gently closed. Tighten and then relax your face and head,
neck, back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental
tension, and breathe slowly and calmly. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and
affirm your intention to consciously enter the dream state; let go of all other
thoughts, worries, and concerns.
2. Focus on your body
Now focus your attention on your physical body. Use the
61-point relaxation exercise (page 54) to pass your attention from one part of
your body to the next, recurrently going through all points. As you do, notice
how your body feels at each point along the way. Watch for signs of strange
sensations, vibrations, and distortions of your body image. These are the
harbingers of REM sleep paralysis. Eventually you will experience sensations
like those described above which will rapidly develop into complete paralysis
of your physical body. At this stage you are ready to leave your paralyzed body
behind and to enter the dream world in your dream body.
As soon as you feel that your physical body is in a
profound state of sleep paralysis, you are ready to go. Remember that your
currently paralyzed physical body has a magical, move-able twin, that is, your
dream body, and that you can just as easily experience yourself as being in one
body as the other. Indeed, except for occasional lucid periods, you rarely even
notice that every night your dream body plays the role of its “twin, “ your
physical body. Now imagine yourself embodied in your airy dream body and
imagine what it would feel like to float or roll out of your earthbound twin.
Let yourself peel free of the immobile physical body. Jump, fall, or crawl out
of bed. Sit up or sink through the floor. Fly through the ceiling, or just get
up. Now you’re in the world of lucid dreaming.
As soon as you “step out of bed, “ you should recognize
that you are truly a stranger in a strange land. Remember that you are in a
dream body and that everything around you is a dream thing too. That includes
the bed you just got out of: it’s a dream bed. And the “sleeping body” you also just got out of,
although you were thinking of it a moment ago as a physical body; now it’s a
dream body too. Everything you see is your dream.
If you believe that you are floating around the physical
world in your “astral” body, then I ask you to make a critical observation or
two and perform a few state tests. Here are three examples: (1) try reading the
same passage from a book twice; (2) look at a digital watch, look away, then
look back a few seconds later; (3) try finding and reading this paragraph, and
draw your own conclusions! (Adapted from Tholey24 and Rama.”)
Two bodies or one?
As Tholey points out, the “experience of a second body is
an unnecessary assumption based on a naive epistemology.”26 As I
explained in Lucid Dreaming, “out-of-body experiences” often give us the
compelling impression that we have two distinct and separate bodies: the
physical, earthly body and a more ethereal, astral one. In fact, a person
experiences only one body, and this isn’t the physical body, but the body image—the
“rain’s representation of the physical body. The body image is what we
experience anytime we feel embodied, whether in our physical, dream, or astral
out-of-bodies. 27 So, since
the idea of a second body is unnecessary, you may choose to try the following
adaptation of Tholey’s one body technique, which carries one less body in its
metaphysical baggage compartment.
THE ONE BODY TECHNIQUE
After awakening from a dream, lie on your back or right
side with your eyes gently closed. Tighten and then relax your face and head,
neck, back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental
tension, and breathe slowly and calmly. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and
affirm your intention to consciously enter the dream state; let go of all other
thoughts, worries, and concerns.
Now focus your attention on your body. Use the 61-point relaxation
exercise (page 54) to pass your attention from one part of your body to the
next, recurrently going through all points. As you do, notice how your body
feels at each point along the way. Watch for signs of strange sensations,
vibrations, and distortions of your body image. These are the harbingers of REM
sleep paralysis. Eventually you will experience sensations like those
described above which will rapidly develop into complete paralysis of your
body. At this stage you are ready to leave your paralyzed body behind, and to
enter the dream world.
3. Leave your body and
enter the dream
As soon as you feel that your physical body is in a profound
state of sleep paralysis, you are ready to go. Remember that the body image you
are currently experiencing as a paralyzed physical body cannot move (in mental
space) because sensory information is telling your brain that your physical
body is motionless. When sensory input is cut off (when you go deeper into REM
sleep), there will be no information (except memory) indicating that your body
is still in the position it was before. Now you are free to feel movement of
your body image or dream body without any contradiction from your sensory
systems. Your body image can move without reference to the actual position of
your physical body, as it does naturally in dreams.
Moreover, if you are experiencing sleep paralysis, you can
be sure that inhibition of sensory input cannot be far off. Simply imagine that
your body image can move again. Imagine you are somewhere other than sleeping
in bed: anywhere else, in any other position or situation.
Once you experience that your dream body is out of bed,
you will no longer feel the sensations from the paralysis of your physical
body.
Commentary
The same caveats apply for the one body technique as for
the twin bodies procedure: As soon as you “step out of bed, “ you should
recognize that you are dreaming. Remember that you are moving in your dream
body and that everything around you is a dream thing too. Everything you see
is your dream.
(Adapted from Tholey28 and Rama. 29)
One body or none?
Of course, even the one body (image) we were left with in the last technique is the product of naive metaphysical realism. Your body image is your brain’s model of your Physical body. Your body image acts as if it is your physical body while you’re awake. This is because your body provides your brain with sensory information about its position and condition; from this sensory information your brain constructs a model of the current status and arrangement of your physical body. Finally, you experience your brain’s model of your body (that is, the body image) as if it were your body.
This all makes good sense if you are trying to keep track of what your physical body is up to: your brain needs to keep a carefully updated model that correctly represents how things stand with your physical body, so that you can act without tripping over your own feet.
Let’s consider a very
different state of affairs—REM sleep In this case, your physical body is
providing virtually no useful sensory information about its condition to your
brain. As a result, the brain cannot properly update the configuration of its
body model to match that of the physical body. The brain
in a sense, has lost the sleeping body. So the body image travels through dreamland blissfully unaware that if the brain were in sensory contact with the physical body, the dream body wouldn’t be going anywhere!
Now, let’s take a radical look at the brain’s body model.
If it isn’t representing the position, activity, or condition of the physical
body, why should it need to maintain a model of the appearance, functionality,
topology, or form of the physical body? As Tholey puts it, “The experiencing of
one’s own body in a dream is merely a phenomenon transferred from the waking
state and is essentially expendable.”30 This allows us to throw
overboard even more metaphysical baggage and really travel light: we’ve gone
from the twin bodies technique to the one body technique; the last step is the
no body technique.
THE NO BODY TECHNIQUE
1. Relax completely
After awaking from a dream, lie on your back or right side
with your eyes gently closed. Tighten and then relax your face and head, neck,
back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental tension, and
breathe slowly and calmly. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and affirm your
intention to consciously enter the dream state; let go of all other thoughts,
worries, and concerns. If you have just awakened from sleep, you are probably
sufficiently relaxed. Otherwise, you may use either the progressive relaxation
exercise (page 53) or the 61-point relaxation exercise (page 54). Let
everything wind down,
slower and slower, more and more relaxed, until your mind becomes as serene as
the calmest sea.
While falling asleep, concentrate on the thought that when
you fall asleep your body will become imperceptible.
As soon as you can no longer feel your body, imagine that
you are a point of awareness from which you perceive, feel, think, and act in
the dream world. Freely float about the dream world like a mote upon a sunbeam.
Commentary
Some people will probably feel that life as a disembodied
spark leaves something to be desired. If so, never fear, there are plenty of
vacant dream bodies available for immediate occupancy. Tholey describes a
combination procedure called the image-ego-point technique which differs from
the no body technique in only one way: you must also concentrate on hypnagogic
imagery. He elaborates: “If a visual dream scenery has become established, then
it is possible to travel into this scenery. The ego-point can under certain
circumstances enter into the body of another dream figure and take over its
‘motor system. ‘ “31
(Adaptedfrom Tholey’s “Ego-point Technique”32)
The last two chapters have described and explained the
techniques for inducing lucid dreams. Try all the techniques, then focus on the
ones that work best for you. Practice them frequently and you should find your
proficiency growing. The more lucid dreams you have, the easier it will become
to have them. Once you are able to enter the lucid dream world, the question
will arise: Now that you are here, where do you go and what do you do next?
The next two chapters will prepare you for applying lucid
dreams by providing
background and techniques for prolonging lucid dreams, and by showing you how to work with dream
imagery.
This chapter presents a general framework for understanding
the dreaming process. Since your dreaming head will be in the clouds, you
should embark on your explorations with your feet on the ground.
The basic task of the brain, as you read in chapter 2, is
to predict and control the results of your actions in the world. To accomplish
this task, it constructs a model of the world. The brain bases its best guess
of what is going on in the world on the information it is currently receiving
from the senses. When asleep, the brain acquires little information from the
senses. Therefore, the information most readily available is what is already inside
our heads—memories, expectations, fears, desires, and so on. I believe that
dreams are a result of our brains using this internal information to create a
simulation of the world.
According to this theory, dreaming is the result of the
same perceptual and mental process that we use to understand the world when
awake. Therefore, to understand dreaming, we need to know about the process of
waking perception and to consider how the functioning of the mind is modified
by sleep.
Perceptual experiences are constructed by a complicated
and primarily unconscious evaluation of sensory information. This process includes
many factors beyond simple sensory input. These factors fall into two major
classes: expectation and motivation.
Perception (what we see, hear, feel, etc. ) depends to a
great extent on expectation. In a certain sense, what we perceive is what we
most expect. Expectation takes many forms; one of the most important is
context. To see how powerfully context influences perception, time how long it
takes you to read aloud the following two sentences:
Form as to arranged and the randomly quickly are example
accurately words easier meaningful much a therefore words sentence these in and
than read same preceding the.
These words form a meaningful sentence and are therefore
much easier to read quickly and accurately than the same words randomly
arranged as in the preceding example.
It probably took you longer to read the first sentence.
This is because in the second sentence you perceived that the organization of
words had meaning; each word fell into a reasonable context, which helped you
to see, understand, and read each word. While you read the first sentence, you
had no help from the context of the words, so it took you longer to process
them.
It also is easier to perceive the familiar than the unfamiliar.
Study Figure 5.1 until you have identified all three elements. How long did it
take you to identify each of the three figures? You probably identified the dog
first, then the ship, and finally the elephant. This corresponds to the
relative familiarity of the three images. The familiar, of course, is the
expected.
Another important influence on perception is recent experience.
Steinfeld found that subjects who had been told a story about an ocean cruise
identified Figure 5.1c as a steamship in less than five seconds. 1
Those who had been told an irrelevant story took thirty seconds to identify
the figure. We expect current events to be like what has recently happened.
Personal interests, occupations, and personality can
strongly influence people’s experience. This fact is used in tests like the
Rorschach inkblot test that use interpretations of ambiguous figures for
personality assessment. In a classic study of imagination,
Figure 5. 2. An
inkblot or... ?
A bias of perception resulting from people’s professions
can also be seen with stimuli less ambiguous than
inkblots. Clifford and Bull showed police officers and civilians several
hours of films of a city street. Their instructions were to watch for certain
fugitives (identified by mugshots) and for certain interchanges (legal vs.
criminal, etc. ). Although the two groups actually detected the same number of
people and actions, the police reported more alleged thefts than did the
civilians. 3 Police obviously expect to see crime, and they do.
Expectation biases perception in the direction of how you think things really
are.
Another important factor that influences perception is
motivation. Our motivations are our reason for doing things. There are many
different kinds of motivation, ranging from the most basic drives like hunger,
thirst, and sex, to psychological needs like affection, recognition, and
self-esteem, and finally to the highest motives, such as altruism and what Abraham
Maslow called self-actualization, the need to fulfill one’s unique potential.
It is likely that all of these levels of motivation can affect perceptual
processes.
The influence of the lower levels of motivation is easiest
to study. For example, in one experiment, children were asked to estimate the
size of coins. When shown the same coin, poor children saw it as bigger than
rich children did. In another experiment, when schoolchildren were shown
ambiguous figures before and after meals, they were twice as likely to
interpret the figures as referring to food when hungry than after eating. As
the proverb puts it, “What bread looks like depends upon whether you are hungry
or not.”
Strong emotions motivate behavior and influence perception.
You probably know from experience that angry people are all too ready to see
others as hostile. The fearful will tend to see what they fear, even if it
means mistaking a bush for a bear. On a more positive note lovers will tend to
mistake strangers for their beloveds. In general, motivations drive people to
act to achieve goals or the satisfaction of some specific need. Having a motive
or emotion biases your perception toward seeing things as you wish them to be.
If perception involves analyzing and evaluating sensory
information, then the brain must use some kind of matching process to
determine what we are perceiving. Suppose, for example, you are presented with
a somewhat ambiguous pattern of light. What are you seeing? Is it a bush or a
bear? A rock or a pear? To identify it as any of these things, you must already
have mental models of bushes, bears, rocks, pears, or whatever, to which you
can compare the information from your senses. The best match is what you see.
The same process applies as well to more abstract levels
of the mind, including language, reasoning, and memory. For example, you cannot
judge whether in a given situation someone has spoken tactfully or truthfully
unless you have mental models of tact and truth. These mental models, called
“schemas” or “frames” or “scripts, “ comprise the building blocks of perception
and thought.
New schemas are created by adapting or combining old
schemas, some of which we inherit genetically. They capture essential
regularities about how the world has worked in the past and how we assume it
will work in the future. A schema is a model of, or theory about, some part of
the world. It is “a kind of informal, private unarticulated theory about the
nature of events, objects, or situations which we face. The total set of
schemas we have available for interpreting our world, “ writes the Stanford psychologist David Rumelhart, “in a
sense constitutes our private theory of the nature of reality.”4
Schemas help organize experience by grouping together
typical sets of features or attributes of objects, people, or situations. These
sets of assumptions allow us to go beyond the partial information available to
our senses and perceive a whole.
EXERCISE: HOW SCHEMAS TAKE US BEYOND THE INFORMATION GIVEN
To see how schemas guide understanding, read the following
story and imagine it happening before reading any further:
Nasrudin walked into a shop and asked, “Have you ever seen
me before?” “Never in my life, “ answered the shopkeeper.”In that case, “
replied Nasrudin, “how did you know it was me?”
After having observed the story in your mind’s eye, make a
list of everything you know with absolute certainty about what happened. In
other words, base your list only on the information explicitly given in the
story; as Dragnet’s Joe Friday was fond of saying, “Just the facts, ma’am.”
You may refer back to the story at any time. Take as long as necessary to
compete the list (five minutes or so). To get you started, finish the
following list on your own: (1) Nasrudin walked into a shop. (2) Nasrudin
asked a question. (3) The shopkeeper answered the question. (4)... and so on.
Now list everything you can plausibly assume or infer
about what happened in the story. Be aware of the basis for each of your
assumptions. You may refer back to the story at any time. You should be kept
busy for at least five or ten minutes without running out of plausible
assumptions. You may stop at any time, but be sure that you have listed at
least a dozen inferences. Here’s a start: (a) Nasrudin is a man. (2) The shopkeeper
was not blind. (3) Nasrudin walked on two legs. (4) The shopkeeper was not
lying.
Your list of inferences should be much longer than your
list of directly observed facts. You probably listed all the facts you could
think of but gave up listing inferences when you realized you could go on
forever. We assume a great deal about the world, much more than we observe
about it directly.
Notice how much you automatically assumed about the story.
Your shop schema leads you to assume that the shopkeeper is in the business of
selling something (probably goods, but possibly services); that the shop was
illuminated either by sunlight or some sort of lamp; that the shop likely had
walls, a ceiling, one or more doors and possibly windows, and certainly a floor,
that the shop had a means of approach (street or path) and was probably
situated in a business section of town. Your social behavior schemas allow you
to assume that Nasrudin probably walked through a door rather than a window;
that he addressed his question to the shopkeeper rather than to someone else;
that the shopkeeper and Nasrudin had never met; that they were both speaking
the same language during their interchange; and so on. General reality
orientation schemas result in the assumption that the laws of physics were
operating as usual: that gravity was present; that the door probably squeaked;
that Nasrudin is not the shopkeeper (and that he wasn’t therefore talking to
himself); that Nasrudin is not a talking dog; and finally, because I think you
can see by now that inferences are only limited by creativity and stamina, that
Nasrudin was serious at the same time as he was joking.
You probably discovered while doing the preceding exercise
that schemas have much in common with the notion of stereotype. You may have
unconsciously assumed, for example, that the shopkeeper was male. You also may
have noticed that schemas aren’t normally subject to conscious inspection. We
aren’t usually conscious of the schemas we are employing, for example, the
particular rules we are following in a given social situation. We merely
perceive what kind of situation we are in (formal, friendly, intimate, etc. )
and act accordingly.
Proper (“expected”) conduct is automatically defined as a
part of the particular schema. So if you perceive that you are at the opera,
your opera schema causes you to sit quietly in your seat, rather than walking
up and down the aisles.
You are probably convinced by now that there are schemas
for everything.”Just as theories can be about the grand or the small, “ writes
Rumelhart, “so schemas can represent knowledge at all levels—from ideologies
and cultural truths to knowledge about what constitutes an appropriate sentence
in our language to knowledge about the meaning of a particular word to
knowledge about what patterns of [sound] are associated with what letters of
the alphabet.”5
Schemas are connected to one another. A certain schema,
such as “spectator at an opera, “ automatically brings into play a great number
of other schemas. For example, you will identify the woman dressed in regal
clothing on stage as a singer, rather than some sort of royalty.
So far, we have described schemas in purely psychological
terms, but they are presumably embodied in the brain by networks of neurons.
Current theory favors the idea that the extent to which a schema is working to
organize experience is determined by the degree of activity in its respective
neural network.
Freud believed the mind to be divided into three parts:
conscious, preconscious, and unconscious. In these terms, the activation of a
schema above a critical threshold results in a conscious experience.
Schemas with too little activation to influence any other
schemas remain unconscious. Those with sufficient activation to influence the
activation of other schemas, but insufficient activation to themselves enter
consciousness, are part of the preconscious mind.
An example will clarify these terms. Consider a word
representing a schema which is probably not currently activated in your mind: ocean.
Until you read this word, your schema for ocean was probably lying dormant
in your unconscious mind, along with many other schemas that you associate with
the ocean. Now, however, you have ocean well activated above your threshold for
consciousness. Your ocean schema probably brought several other schemas along
with it into consciousness, such as fish, sea gulls, and seashore. You
may have thought of the proverb “Only call yours what cannot be lost in a
shipwreck.”
In addition to raising several schemas to consciousness,
the word ocean has also activated some schemas to the preconscious
level. These are schemas for things that you associate with the ocean, though
perhaps not as closely as the things that immediately came to mind. For
example, your schema for ship was probably at least slightly activated (though
now it is in your conscious mind).
Even if you didn’t consciously think of ships, subconscious
activation of your ship schema could be demonstrated by showing you Figure 5.
1c. Like Steinfeld’s subjects who had been told a story about an ocean cruise,
you should quickly recognize the figure as a ship. Thus, schemas do not have to
be in consciousness to affect your behavior.
I suggested that dreams are simulations of the world created
by our perceptual systems. The introduction to waking perception that you have
just read will help you understand this theory.
Consider, first of all, how sleep modifies the process of
perception. During REM sleep, as you learned in chapter 2, sensory input from
the outside world and body movement are both suppressed, while the entire brain
is highly active. The activity of the brain raises certain schemas above their
perceptual thresholds. These schemas enter consciousness, causing the dreamer
to see, feel, hear, and experience things not present in the external
environment.
Ordinarily, if you were to see something that wasn’t
really there, contradictory sensory input would rapidly correct your mistaken
impression. Why doesn’t the same thing happen during dreaming? The answer is
because there is little or no sensory input available to the brain for
correcting such mistakes.
What we are likely to dream about Our experience in dreams
is determined by which schemas are activated above the threshold for
consciousness. But what determines which schemas are activated? The same
processes that influence waking perception: expectation and motivation.
Expectation shows itself in dreams in many ways. When we
construct a dream world we expect that it will resemble past worlds we have
experienced. Thus, dream worlds are almost always equipped with gravity, space,
time, and air. Likewise, recent experience influences dreaming in the same way
it influences waking perception. Freud called this “day residue.”
Personal interest, preoccupations, and concerns influence
dreaming as well as waking perception. The minister who saw Nebuchadnezzar’s
fiery furnace in an inkblot might well dream about the mad king of
Indeed, just as fear makes you more “jumpy, “ that is,
ready to interpret ambiguous stimuli as danger while awake, it has the same effect in dreams. This is probably why
people dream about unpleasant and even horrible situations. The reason is not,
as Freud believed, because they are masochistic and unconsciously wish to be
frightened. More likely it is because they are afraid of certain events, and
therefore in a sense expect that they may happen. You can’t be afraid of ghosts
if you don’t believe in ghosts.
By this account, you might expect that dreams would be
sequences of disconnected images, ideas, feelings, and sensations, rather than
the intricately detailed and dramatic storylike sequences that they often are.
However, I believe that schema activation can also account for the complexity
and meaningfulness of dreams. To see how, look back at how many more inferences
than observations you derived from schemas in the exercise on how schemas take
us beyond the information given (page 123). The exercise showed you how a few
general-purpose schemas can generate a vast amount of meaningful detail: give
a schema a dot, and it will see a fly; give a sleeping brain an activated
schema or two, and it will make a dream.
Some dreams have plots as coherent, funny, dramatic, and
profound as the best stories, myths, and plays. After awakening from such
dreams, it sometimes seems as if the significance of characters or events set
up early in the dream became clear only in the denouement. This can give the
impression of a complete dream plot worked out in advance.
It is probably this sort of dream that gives people the
notion that their unconscious minds have put together a dream film with a
message for their conscious minds to watch and interpret. However, I think a
simpler explanation is that a story schema has been activated throughout
the dream.
The notion of a story schema may have taken you by
surprise, but remember, there are schemas for everything. The story, or
narrative schema, is a basic and universally understood part of human culture.
Stories most typically occur as sequences of episodes, which are typically
divided into three parts: exposition, complication, and resolution. The
exposition introduces the settings and characters, who typically encounter some
complication or problem that is finally resolved at the end of the story.
Indeed, Carl Jung described the dream as being like a drama in three acts.
Story schemas can specify sequences of events, timing of character
introductions, patterns of dramatic tension and release, “surprise” endings,
and so on. It’s not necessary to reify the unconscious mind in the role of
“dream director.”
The view of dreams as world models is far from the traditional
notion of dreams as messages, whether from the gods or from the unconscious
mind. I have presented arguments against the letters-to-yourself view of dreams
elsewhere. 6 Be that as it may, interpretation of dreams can be very
revealing of personality and can be a rewarding, valuable practice.
The reason for this is straightforward. Think about the
inkblot projection test. How is it that what people see in inkblots tells us
something about themselves? Their interpretations inform us about their
personal interests, concerns, experiences, preoccupations, and personality.
Dreams contain much more personal information than inkblots, because the images
in them are created by us, from the contents of our minds. Dreams may not be
messages, but they are our own most intimately personal creations. As such,
they are unmistakably colored by who and what we are, and by whom we would
become.
The building of dreams: Two examples The following two
examples of hypothetical dreams illustrate several features of dream
construction: (1) dreams are products of an interaction between various parts
of the mind including the conscious, preconscious, and unconscious; (2)
schemas, motivations, and expectations interact in the development of the
dream; and (3) there is no predestination in dreams. Dreams respond as readily
to the lowest as to the highest motivation, to expectations of disaster or ad
astra.
I have just entered REM sleep and the activation of my
brain is gradually increasing. Within a minute, some schema reaches perceptual
threshold. Let’s say it’s a city street schema that remains activated from my
day’s experiences. As soon as I see the street, I strongly expect to see
myself on it, and I am there.
Now I notice that it’s night and the street is dimly lit.
This activates an associated set of schemas (previously unconscious or
preconscious) relating to the dangers of being on some streets at night,
including the expectation of someone, perhaps a mugger, who is likely to do me
harm. The same moment that this fearful expectation emerges, a shadowy figure
appears across the street.
Who is he? I can’t see him well enough to tell what he
looks like, but the thought crosses my mind that he could be the mugger I’ve
heard about. And so he now is that mugger: he looks menacingly in my direction,
so I turn Wound and start to walk the other way. I am afraid (that is I expect)
he will follow me, and so he does. I begin to run, and he runs after me. I try
to lose him, going up and down various streets and alleys, but somehow he
always finds me.
Finally, I hide beneath some stairs and feel safe
for a moment. Then I think: but maybe he’ll find me here too! And he does! I
wake in a sweat.
I have just entered REM sleep and the activation of my brain is gradually increasing. Within a minute, some schema reaches perceptual threshold. Let’s say it’s a city street schema that has some residual activation as a day residue. As soon as I see the street, I strongly expect to see myself on it, and I am there. Now I notice that it’s night and the street is dimly lit.
The experience of being on a street at night activates
other schemas related to this experience—the one that comes to the fore is the
idea that I must be on my way to a movie. I see a shadowy figure down the
street. I can’t see him or her well, but the movie schema encourages me to
believe that this is a friend I am meeting before seeing the film. When I get
closer, I see that it is indeed my friend.
We walk on down the street toward the theater. The street
is now clearly one I know well. I seem to have forgotten what film we are to
see and I peer at the marquee. Some part of my mind must be aware that I am
dreaming—the dream schema is activated, because I see that the marquee reads The
Last Wave (a film about dreaming). Since I have seen this movie dozens of
times, I wonder why I am going to see it again. I look back at the marquee, and
it now reads Dream or Awake. I cannot miss this unmistakable clue; I now
am fully conscious that I am dreaming. My friend has disappeared while I was pondering
the dream marquee. I take off into the sky and soar (knowing that the gravity
schema is not applicable).
As we have seen, schemas are theories, embodying assumptions
about the world. If your assumptions are mistaken and, as a result, your
schema fails to model the world accurately, what should happen is a process of
theory revision and schema modification that the renowned psychologist Jean
Piaget called “accommodation.” Your accommodated schema will now better fit the
facts, and you will have slightly more knowledge than you did before.
If we always accommodate our schemas to new information,
our worlds will continuously expand as our schemas become increasingly comprehensive,
adaptable, and intelligent. Unfortunately, people don’t always accommodate
their schemas in the face of new information. . We may not even see the new
information, exactly because it doesn’t fit the assumptions of our schemas.
Instead of noticing the discrepancy, we distort or, in Piaget’s terminology,
“assimilate” our perception of the real event or object to fit the schema. The
difficulty of accurate proofreading illustrates this phenomenon. Or if we do
see that something doesn’t quite fit, we may regard the discrepant feature or
features as irrelevant or defective.
Consider the story in which Nasrudin, the foolish mulla
whom the Sufis use to illustrate common human errors, “finds a king’s hawk
sitting on his windowsill. He has never seen such a strange ‘pigeon. ‘ After
cutting its aristocratic beak straight and clipping its talons, he sets it
free, saying, ‘Now you look more like a bird.... ‘ “7
Just as Nasrudin cut off the hawk’s most prominent
features because they didn’t fit his bird schema, we may suffer from the same
self-perpetuating myopia when we attempt to reduce new concepts to fit our
current understanding. Incidentally, one of the functions of Nasrudin tales and
other Sufi teaching stories is to provide schemas for seeing ourselves in new
ways, and to provide a basis for eventual development of higher perceptions.
The general set of schemas guiding our ordinary waking
experience also governs our ordinary dream state. We tacitly assume, in both
cases, that we are awake, and our perceptions during dreaming are distorted to
fit this assumption.
When bizarre dream events occur, we somehow assimilate
them into what we consider possible. If we happen to notice or experience them
as unusual, we are usually able to rationalize them.
If you want to become a lucid dreamer, however, you must
be prepared to accept the possibility that a “strange pigeon” may be a bird of
an altogether different feather, and that sometimes the explanation for
anomalies is that you are dreaming.
Importance of expectation in the building of dreams Your
expectations and assumptions, whether conscious or preconscious, about what
dreams are like determine to a remarkable extent the precise form your dreams
take. As I have said, this applies to your waking life as well.
As an example of the effect of assumed limitations on
human performance, take the myth of the four-minute mile. For many years it was
believed impossible to run that fast—until someone did it, and the impossible
became possible. Almost immediately, many others were able to do the same.
Assumptions play a more important role during dreaming
than waking perception. After all, in the physical world there are actual
limitations built into our bodies, not to mention the constraints of the laws
of physics.
Although the barrier of the four-minute mile was not
insurmountable, there are absolute limits to human speed.
With the bodies we have today, running a mile in four
seconds is presumably impossible. In the dream world, however, the laws of
physics are followed merely by convention, if at all.
There may be physiological constraints on a lucid
dreamer’s actions, deriving from the functional limitations of the human
brain. For example, lucid dreamers appear to find reading coherent passages
virtually impossible. As the German physician Harald von Moers-Messmer
reported in 1938, letters in lucid dreams just won’t hold still. When he tried
to focus on words, the letters turned into hieroglyphics. (Note that I am not
saying we can never read in dreams. I myself have had dreams in which I have
done so, but these were not lucid dreams in which the writing was being
produced in response to voluntary intention. )
However, possible physiological constraints on dream
actions are far fewer in number than those imposed on waking life by physical
laws, leaving more room in dreams for psychological influences, such as assumptions,
to limit our actions.
The Russian philosopher P. D. Ouspensky believed that “man
cannot in sleep think about himself unless the thought is itself a dream.”
Somehow, from this he decided that “a man can never pronounce his own name in
sleep.” In light of what we now know about the effects of expectation on dream
content, you should not be surprised to hear that Ouspensky reported, “as
expected, “ that “if I pronounced my name in sleep, I immediately woke up.”8
Another lucid dreamer, studied by the English psychologist
Celia Green, heard of the philosopher’s experiences and theories and tried the
experiment for herself. She reported that “I thought of Ouspensky’s criterion
of repeating one’s own name. I achieved a sort of gap-in consciousness of two
words: but it seemed to have some effect; made me ‘giddy, ‘ perhaps; at any
rate I stopped.”9 In one more demonstration of the issue, Patricia
Gar-field described a lucid dream of her own “... in ‘Carving My Name, ‘ I
proceeded to do just that on the door where I was already carving. I read it
and realized why Ouspensky believed it is impossible to say one’s name in a
lucid dream: the whole atmosphere vibrated and thundered and I woke.”
Garfield, who was also familiar with the experience of Green’s subject,
concluded that it is “not impossible to say one’s own name in a lucid dream,
but it is disruptive.”10
I too had read Ouspensky’s account, but I accepted neither
his conclusion nor his original premise. I was confident that nothing would be
easier than saying my name in a lucid dream and soon put my belief to the test.
In one of my early lucid dreams I spoke out loud the magic word—“Stephen, I am
Stephen.”
Beyond hearing my own voice, speaking my own name, nothing
unusual happened. Evidently Ouspensky, Green’s subject, and
So far you have learned various techniques for increasing
your dream recall and inducing lucid dreams. Perhaps you have succeeded in
having a few lucid dreams, or perhaps you know how to induce them more or less
at will. Now that you are learning to realize when you are dreaming, what can
you do with this knowledge? As discussed previously, one of the most
fascinating possibilities is the ability to control dreaming. It may be
possible to dream anything you choose, as the Tibetan dream yogis believe. But
before you can try it, you need to be able to remain asleep and retain
lucidity.
Novice lucid dreamers often wake up the moment they become
lucid. They can recognize lucidity clues, apply state tests, and conclude that
they are dreaming but are frustrated because they wake up or fall into nonlucid
sleep soon after achieving lucidity. However, this obstacle is only temporary.
With experience, you can develop the capacity to stay in the dream longer. As
you will see in a moment, there are also specific techniques that appear to
help prevent premature awakening. Continue to apply will and attention to your
practice, and you will be able to refine your lucid dreaming skills.
Informally experimenting in their beds at home, lucid
dreamers have discovered various ways of remaining in the dream state when
threatened by early awakening. All the techniques involve carrying out some
form of dream action as soon as the visual part of the dream begins to fade.
Linda Magallon, editor and publisher of the Dream
Network Bulletin and an intrepid explorer of lucid dreams, has described
how she prevents herself from waking up by concentrating on the senses other
than vision, such as hearing and touch. She reports that all of the following
activities have successfully prevented awakenings from visually faded dreams:
listening to voices, music, or her breathing; beginning or continuing a
conversation; rubbing or opening her (dream) eyes; touching her dream hands
and face; touching objects such as a pair of glasses, a hairbrush, or the edge
of a mirror; being touched; and flying. 1
These activities all have something in common with the
spinning technique described on page 140. They are based on the idea of loading
the perceptual system so it cannot change its focus from the dream world to the
waking world. As long as you are actively and perceptually engaged with the
dream world, you are less likely to make the transition to the waking state.
Magallon may be a dreamer with an unusually active REM
system; it may be that she has little trouble staying asleep once she is in
REM. However, many others are light sleepers who find it difficult to remain in
lucid dreams for long periods of time. These people need more powerful
techniques to help them stay in their lucid dreams. Harald von Moers-Messmer
was one of the handful of researchers who personally investigated lucid
dreaming in the first half of the twentieth century. He was the first to
propose the technique of looking at the ground in order to stabilize the dream.
2
The idea of focusing on something in the dream in order to
prevent awakening has independently occurred to several other lucid dreamers.
One of these is G. Scott Sparrow, a clinical psychologist and author of the
classic personal account Lucid Dreaming: The Dawning of the Clear Light. 3
Sparrow discusses Carlos Castaneda’s famous technique of looking at his
hands while dreaming to induce and stabilize lucid dreams.4 Sparrow
argues that the dreamer’s body provides one of the most unchanging elements in
the dream, which can help to stabilize the individual’s otherwise feeble
identity in the face of a rapidly changing dream. However, as he points out,
the body isn’t the only relatively stable reference point in the dream: another
is the ground beneath the dreamer’s feet. Sparrow uses this idea in this
example of one of his own lucid dreams:
…I walk on down the street. It is night; and as I look up at
the sky I am astounded by the clarity of the stars, They seem so close. At this
point I become lucid. The dream “shakes” momentarily. Immediately I look down
the ground and concentrate on solidifying the image and remaining in the
dreamscape. Then I realize that if I turn my attention to the pole star above
my head, the dream image will further stabilize itself. I do this; until
gradually the clarity of the stars returns in its fullness. 5
Some years ago I had the good fortune to discover highly effective
technique for preventing awakenings producing new lucid dream scenes. I started
by reason that since dream actions have corresponding physical effects,
relaxing my dream body might inhibit awakening by lowering muscle tension in my
physical body. The next time I was dreaming lucidly, I tested the idea As the
dream began to fade, I relaxed completely, dropping to the dream floor.
However, contrary to my intention I seemed to awaken. A few minutes later I
discovered I had actually only dreamed of awakening. I repeated the experiment
many times and the effect was consistent—I would remain in the dream state by
dreaming of waking up. However, my experiences suggested that the essential
element was not the attempted relaxation but the sensation of movement. In
subsequent lucid dreams, I tested a variety of dream movements and found both
falling backward and spinning in the dream to be especially effective in
prolonging my lucid dreams. Here is a method for spinning to remain in the
dream state.
THE SPINNING TECHNIQUE
When a dream ends, the visual sense fades first Other
senses may persist longer, with touch being among the last to go. The first
sign that a lucid dream is about to end is usually a loss of color and realism
in your visual imagery. The dream may lose visual detail and begin to take on a
cartoonlike or washed-out appearance. You may find the light growing very dim,
or your vision becoming progressively weaker.
2. Spin as soon as the
dream begins to fade
As soon as
the visual imagery of your lucid dream begins to fade, quickly, before the feel
of your dream body evaporates, stretch out your arms and spin like a top (with
your dream body, of course). It doesn’t matter whether you pirouette, or spin
like a top, dervish, child, or bottle, as long as you vividly feel your dream
body in motion. This is not the same as imagining you are spinning; for the
technique to work, you must feel the vivid sensation of spinning.
Continue to spin, constantly reminding yourself that the
next thing you see, touch, or hear will very probably be a dream.
Continue spinning until you find yourself in a stable
world. You will either still be dreaming or have awakened. Therefore,
carefully and critically test which state you are in (see chapter 3).
Commentary
If I think I have awakened, I always check the time on the
digital clock beside my bed. This usually provides a foolproof reality test.
Frequently, the spinning procedure generates a new dream
scene, which may represent the bedroom you are sleeping in or some more unusual
place. Sometimes the just-faded dream scene is regenerated in all its vivid
glory.
By repeatedly reminding yourself that you’re dreaming
during the spinning transition, you can continue to be lucid in the new dream
scene. Without this special effort of attention, you are likely to mistake the
new dream for an actual awakening—in spite of many manifest absurdities of
dream content.
A typical false awakening would occur if while spinning, you felt
your hands hit
the bed and you thought: “Well, I must be awake,
since my hand just hit the bed. I guess spinning didn’t work this time.” What
you should think, of course, is, “Since the spinning hand that hit the bed is a
dream hand, it must have hit a dream bed Therefore, I’m still
dreaming!” Don’t fail to critically check your state after using the spinning
technique.
Effectiveness of spinning
This method is extremely effective for many dreamers,
including myself. I used this technique in 40 of the 100 lucid dreams in the
last six months of the record for my doctoral dissertation. New dream scenes
resulted in 85 percent of these cases. Lucid consciousness persisted in 97
percent of the new dreams. When spinning led to another dream, the new dream
scene almost always closely resembled my bedroom.
The experiences of other lucid dreamers who have employed
this method have been very similar to mine but suggest that the post-spin lucid
dream need not be a bedroom scene. One of these lucid dreamers, for instance,
found herself arriving at a dream scene other than her bedroom in five out of
the eleven times she used the spinning technique.
These results suggest that spinning could be used to
produce transitions to any dream scene the lucid dreamer expects. (See spinning
a new dream scene exercise, page 161. ) In my own case, it appears that my
almost exclusive production of bedroom dreams may be an accident of the
circumstances in which I discovered the technique. I have tried, with very
little success, to produce transitions to other dream scenes with this method.
Although I have definitely intended to arrive elsewhere than my dream
bedroom, I cannot say that I fully expected to. I believe I will someday
be able to unlearn this accidental association (if that is what it is).
Meanwhile,
I’m impressed by the power of expectation to determine what happens in my lucid dreams.
How does spinning work?
Why should dream spinning decrease the likelihood of
awakening? Several factors are probably involved. One of these may be
neurophysiological. Information about head and body movement, monitored by the
vestibular system of the inner ear (which helps you to keep your balance), is
closely integrated with visual information by the brain to produce an optimally
stable picture of the world. Because of this integration of information, the
world doesn’t appear to move whenever you move your head, even though the image
of the world on the retina of your eye moves.
Since the sensations of movement during dream spinning
are as vivid as those during actual physical move-ments, it is likely that the
same brain systems are activated to a similar degree in both cases. An
intriguing possibility is that the spinning technique, by stimulating the
system of the brain that integrates vestibular activity detected in the middle
ear, facilitates the activity of the nearby components of the REM sleep system.
Neuro-scientists have obtained indirect evidence of the involve-ment of the
vestibular system in the production of the rapid eye movement bursts in REM
sleep. 6
Another possible reason why spinning may help post-pone
awakening comes from the fact that when you imagine perceiving something with
one sense, your sen-sitivity to external stimulation of that sense decreases.
Thus, if the brain is fully engaged in producing the vivid, internally
generated sensory experience of spinning, it will be more difficult for it to
construct a contradictory sensation based on external sensory input.
What to do if you do awaken prematurely
Even if you find that despite your best efforts to stay
asleep you still wake up, all is not lost. Play dead. If you remain
perfectly motionless upon waking from a lucid (or nonlucid) dream and deeply
relax your body, there is a good chance that REM sleep will reassert itself and
you will have an opportunity to enter a lucid dream consciously, as described
in chapter 4. For some people with a strong tendency to remain in REM sleep,
this happens almost every time they awaken from a dream until they decide to
move. Alan Worsley is one of the world’s most experienced lucid dreamers. He
has been conducting personal lucid dream experiments since the age of five.
During the 1970s, he was the first person to signal from a lucid dream in
pioneering experiments carried out in collaboration with Keith Hearne. 7
Worsley appears to possess this felicitous sort of physiology, and he offers
the following advice for dreamers who have just awakened but yearn to return to
their lucid dreams: “Lie very still—don’t move a muscle! Relax and wait. The
dream will return. I’ve had dozens of lucid dreams in a row with this method.”8
We have used language to control our thinking and behavior
since we first learned to speak. Our parents would tell us what to do and how
to do it, and we were guided by their words. When we first did these things under
our own direction, we would repeat out loud the parental instructions to remind
ourselves of exactly how and what we were trying to do. Now, having fully
incorporated the role of parental guide within us, we repeat the instructtions
silently to ourselves when carrying out complicated new procedures.
We can also use verbal direction of conscious behavior to
regulate our behavior in the lucid dream (for instance, to maintain awareness
that it is a dream). Until becoming and staying lucid is a well-developed
habit, we are all too likely to lose lucidity anytime our attention wanders.
The moment we take a bit too much interest in some facet of the dream, lucidity
vanishes. If you are a novice lucid dreamer and have problems maintaining your
lucidity, a temporary solution is for you to talk to yourself in your
lucid dreams. Remind yourself that you are dreaming by repeating phrases like
“This is a dream!... This is a dream!... This is a dream!” or “I’m dreaming...
I’m dreaming... I’m dreaming....” This self-reminder can be spoken “out loud”
in the dream, if necessary. Otherwise it’s better to say it silently to
prevent the repetition from becoming the predominant feature of the dream.
Sparrow recommends the same procedure, advising dreamers
with shaky lucidity “to concentrate on an affirmation which serves as a
continual reminder of the illusory nature of the experience.”9 He
considers it essential that the affirmation (for example, “This is all a
dream”) be learned by heart and cultivated in the waking state in order for it
to be an effective aid in the dream state.
After you have acquired some experience, you will learn to
recognize the situations in which you tend to lose your lucidity and find that
you can maintain your lucidity without conscious effort. Learning to do this
can happen fairly rapidly. In my first year of studying lucid dreaming, I lost
lucidity in 11 of 62 lucid dreams; in the second year, I lost lucidity in only
1 of 111 dreams; and in the third year, only 1 of 215 dreams. 10 In
the following ten years, my rate of lucidity lost has stayed at less than one
percent.
My first lucid dream arose from my discovery as a child
of five that I could wake myself from frightening dreams by trying to shout
“Mother!”11
I have found a paradoxical-sounding but simple technique
for waking at will: “Fall asleep to wake up.” Whenever I decide I want to
awaken from a lucid dream, I simply lie down on the nearest dream bed, couch,
or cloud, shut my dream eyes, and “go to sleep.” The usual result is that I
immediately wake up, but sometimes I only dream that I wake up, and when I
realize I’m still dreaming, I try again to wake up “for real, “ sometimes succeeding
at once, but sometimes only after an amusing sequence of false awakenings. (B. K.,
When I was a little girl, about six years old, I came
up with a method for awakening myself when dreams got too unpleasant. I don’t
recall how I came up with the idea, but I would blink my eyes hard three times.
This worked well for a while, and got me out of some pretty horrific and
surrealistic scenarios, but then something changed, and the method began to
produce false awakenings. When I once used this technique to end a mildly
distasteful dream, only to find myself awakening in my bedroom just before the
arrival of a terrible hurricane, and certain that the experience was real, upon
actually awakening 1 decided to abandon the practice. (L. L.,
If the secret to preventing premature awakening is to
maintain active participation in the dream, the secret to awakening at will is
to withdraw your attention and participation from the dream. Think, daydream,
or otherwise withdraw your attention from the dream, and you are very likely to
awaken.
When five-year-old Alan Worsley called out for his mother
in the physical world, he was directing his attention away from the dream as
well as possibly activating the muscles of vocalization in his sleeping body,
which could awaken him.
But nothing could provide a better illustration of the
principle of waking by withdrawing attention from the dream than Beverly
Kedzierski’s formula “go to sleep to wake up.” After all, what does sleep mean
but withdrawal of attention from what is around us?
Another way of withdrawing your participation from the
dream is to cease making the usual rapid eye movements so crucially
characteristic of REM sleep. Paul Tholey has experimented with fixation on a
stationary point during lucid dreams. He found that gaze fixation caused the
fixation point to blur, followed by dissolution of the entire dream scene and
an awakening within four to twelve seconds. He notes that experienced subjects
can use the intermediate stage of scene dissolution “to form the dream
environment to their own wishes.”12 Artist and dream researcher
Fariba Bogzaran describes a very similar technique called “intentional
focusing, “ in which she concentrates on an object in her lucid dream until she
regains waking consciousness. 13
However, the examples here
show that using methods to awaken from dreams may lead to false awakenings.
Sometimes, the false awakening can be more disturbing than the original dream
you were trying to escape. In general, it is probably best not to try to avoid
frightening dream images by escaping to the waking state. Chapter 10 explains
why and how you can benefit from facing nightmares. An example of a good use
for techniques of waking yourself at will from lucid dreams is to awaken
yourself while you still have the events and revelations the dream clearly in
mind.
Before we go on to discuss ways in which you can exercise
your will over the images of your dreams, let’s consider the uses you can make
of your new freedom.
When faced with challenging dream situations, there are
two ways you can master them. One way involves magical manipulation of the
dream: controlling “them” or “it, “ while the other way involves self-control.
As it happens, the first kind of control doesn’t always work— which may actually
be a blessing in disguise. If we learned to solve our problems in our lucid
dreams by magically changing things we didn’t like, we might mistakenly hope
to do the same in our waking lives. For example, I once had a lucid dream about
a frightening ogre whom I confronted by projecting feelings of love and
acceptance, leading to a pleasurable, peaceful, and empowering resolution in my
dream. Suppose I had chosen to turn my adversary into a toad, and get rid of
him that way. How would that help me if I were to find myself in conflict with
my boss or another authority figure whom I might see as an ogre, in spite of my
being awake? Turning him into a toad would hardly be practical! However, a
change in attitude might indeed resolve the situation.
Generally, a more useful approach to take with unpleasant
dream imagery is to control yourself. Self-control means control over habitual
reactions. For example, if you are afraid and run away even though you know you
should face your fear, you aren’t controlling your behavior. Although the
events that appear to take place in dreams are illusory, our feelings in
response to dream events are real. So, when you’re fearful in a dream and
realize that it is a dream, your fear may not vanish automatically. You still
have to deal with it; this is why lucid dreams are such good practice for our
waking lives We’re free to control our responses to the dream, and whatever we
learn in so doing will readily apply to our waking lives. In my “ogre dream, “
I gained a degree of self-mastery and confidence that has served me as well in
the waking world as in the dream. As a result of such lucid dream encounters, I
now feel confident that I can handle just about any situation. If you’d like to
enhance your sense of self-confidence, my advice is that you’d be wise to
control yourself, not the dream.
I read about your work and the techniques you suggested
for having lucid dreams. I practiced noticing whether I was dreaming. The first
night, after several nonlucid dreams, I suddenly remembered to ask myself if I
was dreaming. As soon as I answered “yes, “ something happened that your
article did not mention. Everything in the dream became extremely vivid. The
visual aspects were like someone turned up the contrast and the color. I saw
everything in great detail. All my dream senses were amplified. I was suddenly
intensely aware of temperature, air movement, odors, and sounds. I had a strong
sense of being in control. Even though I had not planned to fly, something in
the dream made me think about flying, and I simply leaped into the air
(Superman style) and flew. The sensation was the most exhilarating and
realistic dream experience I have ever had. I flew down a canyon of buildings,
gradually gaining altitude. The buildings gave way to a park, where I embarked
upon some aerial acrobat-It was my last dream of the night, and the feeling of
exhilaration lasted all day. I told everyone who would listen about the
experiment and the success I had. (G.
R.,
One night I was dreaming of standing on a gentle hill,
8 out over the tops of maples, alders, and other The leaves of the maples were
bright red and rustling in the wind. The grass at my feet was lush and vividly
green. All the colors about me were more saturated than I have ever seen.
Perhaps the awareness that the colors were “brighter
than they should be” shocked me into realizing that I was in a dream, and that
what lay about me was not “real.” I remember saying to myself, “If this is a
dream, I should be able to fly into the air.” I tested my hunch and was
enormously pleased that I could effortlessly fly, and fly anywhere I wanted. I
skimmed over the tops of the trees and sailed many miles over new territory. I
flew upward, far above the landscape, and hovered in the air currents like an
eagle.
When I awoke I felt as if the experience of flying had
energized me. I felt a sense of well-being that seemed directly related to the
experience of being lucid in the dream, of taking control of the flying. (J. B.,
Flying dreams and lucid dreams are strongly related in
several ways. First, if you ever find yourself flying without benefit of an
airplane or other reasonable apparatus, you are experiencing a fine dreamsign.
Second, if you ever suspect that you are dreaming, trying to fly is often a
good way to test your state. And if you want to visit the far corners of the
globe or distant galaxies in your lucid dreams, flying is an excellent mode of
transportation.
If you think you are dreaming, push off the ground and see
if you can float into the air. If you are indoors, after you fly around the
room, look for a window. Go out the window and strive for altitude. Curiously,
more than a few dreamers (most likely city dwellers) have reported that they
sometimes find an obstacle in the form of electrical power lines that seem to
prevent their passage. Some of these oneironauts report a surge of energy,
often accompanied by a burst of light, when they fly through the “power” lines.
Beyond that barrier, oneironauts have flown around the earth, to other planets,
distant stars and galaxies, even mythical realms like Camelot or Shangri-la.
Flying is fun and therefore worth doing for the sheer joy
of it, even if you aren’t determined to reach a specific destination. People
seem to be able to fly in just about any manner imaginable, according to the
hundreds of reports we have received. Many people fly “Superman style, “ with
their arms extended in front of them. Also common is “swimming” through the
air, probably because the closest experience we get to flying in the air is
“flying” in the water. Others sprout wings from their backs or their heels,
flap their hands, or straddle jet-powered cereal boxes, or flying carpets, or supersonic
easy chairs.
One way to challenge yourself and to begin to fly is to
jump off tall buildings or cliff’s. Uncontrolled falling is a common theme of
nightmares, and the following anecdote suggests the potential usefulness of
lucid dream flying for overcoming this terror:
My attempts at flying lucidly were the most interesting
adventures I’ve had in lucid dreams. I have a great fear of heights, so falling
in dreams, while not nightmarish, is common for me. I always wake up before I
land. But attempting the exercise I read in your article, I flew over places
which would have terrified me in a dream before— open water, snowy mountains.
One night I was soaring in outer space and coming back
to earth. No fear involved. But coming eventually to a small ledge in a
mountain, I was afraid to land and almost woke up. Using your techniques
(especially spin-ning), I forced myself to deliberately land on the very edge.
I could see the mountains below, feel the cold, even smell the fresh air. It
was really a great feeling to know I could not be hurt; because if I started to
fall, I could just fly away again. (N.
C.,
I gained conscious control in one of my dreams. I took
a bicycle ride because I decided I’d like to broaden my sensual experience. As
I pedaled, I called out the senses: Hearing! And / heard my own heavy
breathing. Smell! And I smelled a whiff of cigarette smoke. I touched a big,
rough-barked tree, heard the flapping of sparrow wings, saw much greenery, felt
the handles of the bicycle. My senses were so alive, just as good as if I were
awake. Yet I knew I was dreaming. This excited me incredibly! I pedaled
furiously to get back, to wake up, but I woke up feeling refreshed. (L. G.,
Most people are astonished to discover that they are
dreaming. The astonishment stems from the realization that they have been
fooling themselves in a colossal way. It is definitely a surprise, especially
the first time, to learn that your normally trustworthy senses are reporting to
you an absolutely flawless portrayal of a world that doesn’t exist outside the
dream. Indeed, one of the most common features of first lucid dreams is a
feeling of hyperreality that happens when you take a good look around you in
the dream and see the wondrous, elaborate detail your mind can create.
First-time lucid dreamers often note a marked, pleasurable
heightening of the senses, particularly the sense of vision. Hearing, smell,
touch, taste can intensify instantly, as if you had found the volume control
knob for your senses and turned it up a notch. Give it a try. Play with your
senses, one at a time, as you explore the dream world. During daily life, we
all have very good reasons for tuning out our senses so we can concentrate on
getting our jobs done. In your dreams, however, you can learn how to turn them
back on again.
Senses are marvelous instruments for providing data about events inside and outside our bodies. Our brains structure this data into the models of the world we experience. We have all learned how to think, perceive, believe, and model the world in a certain way, and the greatest part of this learning took place when we were infants. The world-modeling process was automatic long before we were able to think about it. Therefore, it comes as a surprise when we discover in lucid dreams that the drama we perceive as real might only be a kind of stage set, and all the people in it but mental constructions. However, once we get used to the notion, it is natural and empowering to begin to take conscious control of our senses in the dream state.
The dream television
In the early 1980s, continuing his dual role as lucid
dream explorer and researcher, Alan Worsley developed an interesting series of
“television experiments.”14 In his lucid dreams he finds a
television set, turns it on, watches it, and experiments with the controls to
change such things as the sound el and the color intensity. Sometimes he
pretends that the TV responds to voice control, so that he can ask it questions
and request it to display various images. Worsley reports that “I have
experimented with manipulating imagery, as if I were learning to operate by 1
an internal computer video system
(including ‘scrolling, ‘ ‘panning, ‘ changing the scene instantly, and
‘zooming’). Further, I have experimented with isolating part of the imagery or
‘parking’ it, by surrounding it with frame such as a picture frame or
proscenium arch and backing away from it (‘windowing’).”15
EXERCISE: THE DREAM TELEVISION
Before bed set your
mind to remember this experiment When you achieve lucidity, find or create a
large, ultra-high resolution, total surround sound television set. Make
yourself comfortable. Turn it on. Find the volume, brightness, and color
saturation controls and slowly experiment with them. Turn the sound up and
down. Tweak the color. When the picture is right, imagine the smell of your
favorite food wafting right out of the picture tube. If you are hungry, allow
it to materialize. Savor a sample. Conjure up velvet pillows and satin
pajamas. Give all the senses a workout. Observe what is happening in your mind
as you adjust the color or contrast control on your world-modeling television
monitor.
I dreamed of falling down the side of a building, and
as I fell I knew I was still unprepared to face the fall, so I changed the
building to a cliff. I grabbed onto foliage and shrubs that grew down the side
and began climbing down confidently. In fact, when someone began falling from
above me, I caught him and told him to think of footholds and plants to support
him because “it’s only a dream and you can do what you want in it.” And I enjoyed
a totally new excitement and headiness of purposely facing danger and risk. It
was a deeply gratifying and proud moment in my life. (T. Z.,
In this dream I was at my mother’s house and heard
voices in another room. Entering the room, I realized without a doubt I was
dreaming. My first command was ordering the people in the room to have a more
exciting conversation, since this was my dream. At that moment they changed
their topic to my favorite hobby. I started commanding things to happen and
they did. The more things began to happen, the more I would command. It was a
very thrilling experience, one of the most thrilling lucid dreams I’ve had,
probably because I was more in control and more sure of my actions. (R. B.,
Two weeks ago I had a dream of being pursued by a
violent tornadic storm. I was on a cliff high above an open expanse of beach
and had been teaching others to fly, telling them that this was a dream and in
a dream all you have to do to fly is believe you can. We were having a great
time when the storm appeared, coming in from the ocean. Tornados and I go way
back in dreams. They are some of my pet monsters of the mind.
When this one appeared, it was announced by exceptionally
strong winds and lightning and high waves. A young boy, a puppy, and I were
together for some time running and seeking shelter, but then we stopped, poised
on the very edge of the last great cliff before the open sea. Panic was
bringing me close to the point of losing lucidity. But then I thought, “Wait!
This is a dream. If you choose, you can keep on running. Or you can destroy the
tornado or transform it. The storm has no power to hurt the boy or the puppy.
It is you it wants. Anyway, no more running. See what it is like from within.”
As I thought this, it was as though some exceptional force lifted the three of
us, almost blurring our forms as we were pulled toward the tornado. The boy and
puppy simply faded out about midway. Inside the storm there was a beautiful
translucent whiteness and a feeling of tremendous peace. At the same time it
was a living energy that seemed to be waiting to be shaped and at the time was
capable of being infinitely shaped and reshaped, formed and transformed over
again. It was something tremendously vital, tremendously alive. (M. H.,
Taking action in dreams can mean many things—you can
command the characters, or manipulate the scenery in the examples quoted above,
or you can decide to explore part of the dream environment, act out a
particular scene, reverse the dream scenario, or change the plot Although, as
explained above, the greatest benefit from lucid dreams may come not from
exercising control over the dreams, but from taking control of your own reactions
to dream situations, experimenting with different kinds of dream control can
extend your powers and appreciation of lucidity. Paul Tholey mentions several
techniques for manipulation of lucid dreams: manipulation prior to sleep by
means of intention and autosuggestion, by wishing, by inner state, by means of
looking, by means of verbal utterances, with certain actions, and with
assistance of other dream figures. 16
Chapter 3 showed how intention and autosuggestion can
influence lucid dreams. Manipulation by wishing is amply illustrated by
oneironauts who transport themselves and change the dream world simply by
wishing it; to happen. Manipulation by inner state is particularly interesting.
Tholey says this about it, referring to his own research findings: “The
environment of a dream is strongly conditioned by the inner state of the
dreamer. I the dreamer courageously faced up to a threatening figure, its
threatening nature in general gradually diminished and the figure itself often
began to shrink. If the dreamer on the other hand allowed himself to be filled
with fear, the threatening nature of the dream figure increased and the figure
itself began to grow.”17
Manipulation by means of looking plays an important part
in Tholey’s model of appropriate lucid dream activities. He cites his own
research in support of the hypothesis
that dream figures
can be deprived of their threatening nature by looking them
directly in the eye. Manipulation by means of verbal utterances is explained
thus: “One can considerably influence the appearance and behavior of dream
figures by addressing them in an appropriate manner. The simple question ‘Who
are you?’ brought about a noticeable change in the dream figures so addressed.
Figures of strangers have changed in this manner into familiar individuals.
Evidently the inner readiness to learn something about oneself and one’s situation
by carrying on a conversation with a dream figure enables one to... achieve in
this fashion the highest level of lucidity in the dream: lucidity as to what
the dream symbolizes.”8
Spinning, flying, and looking at the ground are examples
of manipulation by certain actions: these are actions that stabilize, enhance,
or prolong lucidity. Other dream figures may be able to help you manipulate
dreams to find answers, resolve difficulties, or just enjoy yourself.
Reconciling with threatening dream characters can help you to achieve better
balance and self-integration. This application of lucid dreaming is a key topic
in chapter 11.
On a more basic level, to get the most out of lucidity you
need to know how to get around in the dream world. For many lucid dream
applications, you may wish or need to find a particular place, person, or
situation. One way to achieve this is by willing yourself to dream about your
topic of choice. This is often called “dream incubation.” It is a timeless procedure
used throughout history in cultures that consider dreams valuable sources of
wisdom.
In ancient
Dream temples are probably not necessary for dream
incubation—although they certainly would have helped sleepers focus their minds
on their purpose. This is the key: make sure you have your problem or wish
firmly in mind before sleeping. To do this, it is helpful to arrive at a simple
sin phrase describing the topic of your intended dream. Because for the
purposes of this book, you are trying to induce lucid dreams, you need to add
to your focus the intention to become lucid in the dream. Then you put all of
your mental energy into conceiving of yourself in a lucid dream about the
topic. Your intention should be the last thing you think of before falling
asleep. The following exercise leads you through this process.
EXERCISE: LUCID DREAM INCUBATION
1.
Formulate your intention
Before bedtime, come up with a single phrase or question
encapsulating the topic you wish to dream about: “I want to visit
2. Go to
bed
Without doing anything else, go immediately to bed and
turn out the light.
3. Focus on
your phrase and intention to become lucid
Recall your phrase or the image you drew. Visualize
yourself dreaming about the topic and becoming lucid in the dream. If there is
something you want to try in the dream, also visualize doing it once you are
lucid. Meditate on the phrase and your intention to become lucid in a dream
about it until you fall asleep. Don’t let any other thoughts come between
thinking about your topic and felling asleep. If your thoughts stray, just
return to thinking about your phrase and becoming lucid.
4. Pursue your intention in the lucid dream
Carry out your intention while in a lucid dream about your
topic. Ask the question you wish to ask, seek ways to express yourself, try
your new behavior, or explore your situation. Be sure to notice your feelings
and be observant of all details of the dream.
5. When you
have achieved your goal, remember to awaken and recall the dream
When you obtain a satisfying answer in the dream, use one
of the methods suggested earlier in this chapter to awaken yourself.
Immediately write down at least the pan of the dream that includes your
solution. Even if you don’t think the lucid dream has answered your question,
once it begins to fade awaken yourself and write down the dream. You may find
on reflection that your answer was hidden in the dream and you did not see it
at the time.
Creating new settings
Dreams of this degree of lucidity also let me change
the shapes of objects or change locations at will. It’s lovely to watch the
dream images sort of shift and run like colors melting in the sun until all
you have all around you is shifting, moving, living color/energy/light—I’m not
sure how to describe it—and then the new scene forms around you from this dream
stuff, this protoplasmic modeling day of the mind. (M. H.,
Another way to dream of particular things is to seek them
out or conjure them while you are in a lucid dream. In other literature about
dreams you may find some objections to the notion of deliberately influencing
the content of dreams. Some believe the dream state to be a kind of
psychological “wilderness” that ought to be left untamed. However, as discussed
in chapter 5, dreams arise out of your own knowledge, biases, and expectations
whether or not you are conscious of them. If you consciously alter the elements
in your dream, this is not artificial; it is just the ordinary mechanism of
dream production operating at a higher level of mental processing. Dreams can
be sources of inspiration and self-knowledge, but you can also use them to
consciously seek answers to problems and fulfill your waking desires. Changing
dream scenes at will can also help you to get acquainted with the full
illusion-creating power at your disposal. Seeing that the world around you can
switch from a
The increased sense of mastery over the dream gained by
knowing that you can manipulate it if you wish will give you the confidence to
travel fearlessly wherever the dream should take you. Your power here is
precisely as large as you imagine it to be. You can change the color of your
socks, request a replay of the sunset, or segue to another planet or the Garden
of Eden, simply by wishing. Here are a few exercises you can experiment with in
trying to direct your dreams. Not much is known about the best way to achieve
scene changes in dreams, so take the following exercises as hints and then work
out your own method.
In my dream-spinning experiment, I wanted to go to the
setting of a book I’m reading. I wanted to solve the mystery in the book. I
reached my target. I started at the point the book began, met the characters in
proper sequence, and when I went to the point in the book where I was with
another character in the book who is a wizard, he took a running start, leaped
off a mountain fortress wall, and turned into a hawk, thereby escaping his
enemies. I also jumped off the wall and changed into a hawk. I dressed and
spoke in the manner of the characters and took an active part in solving the
mysteries in the book.
(S. B.,
Spinning during the course of a lucid dream may do more
for you than merely prevent premature awakening. It may also help you visit any
dream scene you like. Here’s how to do it.
EXERCISE: SPINNING A NEW DREAM SCENE
Before going to sleep, decide on a person, time, and place
you would like to “visit” in your lucid dream. The target person and place can
be either real or imaginary, past, present, or future. For example, “
Write down and memorize your target phrase, then vividly visualize
yourself visiting your target and firmly resolve to do so in a dream tonight.
It’s possible that
just by the intention you might find yourself in a nonlucid dream at your
target. However, a more reliable way to reach your target is to become lucid
first and then seek your goal. When you are in a lucid ream at the point where
the imagery is beginning to fade and you feel you are about to wake up, then
spin repeating your target phrase until you find yourself in a vivid dream
scene—hopefully your target person, time, and place.
EXERCISE: STRIKE THE SET, CHANGE THE CHANNEL
Think of this as the opposite of the kind of magical transportation
involved in spinning and flying. Instead of moving your dream self to a new,
exotic locale, simply change the environment of your dream to suit your fancy.
Start with a small detail and work up to greater changes. Change the scene
slowly then abruptly, subtly then blatantly. Think of everything you see as
infinitely malleable “modeling clay for the mind.” Some oneironauts have
elaborated on Alan Worsley’s example of the dream television. When they want to
change the scenery, they imagine that the dream is taking place on a huge,
three-dimensional television screen and they have the remote control in their
hand.
I dreamed that I was at a party recently and having a
boring time when / stood back from the dream and knew it was a dream. I then
had a great time projecting myself into being whoever was having fun. At first
I just tried being women, but then I said, it’s a dream, why not be a man and
see what that feels like? So I did. (B. S.,
In waking life we are used to restrictions. For almost
everything we do, there are rules about how to act, how not to act, and what it
is reasonable to try. One of the lost commonly quoted delightful features of
lucid dreaming is great, unparalleled freedom. When people realize they are
dreaming, they suddenly feel completely unrestricted, often for the
first time in their life. They can do or experience anything.
In dreams you can experience sensations or live out
fantasies that are not probable in the waking state. You can get intimately
acquainted with a fantasy figure. But you could also become that figure.
Dreamers are not limited to their accustomed bodies. You can appreciate a
beautiful garden. Or you can be a flower. Alan Worsley has experimented with
bizarre things like splitting himself in half and putting his hands through
his head. 19 Many oneironauts pass through walls, breathe water,
fly, and travel in outer space. Forget your normal criteria; seek the kinds of
things you can only do or be in dreams.
A few years back I was trying to lose weight. I would
dream that I was in a grocery store, bakery, or restaurant, and food was
everywhere. I was conscious that I was dreaming and therefore could eat
whatever I wanted. I proceeded to pig out on the feast before me, even tasting
the food. These dreams would satisfy my craving to gorge myself. I would wake
feeling satisfied—not full, but satisfied—and if during the day I got the urge
to eat something I shouldn’t I just thought, “I’ll eat it tonight in my dream,“
and I did! (C. C.,
I always wanted to dance professionally, mostly ballet.
My mother, however, always discouraged it because of the hard work and hard
life that went along with it. Eventually, I just gave up and never did take it seriously. However, the desire never left and I would
have wonderful experiences with it in my dreams and would try new moves or
steps that I saw or learned of but could obviously do nothing with except in my
dreams. (B. Z.,
The wish-fulfillment aspect of dreams is deeply embedded
in our colloquial speech: we speak of “the man of your dreams, “ or “your dream
house, “ and we say “may your fondest dreams come true.” These metaphors show
that in our hearts we know that dreams are different from the waking world in
at least one important sense—in dreams you can live your wildest fantasies, see
your most delightful wishes fulfilled, and experience perfection and joy even
when these satisfactions are not possible in your waking life.
In dreams Cinderella can be with her prince and prisoners
can conjure sweet freedom; the crippled can walk and the aged can be as young
as they like—everyone can feel fulfilled, no matter how impossible their wishes
may seem in waking life. The experience of wish fulfillment is not the same as
actually living out the same scenarios waking life, yet the sensations are no
less intense and pleasurable when you know it is “only a dream.” As the
psychologist Havelock Ellis said, “Dreams are real while they last, can we say
more of life?”1 When you are beginning to shape your dreams, wish
fulfillment is a natural thing to pursue. Joyous flights through beautiful
countryside, wild lovemaking with your heart’s desire, sumptuous feasting,
thrilling runs down ski slopes, acts
of power and achievement, and any other pleasant experiences that you can
imagine are possible in the lucid dream state. One of psychologist Ken Kelzer’s
lucid dreams provides a vivid illustration of the joys of lucid dreaming:
... I have been
dreaming for a long time, and now I see myself lying on a brass bed in what
looks like an old hotel. Now I stretch
out my body full length and to fly. My feet stick out through the bars at the
foot
of the brass bed, and without any effort or intention
my part, I lift the bed up off the floor. Soon the bed and I are flying
together around the room as I seek a way to explore all the rooms in this huge
hotel. Suddenly, I realize I am dreaming, and I feel exhilarated as the
familiar, light-headed tingling sensations begin... I begin to sing, “Beautiful
dreamer, wake unto me, Starlight and dewdrops are waiting for thee.” I deeply
enjoy this song, and I sing it with my heart wide open. As I sing, I hear the
gentle tinkling of a music box. The music box plays “Beautiful Dreamer” in
perfect accompaniment to my voice, its modulations, its pacing and its rhythms,
as I sing the words over and over. I feel how wonderful it is to be lucid
again, and I realize that “Beautiful Dreamer” is the perfect theme song for
me...
Now I see many beautiful colors and lights flashing
about me. I see hundreds of rainbow droplets, tiny little spectrums, floating
and spiraling circles of white light, and many small, shiny objects of art
swirling everywhere. I feel very uplifted as I enjoy this dazzling display of
music, light and color. It is a fantastic feast for the senses, a miniature
psychedelic light show, though much more delicate, sensuous and uplifting than
any that I have ever seen.... 2
Go ahead and indulge yourself in these joys, if you wish
It’s good for you. Having fun just for the sake of it is| beneficial in several
ways. Psychologists and physicians are finding that daily pleasure and
enjoyment are go for your health. Educators are also realizing that when tasks
are fun, they are easier to learn.
Robert Ornstein and David Sobel recently published a book
entitled Healthy Pleasures, which discusses myriad ways that pleasure is
good for your health. 3 They claim that our innate desire to seek
pleasure and persist in activities that feel good helps us to live longer and
happier lives. The healthiest people seem to be those who enjoy pleasure, seek
it out, and make it for themselves. Some of the benefits attributed to
indulging in pleasurable and sensual experiences are lowered blood pressure,
de-eased risk of heart disease and cancer, improved immune function, and
lowered sensitivity to pain. Some people may protest that they do not have time
to have fun. But as long as you have time to sleep at night, you have time to
enjoy yourself in your dreams. By learning to have lucid dreams, you open for
yourself a limitless amusement park full of all the delights you can imagine.
Admission is free, and there are no lines!
If you take some time to play and take pleasure in your
lucid dreams, you can learn to become more proficient at lucid dreaming. Once
you have learned to have lucid dreams whenever you like, you will possess a
means of improving your life in many ways. The chapters that follow will
discuss how you can use lucid dreaming to help you learn other skills, overcome
fears, increase your mental flexibility, and find ultimate fulfillment. But the
it way to attain the ability to use lucid dreaming for “serious” tasks may be
to start off by using lucid dreams to have a great time. When lucid dreaming is
easy and fun for you, then your dreams will be ideal environments learning and
practicing for waking life, Wish fulfillment may be the ultimate use that many
people will make of their lucid dreams, and their lives be richer for it. But
that doesn’t have to be the end journey. Many of you will want to go deeper,
and higher to gain greater understanding of the dream state, and apply lucidity
to problem solving and other practical purposes. However, until you satisfy
your urge to pursue the impossible made possible, you are likely to find
yourself distracted from more sublime pursuits by your baser impulses. This is
one more reason why you should not hesitate to give in to your hedonism and
curiosity when you are first learning to have lucid dreams.
My ability to achieve orgasm is highly vulnerable to
stress and anxiety. Recently, during a period of several months of nearly
constant anxiety, I seemed to have lost the ability to climax. I knew it wasn’t
related to my feelings about my partner, or anything he was (or wasn’t) doing.
The frustration ensuing from not being able to achieve sexual release added to
the rest of my general stress. But, then, one night, I had the following dream:
I dreamed I was involved in the plot of a horror film.
It involved a haunted house, or abandoned abbey, where I supposed awful things
were to take place. I walk by what I take to be this haunted building, only it
has been transformed into a large, cheerily lit department store. I think this
is a neat trick; it will attract people whom it can submit to its horrors. I
enter and mill about. Everything looks normal, but I am fearfully looking
everywhere for the incipient danger.
But, then, the thought occurs to me that this is a
nightmare, and therefore I should face anything fearsome. This thought
radically changes my outlook, and with an open and curious attitude I turn to
the scenery, now floating along, looking for challenges and anything
interesting. note that some people are operating a video camera at one side of
the room and that the video screen is on the other side. I am intrigued by the
idea of getting my own image displayed and orient myself in front of the
camera, while looking at the screen. The idea becomes sexual and 1 wish to
display myself on the video screen. At first it is a struggle to get the screen
to display anything other than my back from the waist up, clothed. But,
eventually, I get the right zone on the display and begin to remove jeans. I
begin to experience sexual arousal which intensifies quite rapidly, and within
five seconds I have a wonderful orgasm—the first I’d experienced in two months.
awaken immediately afterward, feeling delightful.
The very evening following this dream I easily experienced
my first waking orgasm in two months. And in the few weeks following, though
the rest of the anxiety-provoking situation remains, I have achieved climax
whenever I desired. (A. L.,
l am an inmate confined in a federal prison. When I
read the article about being conscious while in the dream state I became very
interested in it for I was able to do the same thing. I have had such
experiences while dreaming and have loved them. They have at times given me a
way to escape from being confined.
In one such dream I started realizing that if I wanted
to I could control the environment here, for this was created by my
subconscious, therefore subject to my conscious will. I thought for a moment
of what I would like to do. The first thought that came through my mind was the
fact that I had not been with a woman in years and is is what I wanted most,
for even though it was only a beam, everything there was just like here, there
was no difference.
So as I sat there I
looked at these two guys and told them that this was no more than a dream. I
then told
them that I have
been in prison for a while now and that I wanted a woman to have sex with.
Neither of them said anything but looked at me in a crazy way. I then repeated
my desire and began to think upon it. The guy at the table then told me that I
should go into the other room. So I got up, went to the door, and before
entering concentrated on my desire. I was then in the room. There on the bed
was lying a woman who had been in the dream earlier. I took my clothes off and
got into bed with her. Throughout the
entire sexual act I
kept concentrating on keeping in a conscious state of mind, because in previous
such dreams I would panic or lose myself and fall out of the dream. There was
total awareness of every moment of our sexual act, from beginning to end. After
we were finished / rolled over on my side. As my head hit the pillow I felt
that drifting feeling coming over me and realized that I was getting ready to
pass into the blackness that I always find myself in when I leave these types
of dreams and wake up. (D. M.,
In this lucid dream, I am in the French countryside
riding a beautiful horse along with someone I’ve always wanted to meet but
never have (and have lusted after for many years), the actor Michael York. It
is late afternoon, and we have stopped our horses to walk together through
fields of exquisitely perfect and very fragrant flowers, which we can both
smell distinctly. We then have a “flower fight” and fall together into the
softest bed of flowers ever, where we make love, with a cool breeze floating
over us. We ride back to a chateau together on one horse; the other follows by
my verbal command alone.
When we reach the chateau, Michael takes the horses to
the stables and I go upstairs to a huge marble bathroom with a sunken tub
trimmed in platinum fixtures and with a stained glass skylight. As I step into
the perfectly bubbling and heated bathwater, I think of Michael, naked,
walking into the bathroom and joining me, and he appears.
After a long bath, during which we have fallen asleep
in each other’s arms with the water flowing around us, we adjourn to the
bedroom where I once again think of red wine (Margaux ‘73), biscuits and jam,
and it’s there. We are wrapped in soft, white, thick sheets made of heavy silk.
Just as we bring the wine to the bed, I wake up. (I. E.,
As you would expect in a land of complete freedom, sex is
a very common theme in many people’s lucid dreams. According to the
psychologist Patricia Garfield, an experienced lucid dreamer and noted author
of books on dreams, “Orgasm is a natural part of lucid dreaming: my own
experience convinces me that conscious dreaming is orgasmic.” She
reports that two-thirds of her lucid dreams have sexual content and that about
half of these lucid dreams culminate in orgasms that are apparently as good or
even better than in waking life. In Pathway to Ecstasy,
There are both psychological and physiological reasons
why the lucid dreaming state tends to be a hotbed of sexual activity. In terms
of physiology, our research at Stanford has established that lucid dreaming
occurs during a highly activated phase of REM sleep, associated, as a result,
with increased vaginal blood flow or penile erections. These physiological factors
coupled with the fact that lucid dreamers are freed from all social restraint
ought to make lucid dream sex a frequent experience.
These findings imply that lucid dreaming could become a
new tool for sex therapists, and new hope for lose who suffer from some forms
of psychosexual dysfunction (some cases of impotence, premature ejaculation,
difficulty in achieving orgasm, etc. ). Like many new * based on the
discoveries of lucid dreamers, this one us untested and ripe for research.
Nevertheless, it is fairly clear, as shown in the second example given above,
that lucid dreaming can provide a sexual outlet for people confined to prisons,
working in isolation, or whose activities in waking life are limited by a
physical handicap. The significance of dream sex can vary tremendously. For
some, it is just a good time; for others, it means union of opposite parts of
the personality. It may even provide the starting point for speculation, as in
the case of Samuel Pepys, who recounted a dream in his diary entry for
... I had my Lady Castlemayne in my armes and was
admitted to use all the dalliance I desired with her and then dreamt that this
could not be awake, but that since it was a dream, and that I took so much real
pleasure in it, what a happy thing it would be if when we are in our graves...
we could dream, and dream but such dreams as this, that then we should not need
to be so fearful of death, as we are in this plague time.
I am in a garden
and feeling lighthearted and joyous about my ability to fly. I spend much time
performing all manner of aerial acrobatics, and the sense of freedom I am
experiencing is beyond description. I descend then to enjoy the garden at eye
level and realize that I am quite alone in this place. At the moment of this
realization also comes the awareness that I am in fact asleep in my bed and
having a dream. I am fascinated by the seeming solidity of my own body within
this dream and find great amusement in the act of “pinching myself to see if I
am real.” I indeed feel as real to myself as anyone feels to themselves while
awake! I become then quite serious in pondering this matter and take a seat on
a rock at the edge of the garden to think on this. The thought that comes to me
is this: “The degree of awareness one is able to achieve while in a dream is in
direct proportion to the degree of awareness one experiences in waking life.”
I am startled by
the ability to have such a complex and concrete thought within a dream and I
begin to examine the condition of my waking life from a perspective that seems
impossible to do while living in one’s waking life, I am further startled at
being able to do such a thing within a dream and begin to experience some
apprehension over this entire matter. I decide to get up and inspect my
surroundings. I notice that the garden is a stage set. All the flowers are
painted in luminous color and in great detail on freestanding flats. Being an
artist, I am quite taken by the skill inherent in the painting of them. I then
wander ‘”backstage” through a hallway that is papered in red flocked wallpaper.
Still aware that this is a dream I am in,
I was traveling down my local, mountainless, two-lane
highway in broad daylight when it became pitch dark in a split second. I almost
smashed into the rear end of a slow-moving tractor-trailer in front of me. I
followed it awhile up a steeper and steeper mountain. Then, as I glanced to my
right there was the dark outline of another tractor-trailer pulled off on the
right shoulder of the road. As I crept farther down the road, I saw imbedded
lengthwise in the side of the mountain another tractor-trailer. As I took my
eyes off the tractor and glanced at the road ahead, my car bolted forward down
the road alone, and I shot out into the universe at a breathtaking, totally
exhilarating velocity. I knew I was dreaming as I could hear my sleeping
husband breathing beside me and knew my body was on the bed. I was a speck of
light traveling at a tremendous force through space and I was elated. I
shouted, “Yes! Yes!” and I could see 360° around me. Ahead and to the right I
saw our planet bathed in light; to my left and higher still was another bright
spinning globe. Around the middle of the globe, unfolding like a ribbon, were
the most beautiful, bright stained-glass colors pulsating energy, and I became
one with them. Next, from the unfolding ribbon came musical notes which / could
see but not hear. Then came letters of the alphabet in no particular order.
Then numbers, again in no particular order. Finally came symbols: the circle
and the triangle and a few others. Then many I had never seen before.”This is
all the wisdom of the universe, “ was the message I received telepathically. As
I started to go around the curve—in back of the globe—I thought I must be
dying, having a heart attack or stroke (although I felt no pain), and I came
back to my body.
While I was out there I had no feeling of being a wife,
mother, grandmother, retired legal secretary, etc. (which I am). Out there I
was alone, but not alone, like part of a whole. It was warm, still, bright, and
seemed to me to be a whisper of something. I was infinitely more alive there
than I’ve ever felt here, and I’ve always been a very active woman. I wish I
hadn’t been afraid to “round that curve.” (A. F.,
Exploring lucid dreaming offers many delights and rewards.
The worlds of lucid dreams are fascinating, and constantly changing, with many
vistas of breathtaking and unearthly beauty in which the impossible and unexpected
regularly happens. They are at least as interesting and rewarding to explore as
anyplace a waking world traveler might want to visit. In fact, the lucid dream
world offers several advantages: it doesn’t cost anything but a little effort
to get there, and unlike
Lucid dream travel is guaranteed to be safe and for most
people, almost always pleasant. We aren’t saying that lucid dreamers don’t
sometimes face demanding, anxiety-provoking situations, but that while they are
undergoing fully realistic harrowing experiences (for example, being chased by
demons, axe murderers, or other monsters from the id) they are actually safely
asleep in bed. Whatever they do in their lucid dreams, they will soon find
themselves safely returned to the physical world. If, for example, you
unsuccessfully attempt to avoid a dreamed danger, you may awaken in a sweat but
physically unscathed. Even better, if you use your lucidity to help you face
and overcome fears, you will awaken triumphant and inspired.
“Travel broadens the mind” because it brings people into
new and challenging situations outside their normal limited and habitual world.
Lucid dreaming presents many opportunities for broadening the mind. Intrepidly
exploring your dreams with an open mind is bound to enhance your knowledge of
both yourself and others. As Goethe put it, “If you want to know yourself,
observe the behavior of others. If you want to understand others, look in your
own heart.”5 There is much to be learned through lucid dreaming. If
you are sensitive and attentive in your observations, you may discover great
treasure in the course of exploring your dream world—you may even find
yourself.
Another benefit of observant exploration and examination
of dream reality is that it helps you become better acquainted with your
dreams. As a result, you will more easily recognize dreamsigns, which will help
you to become lucid more frequently. Experience will teach you how to avoid
misconceptions about the difference between waking and dreaming. Novice lucid
dreamers often fail to recognize that they are dreaming, because they are
tricked into accepting the “reality” of dream scenes. They appear quite like
ordinary reality to casual observation. The following dream shows how this
tendency caused one of us to fail to become lucid in a dream with an ironic
dreamsign:
Finding myself driving with my father to JFK airport, /
began to wonder what will happen to the car after we park it and fly off to San
Francisco. Then I realized that I had no memory of transporting that car to
By observing while lucid how real the dream world can
appear, you will be less likely to make the mistake of accepting that “seeing
is believing“ and that vividness has anything to do with the reality of an
experience. You will learn instead to distinguish the two worlds by becoming
familiar with the characteristics that make them different—in dreams, all
things are much more transitory than in waking life, physical laws are
frequently broken, dead or imaginary characters appear among the living, wishes
become horses, and beggars do ride.
The first controlled dream I can clearly recall was
when I was five or six. I used to dream that I was flying around the Earth in a
rocket I had made from a garbage can. The bottom was glass and I had a lovely
aerial view of the world as I flew wherever I wanted. When it was time to land (my
rocket was not equipped for landing), during the descent I would tell myself,
“Time to wake up, “ and I’d wake myself up. Though sometimes I would get
perilously close to the ground, I was never afraid of the inevitable crash
because I knew I was dreaming and could wake myself up at any time. I had a lot
of enjoyment from this dream for about six months. (K. M.,
What a wonderful discovery it was when I read an
article about your research on lucid dreaming today! All my life I have flown
throughout many nights and taken wondrous adventures upon the wings of my
imagination while dreaming. I have talked to bears, dogs, raccoons, and owls; I
have swum with dolphins and whales, breathing underwater as if I had gills. (L.
G.,
I’m an astronomer, and I pride myself on my powers of
detailed observation; I would like to add to our knowledge of the sleep state.
I have saved the Earth from nuclear war, the Galaxy from its core exploding,
the Universe from final heat Death. I have inhabited a score other bodies and
personalities, from the distant past the technological future. One of my more
interesting lucid dreams lasted for over five years in the dream time frame,
during which I lived in the far distant future, in a body very different from
my present one. I would actually fall asleep in this “nest” life.
Interestingly, I did not have lucid dreams in this alter life, but each time I
awakened from the “nested” sleep I would become instantly aware that I was
having a lucid dream, and each time / chose to stay in the dream. This was far
in the future, when the moon had broken up to form lovely multicolored rings,
which I would watch with my wife and little girl in the cool evening twilight. (S.
C.,
From fairy tales to fiction, from fantasies to daydreams
(and nightdreams!), the human imagination is a limitless source of adventure.
Great storytellers are rare, but we all seem to have a deep capacity for
appreciating stories and inventing personal ones to fulfill our need for excitement.
James Thurber’s classic tale “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” has provided the
American archetype of the armchair adventurer.
Walter Mitty was meek and undistinguished in the external
world, but in his fantasies he was a hero. Whether or not we are meek in waking
life, we all can be heroes in our dreams. Many people have written to us about
their lucid dream experiences, noting that they began to become conscious of
their dreams as children and used the opportunity to live out high adventures
as knights on horseback, princesses, or space explorers. In this sense, lucid
dreaming can be used as a kind of wish-fulfillment tool for the adventurous at
heart—or for those who would like just a taste of adventure.
Some of our correspondents have written that they have
enjoyed regular nighttime adventures for decades—just as some people can spend
a lifetime enjoying travel stories or science fiction novels or westerns. The
ability to vicariously enjoy the experiences of fictional characters gives us
raw material from which to construct our own adventures. You can start out as
Ivanhoe or Mata Hart and experience for yourself the scenes you have read about
or seen on a movie screen. Unlike a book or a movie, however, your lucid dream
adventure can continue indefinitely, with a new episode each night or each REM
period.
EXERCISE: HOW TO SCRIPT YOUR OWN ADVENTURE
I have always
looked at my dreams as being an ongoing story in which I have cast myself in
the leading role. Things that happen in everyday life or on television or in a
movie are molded into scenes for my “story.” Sometimes it can be a man that I
have met. For the most part, my dreams are made up of situations that I would
really like to happen in real life. (D. W.,
Not uncommonly, oneironauts have reported that they have
consciously scripted, directed, and starred in their own lucid dream
productions. One woman wrote that she even rolled credits at the end and woke
up laughing at her own joke. In writing your own script for adventure, you can
start out with a simple plot. Feel free to borrow from Shakespeare, fairy
tales, or comic books (Superman is a frequent persona adopted in lucid
dreams). Be open to variations. When something new happens, something that
wasn’t in the original script, then follow it and see where it goes. If and
when you grow tired of experiencing known scenarios, sketch out a simple one
of your own while you are awake, concentrate on it before you go to sleep, and
see if you can “produce” it like a “1m when you become lucid.
Here are a few suggested titles for the kind of adventures
you might try when you start. Choose one that appeals to you:
·
Seeker of the Holy Grail
·
Vision quest
·
Astronaut Time traveler
Fantasies and adventures can operate on many levels of the
mind. At the lowest level, they satisfy our needs for excitement and wish
fulfillment. However, they can also help us focus our goals, create futures for
ourselves and the world, and, on the highest level, model the search for truth
and meaning in life. For those of you with an interest in the psychological and
mythological aspects of storytelling who want to put your lucid dream scenarios
to work on a deeper level of adventure, we recommend reading the late
mythologist Joseph Campbell’s book, The Hero With a Thousand Faces. 6
Early in the book,
The standard path of the mythological adventure of the
hero is a magnification of the formula represented in the rites of passage: separation—initiation—return:
which might be named the nuclear unit of the monomyth.”A hero ventures
forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder:
fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won: the hero
comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his
fellow man.”7
You find the same story everywhere you go,
At the beginning of the trilogy, Luke is just an ordinary
boy, unaware that vast forces are about to focus on him. He does not realize
that the appearance of Obi-Wan Kenobe (the wise old man character) signals a
turning point in his life—the “departure” phase that
You may choose to begin your own dream hero’s journey
from familiar territory. Perhaps you will reject the temptation to indulge in
one of your typical lucid dream pastimes, and instead set off in search of new
experience. Your mission might involve the defense of freedom, the discovery of
a legendary land, such as Shambhala or Oz, or the recovery of a magical object,
such as a ring of power.
In
EXERCISE: YOU ARE THE HERO
Think of a hero’s story that appeals to you. You can use
the structure of a classical myth or story, or you may invent your own, based
on the pattern described above. If you want a little vicarious practice before
taking your own journey, immerse yourself in Star Wars, or The Arabian
Nights, or Wagner’s Ring of the Nibeliingen. Examine the characters
and the action as they progress through the stages of the monomyth cycle. You don’t
have to invent elaborate plots or construct dialogue. Simply note possible
scenes in the journey of your chosen hero-identity that fit with this model.
Write them down in simple sentences. Read the script before you go to sleep.
The next time you attain lucidity, remember your script: turn your back on the
familiar, be open to guidance, and begin your quest.
Commentary
On the deepest level,
It was the night before my first 10 km road run and I
was apprehensive. It was my first such race, the course was hilly, and I had
never run on a hill in my life; all my training had been on an indoor track.
That night I dreamed of running on hills using techniques I’d only read about.
I remember knowing I was dreaming during the dream and remarking to myself that
this would give me a chance to learn how to run hills. It worked. During the
actual run the techniques I’d practiced in my dreams felt exactly the same and
worked just as well in reality. B. E.,
When I was about twelve years old, my mother made my
sister and me take tennis lessons one summer. Toward the end of the four weeks
of lessons I found out there would be a tournament and a trophy for the winner.
That night in my dream I realized I was dreaming and I decided to master the
game of tennis. I took what I had seen on TV, on other people’s tennis games
and tried to remember the way they hit and served, etc. By the end of the dream
I was doing pretty good on swinging and incredibly on serving, because with
serving the ball, once you have the technique down it’s really very basic and
repetitious.
When it came to the tournament I beat everyone and
walked away with the trophy. The teacher couldn’t believe how well I played,
and neither could
Authors Charles Garfield and Hal Bennett popularized the
term “peak performance, “ referring to those extraordinary moments when body
and mind seem to operate together at the very top of their capacity. Research
on how to cultivate peak performance suggests that lucid dreaming may prove to
be an ideal training ground, not only for athletics, but also for any area in
which skill can be developed.
Garfield, president of the
Interest in peak performance has spread from sports
psychology to business. Businesses have discovered that mental practice can
boost performance levels on the job as well as on the playing field. Yoga,
breathing, and meditation have been successfully employed for both material
and spiritual achievement. Even greater improvements in performance have
resulted from the use of controlled mental imagery and mental rehearsal. 2
Lucid dreaming is a very powerful type of mental imagery.
Waking mental images are weak sensory impressions that resemble actual
experience but are generally not as vivid. For example, imagine an apple in
front of you. If you are like most people, you can sort of “see” the apple, its
shape, color, and position on the table. You can imagine what it would smell
like if you could pick it up and sniff it, and what it would taste like if you
could bite into it. However, you are not likely to mistake it for a real
apple—if you visualize an imaginary apple next to a real apple, you will know
which one you can really eat. Dreams, however, are mental images of completely
convincing vividness. While in a dream, you may pick up and eat a dream apple
and be absolutely certain that you are really eating an apple. If you become
lucid, you have the power to realize that dream apples, despite their apparent
reality, are not really real—they do not fill your stomach. However, this
realization does not diminish the vividness of the experience.
Dreams are the most vivid type of mental imagery most
people are likely to experience. The more the mental rehearsal of a skill feels
like the real thing, the greater the effect it is likely to have on waking
performance. Because of this, lucid dreaming, in which we can make conscious
use of dream imagery, is likely to be even more useful than waking mental
imagery as a tool for learning and practicing skills.
In the dream I was in a rink with a number of other
People. We were playing hockey and I was skating in the manner I always had,
competent yet hesitant. At that moment I realized I was dreaming, so I told
myself to allow my higher knowledge to take over my consciousness. I
surrendered to the quality of complete skating.
Instantly there was no more fear, no more holding back
and I was skating like a pro, feeling as free as a bird.
The next time I went skating I decided to experiment
and try this surrender technique. I brought back the quality of that dream
experience into my wakened state. I remembered how I was feeling during the
dream and so in the manner of an actor in a role, I “became” the complete
skater once again. I hit the ice... and my feet followed my heart. I was free
on the ice. That occurred about two and a half years ago. I have skated with
that freedom ever since, and this phenomenon has manifested itself in my roller
skating and skiing as well. (T. R.,
While the idea of mental rehearsal as a way of refining
motor skills was once a radical hypothesis, research in this area has now
burgeoned into a rich, interdisciplinary field. Studies have shown that new
skills can be learned to some extent merely by thinking about performing them. 3
Learning improves when mental and physical practice are combined.
How can merely imagining doing something help you to
actually do it better? First of all, remember the laboratory work at Stanford
showing that when people dream of performing an action, such as singing or
engaging in sexual activity, their bodies and brains respond as if they were
actually doing it, except that their muscles remain paralyzed by the REM
process. Apparently, the neural impulses from the brain to the body are still
active and quite similar, if not identical, to those that would accompany the
same acts in waking.
Likewise, researchers of mental imagery have found that
“vivid, imagined events produce innervation in our muscles that is similar to
that produced by the actual physical execution of the event. “4 For
example, Richard Suinn monitored the electrical activity in the legs of a
downhill skier as he mentally relived a race. 5 He found that the
skier’s muscles exhibited activity in a sequence that corresponded to the layout
of the run, showing more activity at times when the skier was imagining
navigating turns and rough sections. Imagery rehearsal may work to improve
motor skills by strengthening the neural pathways used to elicit the patterns
of movement that are required by the skill.
There is, however, an important difference between dreamed
action and imagined action. When we are awake, the neural impulses to the
muscles created by imagining an action must be somehow attenuated to keep us
from acting out what we imagine. If they were not, think what would happen each
time you fantasized doing something—say, on a hot day, while sitting at your
desk, you think how nice it would be to dive into a lake. If the neural
messages caused by your fantasized action were as great as those evoked when
you really intended to dive, you would be likely to break your neck in your
resultant attempt to dive off the desk. While we dream, our muscles are
actively inhibited from moving by the REM process through a different neural
pathway than the one that transmits directions to act. The neural messages to
our muscles in dreams can be as strong as they are when we are awake. The
evidence for the presence of intact, full-strength messages from the brain to
the muscles in REM sleep comes from studies with cats. French researcher
Michel Jouvet blocked the process that causes muscular paralysis during REM in
cats. He found that the cats then moved around in REM, as if they were acting
out their dreams. 6
Thus, lucid dreaming may be more powerful than waking
mental imagery for motor skill enhancement not only because of the vividness of
the imagery, but also because the Physiological nature of REM sleep is ideal
for establishing neural patterns without actual movement. Through imagery, or
lucid dreaming, athletes could even practice performing movements for which
their bodies are not yet physically prepared, setting up neural and mental
models for skills; this way the movement models will be ready when the muscles
are.
Another basis for the usefulness of mental practice is the
idea of “cognitive coding. “ More complicated skills require the construction
of a conscious map of the skill in addition to the establishment of the neural
pathways that facilitate a movement. This is called symbolic learning. 1
Symbolic learning theory proposes that imagery rehearsal can help you to
codify the sequence of movements involved in your skill. For example, a swimmer
might codify the correct sequence for optimally performing the breaststroke by
thinking “pull, breathe, kick, pull, breathe, kick... “ Using imagery, you can
set up symbols in your mind before going through the actual motions—when so
much of your energy may be required to perform the action correctly that you
may not be able to simultaneously analyze its structure. Lucid dreams could
easily be used for this purpose, again because of the vividness of dreamed
experience.
At the age of ten I became the proud owner of a real
Shetland pony for about a year. One little chore that simply defeated me was
trying to cinch up the girthstrap on a saddle. (It is equivalent to learning
how to tie a man’s necktie. ) One night I realized I was dreaming and dreamed
that I was trying to learn this art, and in the dream I studied the
configurations involved and “saw” how to do it. The next day, I walked out to
the barn ana went straight to the saddle and cinched it exactly as I had
learned the night before. Perfectly. (K. A.,
As we mentioned earlier, researcher Paul Tholey, a sports
psychologist, has done pioneering work investigating the use of lucid dreaming
for skill training in sports. 8 Tholey provides several suggestions
on how lucid dreamers can use their dreams to work on motor skills.
He asserts that “sensory-motor skills which have already
been mastered in their rough outlines can be optimized by using lucid dreams.
“ If you more or less know how to swing a bat, jump over a hurdle, or juggle
three balls, then lucid dream practice can help you learn to do it better.
Furthermore, Tholey proposes that new sensorimotor skills
can be learned using lucid dreaming. He cites the experience of a skier as an
example:
Jetting, with its strong shift of the center of gravity
backwards, had always made me so afraid that I constantly fell and came home
to the cabin covered with bruises. When I learned lucid dreaming that following
summer I began to dream about skiing over moguls. I often used the hump to
initiate a flying experience, but at some point I also began to lean back
shortly before the hump, thereby taking my weight off the skis in order to
change direction with my heels. That was a lot of fun and after a few weeks it
became clear to me during lucid dreaming that my movements corresponded to
jetting. When I went on a skiing vacation again the following winter and took a
course, I mastered jetting in one week. I am absolutely convinced that it was
connected to my summer-night exercises. 9
In another example, Tholey quotes a martial arts
practitioner who found it difficult to retrain himself in the soft style of
aikido after years of hard-style karate:
On this particular evening, after still not succeeding
in wearing down the attacker and taking him to the mat, I went to bed somewhat
disheartened. While falling asleep the situation ran through my mind time and
again. While defending myself, the correct balancing movement collided with my
inner-impulse to execute a hard defensive block so that I repeatedly ended up
unprotected and standing there like a question mark... a ridiculous and
unworthy situation for the wearer of a black belt. During a dream that night, I
fell down hard one time instead of rolling away. That day I had made up my mind
to ask myself the critical question in this situation: “Am I awake or am I
dreaming ?” I was immediately lucid.... I went to my Dojo, where I began an
unsupervised training session on defense techniques with my dream partner.
Time and time again I went through the exercise in a loose and effortless way.
It went better every time.
The next evening I went to bed full of expectations. I
again reached a state of lucid dreaming and practiced further. That’s the way
it went the whole week until the formal training period started up again. Even
though I was totally relaxed, I amazed my instructor with an almost perfect
defense. And even though we speeded up the tempo I didn’t make any serious
mistakes. From then on I learned quickly and had received my own training
license after one year. 10
According to Tholey, once a technique or skill has been
learned, lucid dreaming can be used to perfect routines before performance. In
addition, he suggests that athletes, especially those involved in risk-taking
sports, should go a step beyond practicing optimal actions in lucid dreams and
work on acquiring flexibility of action in the face of unusual or stressful
situations. We will discuss the idea of the benefits of mental flexibility in
more detail in chapter 11.
Tholey further hypothesizes that lucid dreaming can affect
performance by improving the psychological state of the athlete: “By changing
the personality structure, lucid dreaming can lead to improved performance and
a higher level of creativity in sport. “11 The key change, in Tholey’s opinion,
is from an “ego-centered personal outlook, “ which he feels leads to a
distortion of perception, to a more flexible, responsive, “situation-oriented
personal outlook. “ The skier who is thinking about beating an opponent is more
likely to lose his balance when he hits an unseen bump than the skier who has
learned to relax, pay attention to the terrain, and react fluidly to the
unexpected. Tholey remarks that this shift from ego-centered to
situation-centered outlook is applicable to the life beyond sports.
EXERCISE: LUCID DREAM WORKOUT
During the day and in the evening before bedtime, think
about the skill you would like to practice in your lucid dreams. Or actually practice
it during the day, and notice the problems you need to work on. Think about
what it would feel like to do it exactly right. If you can, study the
performances of experts or masters in your skill. While practicing, thinking,
or studying, remind yourself that you want to practice in a lucid dream
tonight.
Use your favorite lucid dream induction technique (see
chapters 3 and 4) to stimulate a lucid dream. While practicing the technique,
visualize yourself becoming lucid, and see yourself practicing your sport or
skill. You can also use the lucid dream incubation technique (page 158) to
induce a lucid dream about working out.
Practice! Each moment you execute your skill, concentrate
on achieving perfection. Recall how it looks when a master does your skill, and
try to duplicate what that would feel like as you do it. Lucid dream practice
is ideal for working on the feel of the skill, how it all fits together, and
performing it smoothly.
In a lucid dream you can go beyond what you know you can
do. When you have felt what it is like to perform the skills you know
perfectly, try out more advanced skills, even things you have never tried
before. Remember that you cannot hurt yourself by straining muscles, getting
overtired, or making an error of judgment, because your muscles aren’t actually
moving. You may be able to get the feeling of a new skill in your dream, and
this will prepare you to learn it faster when you are awake.
I have called a
meeting in a conference room. Present are big shots and team colleagues of
mine. I am moderating this meeting, and at the same time I am an observer.
The scene is undisturbed by my omnipresence. As an observer I can watch each
person’s expressions, detect interpersonal nuances, read each person’s
thoughts. I make sure I never interfere with their free will, I want to know
what their reactions are to what the moderator (me again) has to say. As an
observer I can freeze the proceedings and zoom in on an individual and read his
thoughts. As an observer I can wipe out from everyone’s memory one presentation
or words from the moderator and start over with a new opinion.
This can go on indefinitely. Usually it serves me as a
rehearsal for a meeting I’ll have the next day or in a few days. It also gives
me an indication of what someone may ask (so I can do research in advance) or
where loose logic needs to be strengthened. (M. C., West
As a teen I would make myself dream how I would act the
next day in school or any social activities. I won my first tennis tournament
the night before in my dream. I also dreamed myself through several college
interviews before actually going through one. After nursing school, I dreamed
how I would manage a cardiac arrest and most any stressful new thing in my
career. I can make myself dream just about anything that I need to “practice”
before doing it. (C. A.,
Before I went to sleep, I was mulling over ways in
which I could present my internship experience to my class-mates. While
dreaming, and knowing I was dreaming, I wheeled a cart of stuff into the
classroom, set it up, and did a wonderful presentation. I saw overheads
outlining my talk, slides, posters—everything I would need. When I woke up it
was very clear how I should organize and present the material, so I did, and it
went beautifully. (M. K., Wildwood Crest,
These examples show
that lucid dreaming can be used to rehearse for anything in life. Just as with
sports, we can set up patterns of action and behavior in advance that allow us
to perform more smoothly when the time comes for the actual event. We can
rehearse specific anticipated Performances, such as an oral exam, a dance
routine, a meeting with an influential business associate, a surgical
procedure, or a difficult discussion with a loved one. The next section presents another application
of lucid dream practice to your ability to perform.
This dream helped me overcome an irrational fear. My
dream began with me walking up a driveway toward a large white house. There
were dozens of people with candies going in. I did not have a candle and I felt
afraid I would be unable to enter. When I came up to the door I had to squeeze
my way in. Inside the main room were hundreds of people. While standing in line
I noticed a guitar. Although I could play, I was afraid nobody would like my
music. In the back of my mind I realized I was
dreaming and that it was okay to do what I wanted.
Since I had always wanted to play at a party, I went
ahead and picked up the guitar. I was really amazed at how well I could play
the music I wanted and I really enjoyed putting on my impromptu performance.
Many of the people around me said to me how much they too enjoyed my songs. I
felt as if a burden had been lifted. I
then went through the crowd making friends. (J. W.,
Learning a skill is sometimes not enough. Often, you must
learn to perform in front of an audience. Most people are at least a little
nervous about being in front of a group. Many are nearly paralyzed by the prospect
of making a presentation at work or a speech at a testimonial dinner, or of
appearing in a public athletic or artistic performance. We have received quite
a few letters demonstrating that people can conquer this obstacle by
rehearsing performances in dreams, where it is possible for them to let go of
anxiety about the audience because they know it is not composed of real people.
The next exercise will help you do this.
EXERCISE: PLAYING TO THE DREAM AUDIENCE
During the day, think about what you want to do in your
lucid dream. If you can, practice your performance, your concerto, dance,
batting, whatever. As you do so, remind yourself that you want to perform in
front of an audience in your lucid dream tonight. If you can’t practice,
imagine your performance and see yourself performing in a lucid dream tonight.
Use your favorite lucid dream induction technique (see chapters
3 and 4) to produce a lucid dream. When you become lucid, go to the recital
hall or athletic field or meeting room where your feared performance is to take
place. Or use the lucid dream incubation technique (page 158) to create a dream
about your performance. If you can’t get yourself there in the dream, try to
set yourself up to perform right where you are.
Look around at the people in the audience. If they look
unfriendly, remember this is the result of expectations of disaster caused by
your performance anxiety. Smile at the audience and welcome them. If you do
this sincerely, they will almost certainly become friendly and appreciative.
In any case, you don’t need to fear their criticism or what they will
think of you in the morning—after all, they won’t be there. But in your lucid
dream, they can help you perform to your utmost capacity.
Do your act, give your speech, play your piece, or
whatever. Enjoy it!
CommentaryIf you
do the above and still have difficulty with the idea of an audience, try this
variation: Be alone in the performance arena. Concentrate on feeling relaxed
and unpressured. Then think of the ideal nonthreatening person sitting in the
back row—a trusted friend, or maybe yourself. Fill the back row with other
nonthreatening persons. When the house is filled with an appreciative-looking
audience personally created by you, pick up your cello or your tennis racket
and play to your heart’s content.
I am working with my psychiatrist to become more assertive.
In my lucid dreams I am always with a group of people in a room where everyone
seems to be doing or saying exactly what they feel. I am usually sitting back,
not saying much of anything, and feeling very badly inside. Suddenly, I
realize that I am dreaming and I decide to change my behavior in the dream and
say exactly what is on my mind. It’s a little scary doing this because it is
new for me, but at the same time it feels good and makes me feel clearer. I
wake up from these dreams feeling especially good about myself. It shows me
how it feels to act aggressively rather than passively. You can see how these
dreams are allowing me to make progress in my therapy. (K. G.,
The epiphany was a dream that confronted my insecurities
and lack of confidence. Right after a friend of mine died, I had dropped out of
a doctoral program and was convinced there wasn’t anything I could do that was
useful. In the dream, my friend (the one who had died) and I went to another
world to learn about flying. Everyone in this world was flying—animals, men,
women. The landscape was very beautiful, serene, peaceful. My friend told me I
should fly as well and I said that I couldn’t, that this was “his world” and I
couldn’t fly because I wasn’t dead. So he said, “No problem, you just have to
create the solution. “ And then he took
off and I turned to find a booth renting wings for 25 cents. I put the wings on
and leaped off a cliff and was happily flying until I suddenly realized that it
was ridiculous that a pair of cheap rented wings could sustain me. With that
thought, I started plummeting to the ground, screaming. In that moment of panic
I groped for some salvation and thought to myself, “But I was flying just a
moment ago with these wings, “ and was easily aloft again.
This conflict between belief and disbelief, falling and
flying, repeated two more times, until I realized this was a dream and that it
was my belief that I could fly that enabled me to fly—not any artificial
devices or other means of external support. And at that moment I also realized
that this was true in my waking life as well. The dream experience instantly
transposed itself into a gut feeling that if I believed in myself I could do
anything.
The next week, I interviewed for a job. During the
interview, I could see that the person thought I was wrong for the job, and I
was about to give up when I thought about my lesson in self-confidence. I found
myself saying positive things about my resourcefulness and commitment to hard
work. I was hired and became a consultant, ironically, in a field I knew
nothing about. My employer later told me she hired me because I seemed so
positive and confident that she knew I could pick up the technical skills
quickly. (A. T.,
We tend to try only what we think we can do, which is
generally less than we are capable of. Lucid dreaming provides us with one way
of expanding our belief in our own potentials: we can safely test new behaviors
while dreaming, and the increased self-confidence will make it easier to carry
out the same behaviors in waking life.
Albert Bandura, an eminent psychologist at
As we have seen, the observations we make of how things
work in the waking world are projected onto dreams. However, in lucid dreams,
since we know that we are not in the waking world, we are free to consciously
create new models. We can test the results of new kinds of actions, both by
ourselves and by other dream characters. And if we find that the new behaviors
work well, we will add them to our repertoire of possible ways to respond.
For example, if you are usually a timid and shy person, in
lucid dreams you can practice being open and assertive with dream characters.
If you like the results, you will find it easier to do the same while awake.
Even if the results of your dream experiments are not wholly positive, the
practice will probably decrease the effort it takes to apply the new approach
in waking life. You will learn that, even though an experience may not feel
good at the time, you can handle it, and the end result may be an improvement
in your overall situation in life.
As a further hint on how lucid dreams can help us plan our
waking lives, consider this statement from Bandura: “Images of desirable future
events tend to foster the behavior most likely to bring about their
realization. “13 When we conceive of what we would like the future
to bring, what we would like our lives to become, we are preparing ourselves to
attain that future. The act of creating a concrete mental image in which we
see ourselves as happy, or successful, reinforces our intentions to behave in
ways that help us achieve the image in our heads. This is the basis of the
innumerable self-help books and tapes on the market that instruct you to “see
yourself as rich, “ or “visualize yourself being thin. “
Lucid dreams, as extremely vivid mental images, are the
perfect place to set up images of your future success. If you wish to lose
weight, you can dream you are as thin and fit as you like, experience how it
feels to be that way, and increase your motivation to achieve that state in
waking life. Perhaps you want to stop smoking. In a lucid dream you could dream
yourself as eighty years old and healthy, cheerily hiking up a mountainside
without huffing and puffing. This future is not likely to come to Pass if you
continue to smoke, so if you enjoy the hike the dream, you will be encouraged
to break your addiction to cigarettes.
The happy futures you conjure in your lucid dreams can extend beyond your own success and pleasure. Perhaps the more people there are in the world who create potent images of peace and joy for all the inhabitants of Earth, the more likely we will be to survive the current crises of this planet and grow on to achieve the greatest potential of the human race.
Idries Shah refers to a closely related idea in the preface to his Caravan of Dreams; In one of the best tales of the Arabian Nights, Maruf the Cobbler found himself daydreaming his own fabulous caravan of riches.
Destitute and almost friendless in an alien land, Maruf at
first mentally conceived—and then described—an unbelievably valuable cargo on
its way to him.
Instead of leading to exposure and disgrace, this idea was
the foundation of his eventual success. The imagined caravan took shape, became
real for a time—and arrived.
I’m a department store manager in a home furnishings store
at a mall. In the housewares department we do a lot of floor moves—moving
fixtures, relocating mass displays of goods, etc. When the idea comes up
between the store manager, the display manager, and myself that the floor needs
some revamping, I go home, go to sleep, and I will dream of being in the store
by myself. I try doing a floor move. I move fixtures around (always quickly in
the dream, just by a flick of my finger). I know that I’m in the dream and I
want to find the troublesome merchandise that’s always difficult to display and
find a place for it in my dream. I always remember these dreams. Actually, it
is a joke at work because it has happened often. (J. Z.,
I’m working on my car and try to repair something complicated
and finally at
In the fall of 1986, while I was taking chemistry, I
began to solve problems while sleeping. The majority of these problems were
molecular equations involving two compounds and 4-6 elements. I would realize
that I was dreaming and proceed to work out the problem, breaking it down to an
ionic equation. If you have done this type of problem, you can understand the
difficulty involved. Every time I would be almost done with the problem, the
scene would begin to fade and I would have to reinduce lucidity. I did this by
shaking my head or spinning. After strengthening the lucid dream, I would have
to rewrite the problem and do it again, only faster. Upon awakening, I would
simply write it down and check it. My dream answers were correct 95 percent of
the time. What was great about solving problems this way was that I usually
woke up with a better understanding of the processes involved. I had about
five dreams of this type a week. (K. D.,
Throughout recorded history, dreams have been regarded as
a wellspring of inspiration in nearly every field of endeavor—literature,
science, engineering, painting, music, and sports.
Well-known examples of dream-inspired figures from
literature include Robert Louis Stevenson, who attributed many of his writings
to dreams, including The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde; and
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his opium-dream poem, “Kubla Khan. In science there
is Friedrich Kekule’s dream discovery of the structure of the benzene molecule,
and Otto Loewi’s dream-inspired experiment demonstrating the chemical mediation
of nerve impulses. In the field of engineering, there are several instances of
inventions revealed in dreams, including Elias Howe’s sewing machine. Painters
such as William Blake and Paul Klee have also attributed some of their works
to dreams. Composers, including Mozart, Beethoven, Wagner, Tartini, and
Saint-Saens, have credited dreams as a source of inspiration. In sports, one of
the most familiar cases is master golfer Jack Nicklaus, who claimed to have
made a discovery in a dream that improved his game by ten strokes-overnight!
These examples and those quoted at the beginning of this chapter should make
clear the remarkable creative potential of dreams. 1
Given that dreams are such fertile fields for inspiration,
why is there not yet a school of dreaming in the Western world? The answer may
lie in the fact that dreams are unpredictable. Though a great breakthrough may
appear in a dream, rarely can an artist or thinker decide, ‘Tonight I will
find the solution to my problem. “ Dream incubation techniques are one step
toward deliberately Accessing the creativity of dreams. Since the age of
Eqyptian civilization, people have used dream incubation to try to induce
dreams about the problem they are trying to solve. A more efficient method,
however, may be to seek answers to problems in lucid dreams. One can try
to incubate a lucid dream on the problem, or once in a lucid dream
intentionally turn one’s will toward the question mind. Instead of waiting for
the muse to visit, the artist can call on her.
The examples above suggest a very wide range of potential
applications, from car repairs to painting to mathematics. We believe you can
learn from the experiences of others how to use the creative potential of your
lucid dreams to solve problems and invoke inspiration. Once researchers have
investigated creativity in dreams more thoroughly they should be able to give
you more precise guidance in how to use your sleeping time to solve problems
and be creative. Meanwhile here are some ideas
I discovered in
high school that I was a lucid dreamer when I learned that I could study
complicated mathematical and geometry problems before going to bed and
discovered that I was able to solve the problems when I awakened.
This phenomenon followed me through college and medical
school. When I was in medical school, I began to apply my sleep-solving
abilities to medical problems, quickly running through the questions of the day
and usually finding useful solutions or useful additional questions in the
process (even today I will occasionally wake up at 3: 00 in the morning and
call the hospital to order a special laboratory test on a problem patient, the
possible solution of which had occurred to me in a lucid dream).
At this point, the greatest use to which I have been
able to put this facility is in the practice of surgery. Each night before
retiring I review my list of surgical cases and I actually practice these cases
in my sleep. I have gained a reputation for being a rapid and skilled surgeeon
with almost no major complications. This surgical “practice” has allowed me
from the very beginning to constantly review the anatomy and to refine and
polish technique by eliminating unnecessary motions. I am presently able to
perform most major complex procedures < 35 percent to 40 percent of the time
taken by most off my peers. (R. V.,
With both my husband and myself finishing college in
May, we can now think about starting a family. Lately, I have been concerned
with names for babies. During this latest lucid dream I talked with Robert, my
husband, about names I liked. (Of course, he agreed with me on my favorite
names because I wanted it that way. ) I even dreamed that I borrowed a baby to
try out the names. I took the baby to both sets of parents and reran the same
scene over and over. Mom and Dad, this is Chris. “ “Mom and Dad, this is
Justin, “ etc. This went on and I watched for my parents’ reaction to the
names. Finally, I settled on a boy’s and a girl’s name. When I awakened, after
having another dream, I couldn’t remember the two names I had felt so good
about during the earlier dream. I thought about it all day long, but couldn’t
remember them. That night I started another lucid dream and stopped it in the
middle. I remembered that in the “name dream” I had told a girlfriend the two
names, so I called her in the dream and asked her. She told me. I woke myself
up immediately and said the names over and over out loud. Now I remember the
names. (L. H., Hays,
Creativity means different things to different people.
Some people may find the word threatening, because we are often taught that
creativity is a rare talent that only artists really know how to use. However,
all creativity means is the use of the imagination to produce some new thing
from a work of art to a homework paper. We can’t help being creative. The
essence of creativity is the combination of old ideas or concepts into a new
shape. Each sentence we speak, if it is not a direct quotation, is creative.
How creative a thing or act is depends on the uniqueness of the use of the
elements involved. What makes high creativity so elusive is that, in general,
we do not know how to evoke the state of mind in which we can easily make new,
unique, and useful associations between ideas. The key issue in creativity
research is to discover a means of readily accessing such states of mind at
will. Dreams can be a fabulous source of creativity. An introduction to what is
currently known about the creative process will help you understand why.
There are degrees of creativity, just as there are of
lucidity. Like the ability to solve problems, creativity is a universal human
capacity. As explained earlier, this ability is not restricted to the fine arts
or to any formal discipline; it can be applied to anything that can be done
innovatively, imaginatively, flexibly, spontaneously.
Everybody is creative at one time or another, and some
people are creative a lot of the time. As the psychotherapist Carl Rogers put
it: “The action of the child inventing a new game with his playmates; Einstein
formulating a theory of relativity; the housewife devising a new sauce for the
meat; a young author writing his first novel; all of these are, in terms of our
definition, creative.... “2 Creativity researchers agree that
creative expression is a process. Inspirations often seem to appear suddenly,
out of nowhere, in a flash of illumination. However, there is evidence that the
“sudden” realization is only the part of the process that emerges above the
threshold of awareness. While analyzing his own discoveries, the great
nineteenth-century German scientist Hermann Helmholtz first described the
stages of the creative process: saturation, incubation, and illumination.
In the saturation stage, problem solvers gather information
and try different approaches without complete success. These preparations might
consist of reading, talking to experts, observing, recording, photographing, or
measuring. The problem solvers then think about the problem—concentrate,
meditate, model it in their minds, review the research. This is the point at
which the mechanic stares at an engine, the painter at a blank canvas, the
writer at an empty page (or computer screen). At the end of this stage, the
problem solver says to himself or herself, “Okay, I’ve studied the problem.
I’ve thought about it. I’ve looked at it. Now, what’s the answer?”
The next stage is to do nothing. Incubation begins when a
problem solver gives up actively trying to solve the problem, handing it over
to the realm of the unconscious. Many creative dreamers in the historical
literature have decided at this point to take a nap. Other problem solvers
have incubated their solutions while taking a drive or a long walk. If they
have studied enough, analyzing the right aspects of the problem, and if they
have fostered the right psychological conditions for the emergence of a
creative solution, the incubation phase will then give birth to illumination: “
A good example of illumination in a dream, born out by
verification while awake, comes from Nobel Prize winner Otto Loewi. As the
physiologist recounted the story, he had a hunch early in his career about the
nature of the nerve impulse but forgot about the idea for seventeen years,
because he couldn’t think of an experiment to test his hypothesis. Nearly two
decades later, he had a dream which presented him with the method of successfully
testing his theory. According to Loewi’s account:
I awoke, turned on the light, and jotted down a few
notes on a tiny slip of thin paper. Then I fell asleep again. It occurred to me
at
Loewi eventually won the Nobel Prize for proving that
chemicals assist in the transmission of information through neurons.
The above discussion of the creative process, while noting
that the illumination would come if the thinker had fostered the right
psychological conditions for creativity, left open the question of what those
conditions might be. A few researchers have made a start on this question by
exploring the notion that different kinds of knowledge seem to be accessible
from different states of consciousness.
Elmer and Alyce Green, biofeedback researchers at the
Menninger Foundation, examined physiological aspects of the relationship
between creativity and conscious states. By measuring the bodily processes of
people involved in the different stages of creative problem solving, the
Greens were able to make strong correlations between the illumination phase
and at least one physiologically distinguishable state of consciousness. They
wrote:
The entrance, or key, to all these inner processes [is]
a particular state of consciousness in which the gap between conscious and
unconscious processes is voluntarily narrowed, and temporarily eliminated when
useful. When that self-regulated reverie is established, the body can
apparently be programmed at will, and the instructions given will be carried
out, emotional states can be dispassionately examined, accepted or rejected, or
totally supplanted by others deemed more useful, and problems insoluble in
the normal state of consciousness can be elegantly resolved. 4
The state of consciousness the Greens refer to is not
lucid dreaming but the hypnagogic or reverie state. Nevertheless, their
conclusions would seem to apply even more precisely to the lucid dreaming
state, in which the conscious and unconscious minds meet face to face.
Carl Rogers also looked at the relationship between creativity
and psychological states. In On Becoming a Person, he proposed that
three psychological traits are especially conducive to creativity. 5
The first trait, openness to experience, is the opposite of psychological
defensiveness, or rigidity about concepts, beliefs, perceptions, and
hypotheses. It implies tolerance of ambiguity and the ability to process
conflicting information without finding it necessary to either believe or disbelieve
it. As you have seen, the very act of becoming lucid in a dream requires the
ability to process the conflicting, ambiguous, and often improbable information
presented by the dream flexibly enough to come to the unusual conclusion that
your experience in the dream is illusory. So, once you have succeeded in become
lucid, the trait of openness to experience is already prepared for you.
The second trait is possessing an internal source of
evaluation. This means that the value of the creative person’s product is
established not by the praise or criticism of others, but by the individual.
This could be nowhere more true than in the lucid dream, where the dreamer is
responsible for creating and evaluating the entire experience.
The final trait postulated to be conducive to creativity
by
The most important idea behind our belief that lucid
dreaming can help boost the illumination phase of the creative process is the
concept of “tacit” knowledge. The things you know that you know and can spell
out explicitly, such as your street address or how to tie your shoe, are called
“explicit” knowledge. Tacit knowledge, on the other hand, includes what you
know but can’t explain (how to walk or talk), and what you know but don’t
think you do (say, the color of your first-grade teacher’s eyes). This latter
form of knowing is demonstrated by recognition tests in which individuals think
they are only guessing but in fact do better than chance would allow.
Of the two kinds of knowledge, the tacit variety is by far
the more extensive: we know more than we realize. In dreams we have greater
contact with our tacit knowledge than we do while awake. If you remember your
dreams, you can surely recall having had one in which the likeness of a person
whom you have met only once was reproduced with amazing detail in comparison to
any description you could have made of him or her while awake. The explanation
for this phenomenon is our access to tacit knowledge in dreams. In dreams we
have conscious access to the contents of our unconscious minds. Therefore, in
our dreams we are not limited, as we are while awake, to working with only that
tiny portion of our accumulated experience to which we normally have conscious
access.
Without lucidity, it seems we have no way to determine
when, or even if, a creative dream might occur. However, through lucid dreaming
we may be able bring the extraordinary creativity of the dream state under
conscious control. Consider this next example, in which an oneironaut managed
to find a specific piece of tacit knowledge in the form of a book. In this
instance, the dreamer did not find the specific solution in the dreamed book,
but upon awakening he did find it in the real book. The knowledge discovered in
this case was that this book contained a clue to the problem—a good example of
something you can know without knowing you do:
I recently
pulled second place in a math competition. When I received a copy of the
problems (five in all), I spent most of the day mulling over various
approaches. When I went to sleep that night, I dreamed lucidly of looking
through a particular math reference book I own. I don’t think I dreamed of
reading anything in particular in the book, just the act of flipping through
it. Subjectively, the dream was only a couple of seconds long. When I woke, I
didn’t have an opportunity to look through the book until that evening. When 1
did, 1 discovered the trick I needed to solve one of the problems. (T. D.,
If our hypotheses about creativity in dreams are true—that lucid dreams permit deliberate access to a wide store of knowledge, and that dreams themselves are conducive to creativity—then how can a lucid dreamer make use of Potential? For a hint, take another look at the examples of lucid dreams quoted at the beginning of this chapter. The floor manager dreamed of a dream model store, filled with the items to be displayed. The person who solved automobile repair problems did so by the elements of the problem into his dream and manipulating them until a solution emerged. The chemistry student simply continued working on problems as I he would while awake. The following letter is an example of another kind of mental model building, in which the lucid dreamer was I able to model a highly abstract concept (note that the dreamer had already been through the preparation and incubation phases):
A little over a year ago, I was in a linear algebra
class that introduced me to vector spaces. I was having a lot of trouble
understanding the topic on more than a superficial level. After about a week of
serious studying, I had a lucid dream about an abstract vector space. I
perceived directly a four-dimensional space. The dream did not have a visual
component, but such abstract dreams are not uncommon for me. The best I can
describe that dream is to say that I perceived four coordinate axes that were
mutually perpendicular. Since that night, both math and dreaming have been more
fun for me, and I’ve had relatively little trouble understanding vector space
calculus. (T. D.,
A computer programmer uses her mind’s logical processes to
model the function of her programs while lucid:
I have had programs to write for a class and before I
write them on the computer, I test my way of solving the program during a lucid
dream. I have found that many of my ideas wouldn’t work, or needed something
additional. This has saved me many hours of programming outside of class. I
actually run my programs in my mind before I ever sit down at the computer. (L. H., Hays,
The use of lucid dreams to create mental models of problem
situations is the basis of the exercises that follow. Mental modeling methods
can also be useful to artists.
Fariba Bogzaran, artist and dream researcher, uses her
lucid dreams to discover the subject of her forthcoming works. She becomes
lucid anytime she enters an art gallery in her dreams. In her dream gallery
she finds an art piece that she wishes to bring into the waking world. She
carefully observes the medium, texture, and color of the piece. To ensure that
she remembers her lucid dream and can later reproduce the artwork, she fixes
her gaze on the art object until she awakens (as described in chapter 5). In
1987 she had a lucid dream that inspired her to learn paper marbling:
l am in an art studio teaching a class. One of the
students calls me over to look at his work. As I approach, I become aware that
I am dreaming. I stand still and look around the room. The art medium looks
very unfamiliar to me. I see two water trays with different colors floating on
top of the water. Next to the tray I see many small jars with a variety of
colors in them. I take a closer look at the art work—close enough to touch the
paper. At this point I realize that this must be the marbling technique...
I recorded the dream right away and made a sketch of
the marbled paper which the student created in the dream. My curiosity about
this medium led me on a search for a teacher who could instruct me in this
beautiful art technique.... Thereafter, marbling became the medium for my
self-expression. 6
One of the most frequent problems we face in everyday life
is decision making. Lucid dreaming can help us arrive at informed decisions, as
in the following example:
I have been
wrestling with the decision to buy a new, double-wide mobile home and then
whether or not I
should keep my old
one and rent it out. That was what I decided to do, after months of worry and
thought.
Then, Sunday night I went to bed. I was asleep but I
was awake (that sounded demented until I read your article). I was at a big
table, kind of like a desk, there were papers before me and though I saw no
one, someone answered my questions from over my shoulder... in my dream the
problem was all laid out neatly and orderly, the pros and cons of my decisions
were examined. I asked questions, I got answers. I woke up an hour after going
to bed and knew what I was going to do about the entire problem. Not only was I
sure of what I was going to do I (buy a new home, and sell the old), but I was
so comfortable with the decision! It was like I had talked to someone with
great authority, someone who knew my needs, my insecurities and capabilities. (K.
A.,
This discussion has mentioned two primary approaches to
deliberately utilizing the creativity of dreams. One is to seek the answer to
your problem once you are in a lucid dream. The other is to incubate a dream
about the problem and include in your incubation a reminder to become lucid in
the dream.
Lucidity, though not absolutely necessary for creative
dreaming, offers important advantages. Once you learn how to have lucid dreams
frequently, you can have a creative dream whenever you wish, just by acting on
your desire to seek an answer or create in your next lucid dream. Of course,
the age-old method of dream incubation may help you find answers in nonlucid
dreams, but even here lucidity can help.
If you use incubation to stimulate a lucid dream about a
particular topic, then your lucidity will give you the power to act freely and
consciously, knowing you are dreaming. You could incubate a dream of visiting
an expert on your difficulty or of a place you are thinking of moving to. Or
with another kind of problem you could incubate a dream in which you try a new
way of dealing with someone in your life. Being lucid in the dream allows you
to reflect on exactly why you are there: to ask Einstein a question about
physics, to explore San Francisco and see if you would like to live there, to
look in libraries for stories to write, or to try being warm and supportive to
your child instead of overcritical. Without lucidity, you might forget your
purpose.
Another way lucidity can add to the usefulness of creative
dreams is by ensuring that you are aware that you are dreaming and that you
must be careful to do all you can to recall the dream upon awakening. In
nonlucid dreams, even ones of great potential value, there is always a risk
that you may forget. Fariba Bogzaran is able to use her intentional focusing
technique, which brings her to full awakening with her art image clearly in
mind, because she is aware that she is dreaming. The following exercises
include an instruction to help you remember to awaken from your creative lucid
dreams while your answer or inspiration is still vivid.
Before going to bed, choose a problem you’d like to solve
or a creative breakthrough you would like to make. Frame your problem in the
form of a single question. For example, “Which investments should I make?” or
“What will be the theme of my short story?” or “How can I meet interesting
people?” Once you’ve selected a probem question, write it down and memorize it.
Use the lucid dream incubation technique (page 158) to try
to evoke a dream about your question.
Once in a lucid dream, ask the question and seek the
solution to your problem. Even if you became lucid in a dream that doesn’t
exactly address your problem, you can still seek the answer. You can look for
or conjure up the person or place you need, or seek your solution where you
are. It may help to question other dream characters, especially if they
represent people who you think might know the answer. For example, if you were
trying to solve a physics problem, Albert Einstein might be a good person to
ask in your dream. To visit an expert advisor, try using the spinning a new
dream scene exercise (page 161). Or simply explore your dream world with your
question in mind, while remaining openly receptive to any clues that may
suggest an answer. Remember that you unconsciously know many more things than
you imagine; the solution to your problem may be among them.
When you obtain a satisfying answer in the dream, use one
of the methods suggested in chapter 5 (or your own) to awaken yourself.
Immediately write down at least the part of the dream that includes your
solution. Even if you don’t think the lucid dream has answered your question,
once it begins to fade awaken yourself and write down the dream. You may find
on reflection that your answer was hidden in the dream and you did not see it
at the time.
I do this
frequently. 1 have a certain computer program to design. At night I will dream
that I am sitting in a parlor (an old-fashioned one that Sherlock Holmes might
use). I’m sitting with Einstein, white bushy hair—in the flesh. He and I are
good friends. We talk about the program, start to do some flowcharts on a
blackboard. Once we think we’ve come up with a good one, we laugh. Einstein
says, “Well, the rest is history. “ Einstein excuses himself to go to bed. I
sit in his recliner and doodle some code in a notepad. Then the code is all
done. I look at it and say to myself, ‘ 7 want to remember this flowchart when
1 wake up. “ I concentrate very hard on the blackboard and the notepad. Then I
wake up. It is usually around 3: 30 a.
m. I get my flashlight (which is under my pillow), get my pencil and
notepad (next to my bed), and start writing as fast as I can. I take this to
work and usually it is 99 percent accurate. (M. C., West
It might be possible to build a mental model not of a
specific problem, but of a workshop for solving all manner of problems or
stimulating creative breakthroughs, We’ve already seen evidence for the
potential of this approach in the lucid dream garage implied by the mechanic, in
the parlor equipped with Albert Einstein and blackboard used by the computer
programmer, and in her creative dreams in which the lucid dreamer created tools
and situations applicable to the problem. Remember the fairy tale about the
cobbler and the elves did his work while he was sleeping? At least one -known
man of letters, the writer Robert Louis Stevenson created his own dream
workshop replete with assistants—his
“brownies, “ as he called them,
who helped him produce many of his most famous works. Stevenson remarks on his
dream helpers:
The more I think of
it, the more I am moved to press upon the world my question: Who are the
people? They are
near connections of the dreamer’s beyond doubt; they share in his financial
worries and have an eye to the bankbook... they ! have plainly learned like him
to build the scheme of a considerable story and to arrange emotion in
progressive order; only I think they have more talent; and one thing is beyond
doubt, they can tell him a story piece by piece, like a serial, and keep him
all the while in ignorance of where they aim. Who are they then? And who is the
dreamer?7
Stevenson was not explicit about whether his brownies were
characters of lucid dreams. It appears from his reports that they were mental
images that appeared during lucid hypnagogic reverie. The technique the writer
used was to lie in bed with his forearm perpendicular to the mattress. He found
that he could drift easily into his familiar fantasy workshop, and if he fell
into a deeper sleep, his forearm would fall to the mattress and awaken him.
Stevenson credited his brownies with coming up with the plot for his famous
story, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Here are some ideas for building a lucid dream workshop of
your own. You will need an inspiring environment, gifted helpers, powerful
tools. The first step is to create the environment. If you feel you need
magnificent surroundings, you can create them. If the atmosphere you seek is
that of a starving artist in a garret, so be it. If you are a computer
programmer, you can seat yourself at your ultimate “dream computer. “You can
create a “fortress of solitude” on an uninhabited planet or surround yourself
with companions. Give your rooms doors and windows into other dimensions where
help might be found. After initially creating your workspace in a lucid dream,
each time you visit it you can add finishing touches: put treasure chests,
reference libraries, or workbenches into your structure—whatever you might
possibly need to inspire and empower your creative work.
When you are satisfied with your environment, enlist
helpers—experts, teachers, assistants, wizards, consultants, muses, galactic
councils. If you want to learn to Paint, summon Rembrandt. Go fishing with
Hemingway Hesse and talk about that novel you’ve always wanted write. Ask your
helpers to get you started on your specific problem or creative challenge.
Build or conjure tools—an idea machine, or a magical paintbrush. If this
exercise works for you, don’t forget to return to your workshop every once in a
while. Your mental model grow increasingly capable of empowering your
creativity. The more problems you solve there, the more inspirations you find
there, the more power the workshop will have for you.
I began to try to recognize my dreams as products of my
mind, even as I dreamed them. The breakthrough came one night soon after a
nightmare. I decided I could not live fully while I let my fears roam about on
their own power, so to speak. I entered the dream state determined not to
yield. I had read somewhere that a fear could only be dissipated by
friendliness and trust. Anger, threats, aggressiveness were out. These
reactions were actual fearful reactions. So I made up my mind to be friendly.
The dream evolved, and I barely had time to remind
myself to smile before the nightmare began. This time it was an almost childish
nightmare, in which my collective fears took the shape of a large, nebulous but
very scary monster. I quailed and almost turned tail, but by sheer will (I was
really scared) I stayed and let it approach. I said to myself “it’s my dream,
and if I forget this, have to go through it again, “ and I smiled as sincerely
as I could. What’s more, I spoke as calmly as I could, a step since waking or
sleeping terror leaves me speechless.
I said
something like “I’m not afraid. I want to be friends. You’re welcome to my
dream!” and almost as
soon as I said it, the monster became friendly,
delightedly so. I was ecstatic. Needless to say, I awoke quickly, still saying
“I did it!” (T. Z.,
I know that I can change a frightening situation in a
lucid dream, so I don’t let myself get scared or panic. I never run away from
things or persons in my dreams anymore. And the strange thing is that in waking
life I don’t run away either, anymore. I face things head on and don’t drag
situations out forever. My lucid dreams have changed the way I look at life.
People think I’ve changed through the years, but the fact is that this is the
real me coming out. (V. F.,
Nightmares are terrifying dreams in which our worst fears
are brought to life in fully convincing detail. Whatever horror you personally
believe to be the worst things that could happen, these are the most likely
subjects of your nightmares. All people, in every age and culture, have
suffered from these terrors of the night. People’s understanding of the
origins of nightmares has varied as much as their understanding of dreams. In
some cultures, nightmares have been the true experiences of the soul wandering
another world as the body slept. To others, have been the result of the
visitation of demons, Indeed, the word nightmare comes from the
Anglo-Saxon for goblin or incubus. (An incubus is a demon who comes in the
night to steal the sexual favor of ladies; its female counterpart is the
succubus.)
In Western culture today, most people are content to say of
nightmares that they are “only dreams, “ meaning they are imaginary and of no
consequence. Thus, when a business executive awakens with his heart pounding
from a dream of being pursued by zombies through the jungle, he is grateful to
be able to recite the comforting refrain, “Thank God, it was only a dream, “
get a glass of water, and return to bed. However, when just a few minutes
before the stinking corpses with eyes like pits to hell were breathing down his
neck, the executive had no doubts about their reality. The zombies may have
been imaginary, but the terror was real. So, to lightly dismiss the real terror
of horrific dreams as illusory is an error that leaves us with no choice but to
submit ourselves again and again to the greatest fear we are likely to ever
experience.
What gives nightmares their special terror? In dreams,
anything is possible. This limitlessness can be wonderful, since it allows us
to experience delights of fantasy and pleasure unachievable in waking life.
However, turn over the stone, and anything you can imagine that you would not
like to experience, however unlikely in waking, can happen as well.
In nightmares we are alone. The terrifying worlds we
create in our minds are populated with our personal fears. We may dream that we
are accompanied by friends, but if we doubt them they can just as easily turn
into fiends. If we run from an ax-wielding maniac, he can find us no matter
where we hide. If we stab a devil with a knife, he may not even notice, or the
knife may turn to rubber. Our thoughts betray us; if we think, I only hope he
doesn’t have a gun—lo! he has a gun. It is no wonder we are grateful to return
from nightmares to the relative sanity and peace of the waking world.
Thus, it is understandable that people who realize they
must be dreaming in the midst of nightmares frequently choose to wake up.
However, if you become fully lucid in a nightmare, you will realize that the
nightmare can really hurt you, and you don’t need to “escape” it by awakening.
You will remember that you are already safe in bed. It is better, as discussed
below, to face and overcome the terror while remaining in the dream.
Studies show that one-third to one-half of all adults experience
occasional nightmares. A survey of college students found that almost
three-quarters of a group of 300 had nightmares at least once a month. In
another study, 5 percent of college freshmen reported having nightmares at
least once a week. 1 If this rate applies to the general population,
then we might find that more than ten million Americans are plagued by wholly
realistic horrifying experiences every week!
Some factors that seem to contribute to nightmare frequency
are illness (especially fever), stress (caused by such situations as the
difficulties of adolescence, moving, and hard times at school or work),
troubled relationships, and traumatic events, such as being mugged or experiencing
a serious earthquake. Traumatic events can trigger a long-lasting series of
recurrent nightmares.
Some drugs and medications can cause an increase in nightmares. The reason for this is that many drugs suppress REM sleep, producing a later effect of REM-rebound. If you go to sleep drunk, you may sleep quite soundly but dream little, until five or six hours into sleep. Then, the alcohol’s effect has mostly worn off and your brain is prepared to make up for the lost REM time. As a result, you will dream more intensely than usual for the last few hours of your sleep time. The intensity is reflected in the emotionality of the dream, which often will be unpleasant.
There are a few drugs that seem to increase nightmares increasing the activity of some part of the REM systems. Among these are L-dopa, used in the treatment of Parkenson’s disease, and beta blockers, used by people with some heart conditions. Since research has shown that lucid dreams tend to occur during periods of intense REM activity, I believe that drugs that cause nightmares may also facilitate lucid dreaming. 2 This is a topic I plan to research in years to come. I think that whether intense REM period leads to dreams that are pleasantly exciting or terrifying depends on the attitude of the dreamer.
Thus, it is to the dreamer’s attitude that I think we
should look in seeking a treatment for nightmares. For example, people rarely
experience nightmares in the sleep laboratory, because they have a feeling of
being observed and cared for. Likewise, children who awaken from nightmares and
crawl into bed with their parents feel safe from harm and thus are less likely
to have more bad dreams.
I believe the best place to deal with unpleasant dreams is
in their own context, in the dream world. We create our nightmares out of the
raw material of our own fears. Fears are expectations—why would we fear something
we thought would never happen? Expectations affect our I waking lives, but even
more so, they determine our dream lives. When in your waking life you walk down
a dark street, you may fear that someone will threaten you. However, for some
dark figure to actually leap out at you ! with a knife depends on there really
being some knife-bearing thug hiding in an alley nearby waiting for a victim.
On the contrary, if you dream of walking down a dark street, fearing
attack, it is almost inevitable that you will be attacked, because you can
readily imagine the desperate criminal waiting for you. But if you had no
thought that the situation was dangerous, there would be no thug, and no
attack. Your only real enemy in dream is your own fear.
Most of us harbor some useless fears. Fear of speaking in
public is a common example. In most cases, no harm will result from giving a
speech, but this fact does not prevent many people from being as frightened of
public speaking as they would be of a life-threatening situation. Likewise, to
be afraid in a dream, while understandable, is unnecessary. Even when fear is
useless, it is still quite unpleasant and can be debilitating. An obvious way
to improve our lives is to rid ourselves of unnecessary fear. How is this done?
Research on behavior modification treatment for phobias
shows that it is not enough for a person to know intellectually that the object
of their fear is harmless. Snake phobics may “know” perfectly well that garter
snakes are harmless, but they will still be afraid to handle one. The way to
learn to overcome fear is to face it—to approach the fearsome object or
situation little by little. Each time you encounter the feared thing without
harm you learn by experience that it cannot hurt you. This is the kind of
approach we propose for overcoming nightmares. Many anecdotes demonstrate that
the approach is effective and can even be used by children.
None of our proposed treatments for nightmares require
that you interpret the symbolism of the unpleasant images. Much fruitful work
can be accomplished in dreams by working directly with the images. Waking
analysis (or interpretation while in the dream) may help you understand the
source of your anxieties but will not necessarily help you outgrow them. For
instance, consider again the fear of snakes. The classical interpretation of
snake phobia is that it is a disguised anxiety about sex, especially regarding
the male member, and in fact most snake phobics are women. A much more
plausible biological explanation is that humans come into the world prepared to
learn to fear snakes, because avoiding venomous snakes has obvious survival
value. However, providing this information doesn’t cure the phobia. What does
help, as mentioned above, is for the phobic to become accustomed to
dealing with snakes. Likewise, dealing directly with dream fears, learning they
cannot harm us, can help us to overcome them.
According to Freud, nightmares were the result of masochistic wish fulfillment. The basis of this curious notion was Freud’s unshakable conviction that every dream represented the fulfillment of a wish. “I do not know why the dream should not be as varied as thought during the waking state, “ wrote Freud, tongue-in-cheek. For his own part, he continued, “I should have nothing against it.... There is only a trifling obstacle in the way of this more convenient conception of the dream; it does not happen to reflect reality. “3 If for Freud, every dream was nothing but the fulfillment of a wish, the same thing must be true for nightmares: the victims of nightmares must secretly wish to be humiliated, tortured, or persecuted.
I do not see every dream as necessarily the expression of
a wish; nor do I view nightmares as masochistic wish fulfillment but rather as
the result of maladaptive reactions. The anxiety experienced in nightmares can
be seen as an indication of the failure of the dreamer to respond effectively
to the dream situation.
Anxiety arises when we encounter a fear-provoking situation against which our habitual patterns of behavior are useless. People who experience anxiety dreams nee a new approach for coping with the situations represented in their dreams. This may not be easy to find if the ore results from unresolved conflicts which the dreamer does not want to face in waking life. In severe cases, it may be difficult to treat the nightmare without treating personality that gave rise to it. But I believe that qualification applies mainly to chronically maladjusted personalities. 4 For relatively normal people whose nightmares are not the result of serious personality problems, lucid dreams can be extremely helpful. However, if you are to benefit from our method of overcoming nightmares, you must be willing to take responsibility for experiences general and, in particular, for your dreams.
To illustrate how lucidity can help you work through
anxiety-provoking situations, consider the following analogy- The nonlucid
dreamer is like a small child who i terrified of the dark; the child really
believes there are monsters there. The lucid dreamer would perhaps be like an
older child—still afraid of the dark, yet no longer believing that there are
really monsters out there. This child might be afraid, but he or she would know
that there was nothing to be afraid of and could master the fear.
Anxiety results from
the simultaneous occurrence of two conditions: one is fear in regard to some
(possibly
ill-defined) situation
we find threatening; the other is an uncertainty about how to avoid an unfavorable
outcome. In other words, we experience anxiety when we are afraid of something
and have nothing in our behavioral repertoire to help us overcome or evade it.
Anxiety may serve biological function: it prompts us to scan our situations
more carefully and reevaluate possible courses of action in search of an
overlooked solution to the situation—in short, to become more conscious. 5
When we experience
anxiety in our dreams, the most live response would be to become lucid and face
the
situation in a creative
manner. In fact, anxiety seems to result spontaneously in lucidity fairly
frequently (for example, in a quarter of the sixty-two lucid dreams I had first
year of my records). 6 It may even be the case that anxiety in
dreams would always lead to lucidity for people who are aware of this
possibility. With practice, dream anxiety can become a reliable dreamsign, no
more dangerous than a scarecrow, pointing to where you need to do some repair
work. There is no cause for fear in dreams.
In the midst of a lucid dream I saw a series of
gray-black pipes. Out of the largest pipe emerged a black widow [spider] about
the size of a cat. As I watched this black widow, it grew larger and larger. However,
as it was growing I was not the least bit afraid and I thought to myself “I am
not afraid” and I made the black widow vanish. I was very proud of my
achievement since I had always been terrified of black widows. The earliest
nightmare I can remember was about a large black widow that I couldn’t escape.
For me, black widows were a very strong symbol of fear itself. (J. W.,
About twenty-six years ago I realized that the monster
in my nightmares couldn’t really hurt me. I told it I wasn’t afraid anymore and
it changed into a toothless, whimpering witch and went away. Yesterday I read
the article about your work in Parade magazine, and last night the monster
returned. This time, knowing I was dreaming, I enjoyed the intricacy of detail,
changing from one revolting, menacing shape to another, second by second. I
remember the black kitten you had described from one of your dreams and I told
it to smile. I was stunned as I watched the bulging eyes recede, the snarling
mouth try to relax into a smile. It didn’t know how. The shark teeth changed
into horse teeth and it beamed. It was the silliest damn thing I ever saw, and
I woke up laughing my head off. I feel like a sixty-seven-year-old kid with a
new toy. (L. R.,
“There is no cause for fear, “ wrote the Sufi teacher
Jalaludin Rumi seven centuries ago. “It is imagination, blocking you as a
wooden bolt holds the door. Burn that bar.... “7 Fear of the unknown
is worse than fear of the known, and this seems nowhere more true than in
dreams. Thus, one of the most adaptive responses to an unpleasant dream
situation is to face it, as can be seen in the following account of a series of
nightmares experienced by the nineteenth-century lucid dream pioneer the Marquis
d’Hervey de Saint-Denys:
I wasn’t aware I was dreaming, and I thought I was
being pursued by frightful monsters. I was fleeing through an endless series of
interconnecting rooms, always experiencing difficulty in opening the dividing
doors and closing them behind me, only to hear them opened again by my hideous
pursuers, who uttered terrible cries as they came after me. I felt they were
gaining on me. I awoke with a start, bathed in sweat.
... I was all the more affected on waking because, when
this particular dream came upon me, I always lacked, through some curious twist
of fate, that consciousness of my state that I so often had during my dreams.
One night, however, when the dream returned for the fourth time, at the moment
my persecutors were about to renew their pursuit, a feeling of the truth of the
situation was suddenly awakened in my mind; and the desire to combat these
illusions gave me the strength to overcome my instinctive terror. Instead of
fleeing, and by what must indeed under the circumstances have been an effort of
will, I leaned against the wall and resolved to contemplate with the closest
attention the phantoms that I had so far only glimpsed rather than seen. The
initial shock was, I confess, strong enough; such is the difficulty that the
mind has in defending itself against an illusion that it fears. I fixed my eyes
on my principal attacker, who somewhat resembled the grinning, bristling demons
which are sculpted in cathedral porticos, and as the desire to observe gained
the upper hand over my emotions, I saw the following: the fantastic monster had
arrived within several feet of me, whistling and cavorting in a manner which,
once it had ceased to frighten me,
appeared comic. I noted the claws on one of its paws, of which there were seven,
very clearly outlined. The hairs of its eyebrows, a wound it appeared to have
on its shoulder and innumerable other details combined in a picture of the
greatest precision—one of the clearest visions I have had. Was it the memory
of some Gothic bas-relief? In any case, my imagination added both movement and
colour. The attention I had concentrated on this figure had caused its
companions to disappear as if by magic. The figure itself seemed to slow down
in its movements, lose its clarity and take on a wooly appearance, until it
changed into a kind of floating bundle of rags, similar to the faded costumes
that serve as a sign to shops selling disguises at carnival time. Several
insignificant images appeared in succession, and then I awoke. 8
That seemed to be the end of the marquis’s nightmares.
Paul Tholey also has reported that when the dream ego looks courageously and
openly at hostile dream figures, the appearance of the figures often becomes
less threatening. 9 On the other hand, when one attempts to force a
dream figure to disappear, it may become more threatening, as in the following
case of Scott Sparrow’s:
I am standing in the hallway outside my room. It is
night and hence dark where I stand. Dad comes in the front door. I tell him
that I am there so as not to frighten him or provoke an attack. I am afraid for
no apparent reason. I look outside through the door and see a dark figure which
appears to be a large animal. I point at it in fear. The animal, which is a
huge black panther, comes through the doorway. I reach out to it with both
hands, extremely afraid. Placing my hands on its head, I say, ‘You’re only a
dream. “But I am half pleading in my statement and cannot dispel my fear.
I pray for Jesus’ presence and protection. But the fear
is still with me as I awaken. 10
Here the dreamer uses his lucidity to try to make his
frightful image disappear. There is little difference between this and running
from dream monsters. If, upon reflection, Sparrow had recognized that a dream
panther could not hurt him, the thought alone should have dissipated his
anxiety. Fear is your worst enemy in dreams; if you allow it to persist it will
grow stronger and your self-confidence will diminish.
However, many novice lucid dreamers may at first tend to
use their new powers to find more clever ways to escape their fears. This is
because of our natural tendency to continue in our current frame of mind. If,
in a dream in which you are fleeing from harm, you realize you are dreaming,
you will still tend to continue escaping, even though you should now know that
there is nothing to flee from. During the first six months of my personal
record of lucid dreaming, I occasionally suffered from this sort of mental
inertia until the following dream inspired a permanent change in my lucid
dreaming behavior:
I was escaping
down the side of a skyscraper, climbing like a lizard. It occurred to me that I
could better escape by flying away, and as I did so, I realized that I was
dreaming. By the time I reached the ground, the dream and my lucidity faded.
The next thing I knew I was sitting in the audience of a lecture hall,
privileged to be hearing Idries Shah (an eminent Sufi teacher) comment on my
dream. “It was good that Stephen realized he was dreaming and could fly, “Shah observed
with a bemused tone, but unfortunate that he didn’t see that since it was a
dream, there was no need to escape. “
I would have had to be deaf not to get the message. After
this dream lecture, I resolved to never use my lucidity to avoid unpleasant
situations. But I wasn’t going to be content to passively avoid conflicts by
doing nothing. I made a firm resolution regarding my lucid dreaming behavior:
anytime I realized I was dreaming, I was required to ask myself the following
two questions: (1) Am I now or have I been running away from anything in the
dream? (2) Is there now or has there been any conflict in the dream? If the
answer was yes to either, then I was honor-bound to do everything I could to
face whatever I was avoiding and to resolve any conflict. I have easily
remembered this principle in almost every subsequent lucid dream and have
attempted to resolve conflicts and face my fears whenever it was called for.
“Escaping” from a nightmare by awakening only removes you
from the direct experience of the anxiety-provoking imagery. You may feel a
certain relief, but like the prisoner who digs through his prison wall and
finds himself in the cell next door, you haven’t really escaped. Moreover,
aware of it or not, you are left with an unresolved conflict that will
doubtless come back to haunt you some other night. In addition, you may have an
unpleasant and unhealthy emotional state with which to start your day.
If, on the other hand, you choose to stay in the nightmare
rather than waking from it, you can resolve the conflict in a way that brings
you increased self-confidence and improved mental health. Then when you wake up
you will feel that you have freed some extra energy with which to begin your
day with new confidence.
Lucid dreaming gives us the power to banish the terror of
nightmares and at the same time to strengthen our courage—if we master our fear
sufficiently to recognize our most disturbing images as our own creations and
face them.
My first experience of this terror of being awake but
not in control of my body was when I was young, sick with a fever, and in my
mother’s bedroom. I saw a black shadow pass the window, enter the room and try
to take the covers off of me. Inside I was screaming and frantic, outside I knew
that nothing was happening. I was dreadfully scared of people coming in
through that window, and this somehow helped me realize that it was a black
shadowy figure, not a person. I fought it off and woke up. In the past year I
have had a repeat of that dream complete with the feeling of flesh on my
shoulder—I was terrified. Also recently, in another such dream, something
awful was trying to kill me. I remembered something my husband had told me
he’d done in the same situation when he was dreaming, so I turned and faced the
“thing, “ and essentially challenged it to go ahead and kill me, asserting thai
I was not afraid. I felt strongly that it could not hurt me if I put out my
strength and began summoning up an image of goodness and purity (God) and praying.
The “thing” was defeated and I woke up feeling very good. (K. S.,
The experience of sleep paralysis can be terrifying, as in the example above. In a typical case, a person awakens, but then finds he cannot move. It may feel like a great weight is holding him down and making it difficult to breath. Hallucinations may appear, often loud buzzing noises, vibrations in the body, or people and threatening figures nearby. The dreamer may feel things touch his body, body distortions, or “electricity” running inside him. As the experience progresses, the surroundings may begin to change, or the person may feel he is leaving his body, either by floating up or by sinking through the bed. Quite often, the dreamer knows the experience is a dream but finds it very difficult to awaken.
The probable cause of sleep paralysis is that the mind
awakens, but the body remains in the paralysis state of REM sleep. At first,
the dreamer actually perceives the environment around him, but as the REM
process takes over again, strange things begin to occur. Anxiety seems to be a
natural concomitant of this physiological condition, and it is worsened by the
dreamer’s feeling that he is awake, his belief that these peculiar things are
really happening, and the sensation of being unable to move. If the dreamer
goes more completely into REM sleep, he loses the awareness of his body, which
causes him to feel paralyzed. At this point, he may experience the sensation of
“leaving his body, “ as his mental body image is freed from the constraints of
perceptual input from his actual body. 11
Sleep paralysis experiences are likely to be the cause of
some of the strangest night phenomena, such as visitations by demons, incubi,
and succubi, and out-of-body experiences. They don’t need to be terrifying,
however, if you reflect as they are happening that they are dreams and that
none of the bizarre events are dangerous. People in these states commonly try
to cry out for others to awaken them, or to force themselves to move in order
to awaken. This usually only makes matters worse, however, since it increases
their feelings of anxiety. Anxiety itself may help to perpetuate the condition.
A better approach is to (1) remember it is a dream and therefore (harmless,
and (2) relax, and go with the experience. Adopt an attitude of intrepid
curiosity. Dreams that proceed from paralysis experiences are often quite
intense and wonderful.
I was on top of a mountain at the edge of a cliff. I
seemed to be a prisoner of two guys who had a dog and a lion with them. I felt
they were going to throw me off the cliff, so I rushed them and knocked the two
guys off the cliff along with the lion, but I went over too, into the water. I
was all right and now my hands were free. I swam to the side and started to
climb up the mountain but the lion was in front of me and he was angry because
I pushed him into the water. He would not let me up, so I tried to scare him by
throwing water and rocks at him. He just got angrier. He started to get closer
to me and I moved back into the water. He started to roar and jumped in after
me, but I jumped to the rocks. Now I was on my back and knew I couldn’t get
away, so I faced him, and as he attacked I said, Come on. “ I put my hands out
and suddenly I realized I was dreaming. In mid-attack his expression changed
from rage to friendly and playful. When he landed on me I hugged him, and we
play wrestled and rolled. I kissed him and he licked me. I felt really great
that I was lucid and play ing with a lion. Then he rolled over and turned into
a naked black woman. She was beautiful with large nipples on her breasts. I
started to play with her, and was getting excited, but I had this feeling that
getting back to the top of the cliff was more important, so I said, let’s go
back. As we started I woke up. (D. T.,
I had a fear of death but cured it through a lucid
dream. I was walking through a Hell-like environment and realized that this
could not be, as I was asleep in my bed. At that instant, I was stabbed in the
back. “Feeling” the Pain, I decided to see what “dying” would be like. I felt
myself in a catatonic state. I willed my dream “soul” to depart from my dream
“body. “ It was a strange feeling to see
my dream “body” beneath me. I also had a sense of all-pervading peace and calm.
I said to myself that if this is what dying is like, it isn’t so bad. From that
day forward, I have had no fear of dying. I even remain calm in
life-threatening situations. (K. D.,
Anyone who ever suffers from nightmares can benefit from
using lucidity as a response to severe anxiety in dreams. Readers who have
nightmares frequently will be able to put the advice we provide here to use
right away. But others would do well to study these materials and have them
ready in mind for the next time they find themselves in a frightening dream.
Several approaches to dealing with unpleasant dream
experiences appear in dream literature. They can all be assisted by lucidity, because
when lucid we are sure of our context (dreaming) and know that waking world
rules don’t apply. One of the first proposed systems for overcoming nightmares
was that attributed to the Senoi people of Malaysia by Kilton Stewart in his
paper “Dream Theory in Malaya. “12 Patricia Garfield brought
Stewart’s ideas to the public in her inspiring book Creative Dreaming. 13
The basic principle of the Senoi system is to confront and conquer danger.
This means that if you encounter an attacker or an uncooperative dream figure,
you should aggressively attack and subdue it. If necessary, you are advised to
destroy the figure, and thereby release a positive force. Once you have subdued
the dream figure, you must force it to give you a valuable gift—something you
can use in your waking life. Another suggestion is that you enlist friendly and
cooperative dream characters to help you overcome the threatening character..
People have reported positive, empowering results with the
“confront and conquer” approach. However, as Paul Tholey has found, attacking
unfriendly characters may not be the most productive way to handle them. The
reason for this will be discussed in detail in chapter 11, but in brief, the
idea is that hostile dream figures may represent aspects of our own
personalities that we wish to disown. If we try to crush the symbolic
appearances of these characteristics in dreams, we may be symbolically ejecting
and attempting to destroy parts of ourselves. Another idea associated with the
Senoi is valuable to keep in mind regarding nightmares. Falling is a very
common theme in anxiety dreams. The Senoi system proposes that when you dream
of falling, you shouldn’t wake yourself up but go with it, relax, and land
gently. Think that you will land in a pleasant and interesting place,
especially one that offers you a useful insight or experience. As a next step,
it is suggested that in future dreams when you are falling, you should try to
fly, and travel to somewhere intriguing and worthwhile. In this way, you can
turn a frightening, negative experience into one that is fun and useful.
Tholey, who has researched the efficacy of various attitudes
toward hostile dream characters, concludes that a conciliatory approach is most
likely to result in a positive experience for the dreamer. 14 His
conciliatory method is based on the practice of engaging in dialogues with
dream characters (see the following exercise). He found that when dreamers tried
to reconcile with hostile figures, the figures often transformed from “lower
order into higher order creatures, “ meaning from beasts or mythological beings
into humans, and that these transformations “often allowed the subjects to immediately understand the meaning
of the dream. “ Furthermore, conciliatory behavior toward threatening figures
would generally cause them to look and act in a more friendly manner. For
example, Tholey himself dreamed:
I became lucid, while being chased by a tiger, and wanted
to flee. I then pulled myself back together, stood my ground, and asked, “Who
are you?” The tiger was taken aback but transformed into my father and
answered, “I am your father and will now tell you what you are to do!” In contrast to my earlier dreams, I did not
attempt to beat him but tried to get involved in a dialogue with I told him
that he could not order me around. I rejected his threats and insults. On the
other hand, I had 1 to admit that some of my father’s criticism was justified,
and I decided to change my behavior accordingly. At that moment my father
became friendly, and we shook hands. \ I asked him if he could help me, and he
encouraged me to go my own way alone. My father then seemed to slip into my own
body, and I remained alone in the dream. 15
To have a good dream dialogue, you should treat the dream
figure as being your equal, as in the example. The following questions may open
up fruitful lines of dialogue with dream figures:
“Who are you?”
“Who am I?”
“Why are you here?”
“Why are you acting the way you are?”
“What do you have to tell me?”
“Why is such-and-such happening in this dream?”
“What do you think or feel about such and such?”
“What do you want from me? What do you want me to do?’
“What questions would you ask of me?”
“What do I most need to know?”
“Can you help me?”
“Can I help you?”
EXERCISE: CONVERSING WITH DREAM CHARACTERS
Choose a recent dream in which you had an unpleasant
encounter with a dream figure. Visualize the character before you and imagine yourself talking to the dream character.
Begin a dialogue by asking questions. You may choose a question from the list
above or substitute any personally relevant question. Write down your questions
and the responses you get from the character. Try not to let critical thoughts
interrupt the flow, such as “This is silly, “ or “I’m just making this up, “ or
“That’s not true. “ Listen, and interact. You can evaluate later. Terminate
the dialogue when it runs out of energy or when you achieve a useful
resolution. Then evaluate the conversation and ask yourself what you did right
and what you would do differently next time. Once you are successful with this,
try the same exercise on another dream.
Set a goal for yourself that the next time you have a
disturbing encounter with a dream character you will become lucid and engage
the character in dialogue.
When you encounter anyone with whom you feel conflict, ask
yourself whether or not you are dreaming. If you find that you are dreaming,
continue as follows: Stay and face the character, and begin a dialogue with one
of the opening questions from the list above. Listen to the character’s responses,
and try to address his, her, or its problems as well as your own. See if you
can come to an agreement or make friends. Continue the dialogue until you reach
a comfortable resolution. Then be sure to awaken while you still remember the
conversation clearly, and write it down.
Ask yourself if you achieved the best result you could. If
you feel you did not, think about how you could improve your results next
time. You can use Step 1 to relive the dialogue to attain a more satisfying
result. (Adapted from Kaplan-Williams16 and Tholey. 17)
In contrast to the positive results of conciliatory
dialogue, Tholey found that when dreamers attacked dream characters either
verbally or physically, the dream figure. often regressed in form, for
instance, from a mother, to a witch, then to a beast. We might assume that the
other characters in our dream worlds are more helpful as friendly humans than
as subdued animals, so the aggressive approach may not be the best choice most
of the time.
I say most of the time, because in some instances it may
not be advisable to open yourself to a dream attacker. The circumstances that
might make this true are in cases of dreams that replay real life events in
which one was abused by someone—say, a rapist or child molester. In such cases,
a more satisfying resolution may result from the Senoi approach of overcoming,
destroying, and transforming the dream attacker. However, in many instances,
Tholey’s research has shown that aggressive attacks on dream characters can
result in feelings of anxiety or guilt, and the subsequent emergence of dream
“avengers. “ So, I would advise avoiding such behavior unless it truly seems to
be the best option.
I have a few suggestions to add to these ideas for how to
resolve nightmare situations. One is an extension of the “confront and conquer”
approach. Though I cannot wholly recommend conquering dream characters, the intention
to confront all danger in dreams is fully in accordance with my conception of a
constructive dream life-Remember that nothing can hurt you in dreams, and consider
if there is any reason why you should not allow yourself to experience the
things you are trying to avow in the dream. An excellent example of enduring
the dreamed danger is provided by Patricia Garfield:
I was in a subway like the
In another case, a woman dreamed that she was having difficulty
avoiding being struck by cars as she crossed a busy street. As she had an
unusually intense fear of traffic in waking life, upon becoming lucid she
decided to directly confront her fear and leaped into the path of an oncoming
pickup truck. She described that she felt the truck pass through her and then
she, in an ethereal form, rose heavenwards, feeling elevated and amused.
This “let it happen to you” approach may not be best when
dealing with dream characters, however. In Tholey’s research, “Defenseless
behavior almost always led to unpleasant experiences of fear or discouragement.
“19 Hostile dream figures would tend to grow in size and strength
relative to the dreamer. The reason for this may be that dream characters often
are projections of aspects of our own personalities, and by giving in to their
attacks, we may be allowing untransformed negative energies within us to
overpower our better aspects.
Chapter 11 discusses this idea in greater depth and
Proposes another method for placating hostile dream figures: opening your
heart and accepting them as part of yourself. This may not require any words at
all and can nave an astonishingly positive effect.
The following is a list of some of the more common
nightmare themes, with suggested methods of transforming the dream to achieve a
positive outcome. Make yourself a goal that whenever you next find yourself in
a nightmare, you will become lucid and overcome your fear. If the nightmare
features one of the following themes, try the suggested responses.
Response: Stop running. Turn to face the pursuer. This in
itself may cause the pursuer to disappear or become harmless. If not, try
starting a conciliatory dialogue with the character or animal.
THEME 2: BEING ATTACKED
Response: Don’t give in meekly to the attack or flee. Show
your readiness to defend yourself, then try to engage the attacker in a
conciliatory dialogue. Alternatively, find acceptance and love in yourself and
extend this toward the threatening figure (see chapter 11).
Response: Relax and allow yourself to land. The old wives’
tale is false—you will not really die if you hit the ground. Alternatively, you
can transform falling into flying.
Response: When you feel trapped, stuck, or paralyzed,;
relax. Don’t allow anxiety to overcome your rationality. Tell yourself
you are dreaming and the dream will soon end. Let yourself go along with any
images that appear or things that happen to your body. None of it will hurt
you. Adopt an attitude of interest and curiosity about what happens.
Response: First of all, you don’t need to continue with
this theme at all. You can leave the exam or lecture room. However, you might
enhance your self-confidence in such situations by creatively answering the
test questions or giving a spontaneous talk on whatever topic suits you. Be
sure to enjoy yourself. When you wake up, you may want to ask yourself whether you
should actually prepare for a similar situation.
THEME 6: BEING NAKED IN
PUBLIC
Response: Who cares in a dream? Have fun with the idea.
Some find being naked in a lucid dream erotically exciting. If you wish, have
everyone else in the dream remove their clothes. Remember, modesty is a public
convention, and dreams are private experiences.
After waking up from the nightmare, I would go back to
sleep while thinking of a point in the dream before it went bad. I would go
back to that point and redream the dream, changing it, re-creating it so that
it would turn out well and end up as a good dream. (J. G.,
From a friend I received the advice that to just “stand were” in a dream could change its course. At that time was having frequent terrifying dreams. I would wake up screaming for help—thus ending the dream. And, of course, the overtones of helpless fear carried over into the day. So before I went to sleep I began to say to myself that whatever happened in my dreams, I was simply going to stand there and meet the danger and just see what the dream would do about that.
An example of what happened is the elevator dream. I
was stuck in an elevator. It wouldn’t go tip or down and I couldn’t get out.
Finally, I climbed out the top and while I was on the roof of the elevator, it
began to go up very quickly and I would have been crushed against the top of
the elevator shaft. Instead of screaming for help, I simply responded as an
observer and recognizing that this was a dream, I said to the dream that I was
going to sit there on the elevator. “Now, how will you handle that?” The
elevator stopped short of the top. No harm was done. Not only that, the dream
was no longer out of control. Until that time the elevator dream had been recurring.
It never returned. (V. W.,
Since I was three years old, twice a month, I have had
nightmares about tidal waves engulfing me; the details varied but the feeling
was always the same: terror and helplessness. Until... in a half-awake state I
determined to have a lucid dream about diving into a big wave. I did it! With
my heart beating wildly, I ran toward the stormy sea, chanting that it’s just a
dream. I dove in headfirst. For a fearful moment I felt water in my lungs, but
then began to enjoy the sensation of bobbing about in the powerful currents and
waves... after several (very pleasant) minutes of this, I washed up on
shore. I had one other lucid dream about
facing the wave and enjoying being underwater. Since then, I have had no more
nightmares of tidal waves. (L. G.,
When thinking about a nightmare becomes so painful that we avoid it, it is not surprising that it recurs. However, even the most terrible images become less frightening when we examine them. I believe Saint-Deny8 sheds light on the mechanism of recurrent nightmares in the following comment on his living gargoyle dream, quoted earlier in this chapter:
I don’t know the origin of the dream. Probably some
pathological cause brought it on the first time; but afterwards, when it was
repeated on several occasions in the space of six weeks, it was clearly brought
back solely by the impressions it had made on me and by my instinctive fear of
seeing it again. If I happened, when dreaming, to find myself in a closed room,
the memory of this horrible dream was immediately revived; I would glance
towards the door, the thought of what I was afraid of seeing was enough to
produce the sudden appearance of the same terrors, in the same form as before. 20
I believe nightmares become recurrent by the following
process: in the first place, the dreamer awakens from a nightmare in a state
of intense anxiety and fear; naturally, he or she hopes that it will never
happen again. The wish to avoid at all costs the events of the nightmare
ensures that they will be remembered. Later, something in the person’s waking
life associated with the original dream causes the person to dream about a
situation similar to the original nightmare. The dreamer recognizes, perhaps
unconsciously, the similarity and expects the same thing to happen. Thus,
expectation causes the dream to follow the first plot, and the more the dream
recurs, the more likely it is to recur in the same form. Look-^g at recurrent
nightmares in this way suggests a simple treatment: the dreamer can imagine a
new conclusion for the dream to weaken the expectation that it has only one
possible outcome.
Veteran dreamworker Strephon Kaplan-Williams decribes a technique
for redreaming the end of a nightmare; he calls it “dream reentry. “ The
technique can be Practiced with any dream that you feel unsatisfied with the
outcome of, but it seems especially apt for recurrent nightmares, in which you
are stuck time after time with the same set of disturbing events.
Dream reentry is practiced in the waking state. People
begin by selecting dreams to relive, then come up with alternative ways of
acting in the dreams to influence the progression of the events toward more favorable
or useful outcomes. They relive the dream in imagination, incorporating the
new action, and continue to visualize being in the dream until they see the
result of their alternative behavior. Kaplan-Williams offers an example of
dream reentry from his own experience. He had dreamed: “I I am in this house
and there is something scary to confront. I don’t want to do it and am all
alone. I’m quite afraid. I wake up. “ He resolves to reenter the dream and i
face the fear. In this case, he actually fell asleep as he was practicing the
reentry process, which added to the intensity of his experience:
This time I make myself enter the bathroom where the
source of my fears seems to be. I am afraid, so afraid that the flow of images
stops. But through sheer will I make myself enter the bathroom ready for
anything, I think of taking my machete and thrashing around with it if I am
attacked. But I decide against this because I want to confront my fear by
willing myself to stay with the situation no matter what.... I am ready to face
that which could overwhelm me and exist with it rather than try to defeat it.
... When I do [enter the bathroom], there seems to be a
hulking luminescent figure there. It does not attack me but changes into a
dwarf-like figure, long arms, roundish head, like Yoda. We face each other. I
have stayed with the situation. No attack comes. My fear goes away when I
experience what is there behind the door, and has been there so many years
going back to childhood. What has been there behind every door and scary place
is fear itself and my inability to fully deal with it. 21
Several years ago, I used a similar approach with someone
suffering from recurrent nightmares. A man telephoned me asking for help. He
feared going to sleep, because he might have “that terrible dream” again. In
his dream, he told me, he would find himself in a room in which the walls were
closing in, threatening to crush him. He would desperately try to open the
door, which would always be locked.
I asked him to imagine he was back in the dream, knowing
it was a dream. What else could he do? At first he was unable to think of
anything else that could possibly happen, so I modeled what I was asking him
to do. I imagined I was in the same dream and I visualized the walls closing
in. However, the moment I found the door locked, it occurred to me to reach
into my pocket where I found the key, with which I unlocked the door and walked
out. I recounted my imaginal solution and asked him to try again. He imagined
the dream again—this time he looked around the room and noticed that there was
no ceiling and climbed out.
I suggested to him that if this dream should ever recur,
he could recognize it as a dream and remember his solution. I asked him to
call me if the dream came back, but he never did. Unfortunately, we cannot be
sure about what happened. But I think that having found some way to cope with
that particular (dream) situation, he had no need to dream about it again
because he no longer feared it. As I have hypothesized elsewhere, we dream
about what we expect to happen, both what we fear and what We hope for. I
believe that the approach I have outlined can provide the basis for an
effective treatment for recurrent nightmares and look forward to it being
tested clinically.
Some evidence has appeared in psychotherapy literature
indicating that rehearsal (redreaming) can help people overcome recurrent
nightmares. Geer and Silverman successfully treated an otherwise normal patient
who suffered for fifteen years from a recurrent nightmare with five sessions of
relaxation followed by seven sessions of mentally reexperiencing the nightmare
(rehearsal). 22 The frequency of nightmares began to decrease after
the third rehearsal session, when the patient was instructed to say to himself “It’s
just a dream. “ After the sixth rehearsal session, several weeks later, the
nightmare disappeared. Marks described a case in which a recurrent nightmare of
fourteen years’ duration disappeared after the patient relived the dream three
times while awake, then wrote three accounts of the nightmare with triumphant
endings. 23 Bishay treated seven cases of nightmares with simple
rehearsal of the nightmare and/or rehearsal with an altered ending. 24
A one-year follow-up of five patients in the latter study showed complete
relief from nightmares in the four patients who successfully imagined
masterful endings, and marked improvement in a patient who was only able to
imagine a neutral outcome.
Rehearsal redreaming is done while awake. However, a
similar technique can be practiced during the recurrent nightmare, if
the dreamer is lucid. Instead of imagining how the dream might turn out if the
dreamer tried something new, while lucid the dreamer can try the alternative
action right there in the nightmare. The resultant resolution should be all
the more empowering, because of the enhanced reality of the dream experience.
Practicing altering the course of recurrent nightmares both in waking and
dreaming may be even more effective. Sometimes, the waking redreaming exercise
is enough to resolve the problem created in the dream so that it never recurs
again. However, if the dream does occur again, then the dreamer should be
prepared to become lucid and consciously face the problem. The following
exercise incorporates both reentry techniques.
EXERCISE: REDREAMING RECURRENT NIGHTMARES
If you have had a particular nightmare more than once,
recall it in as much detail as you can and write it down. Examine it for points
where you could influence the turn of events by doing something differently.
Choose a specific part of the dream to change, and a
specific new action that you would like to try at that point to alter the
course of the dream. Also select the most relevant point before the trouble
spot at which to reenter the dream. (If it is a long dream, you may wish to
begin at the part that immediately precedes the unpleasant events. )
Find a time and place where you can be alone and uninterrupted
for between ten and twenty minutes. In a comfortable position, close your eyes
and practice the progressive relaxation exercise (page 53).
Beginning at the entry point you chose in Step 2, imagine
you are back in the dream. Visualize the dream happening as it did before
until you reach the part at which you have chosen to try a new behavior. See
yourself doing the new action, then continue imagining the dream until you
discover what effect your alteration has on its outcome.
When the imagined dream has ended, open your eyes. Write
down what happened as if it were a normal dream report. Note how you feel about
the new dream resolution. If you are not satisfied, and still feel
uncomfortable about the dream, try the exercise again with a new alternative
action. Achieving a comfortable resolution with the waking exercise may be
enough to stop the recurrence of the nightmare.
If the dream occurs again, do in the dream what you
visualized during waking reentry. Remember that the dream cannot harm you and
be firmly resolved to carry through with your new behavior.
I learned as a child of five or six to control
nightmares. For example, a dinosaur was chasing me, so I inserted a can of
spinach into the plot, and upon eating it gained Popeye’s strength and
“vanquished” my foe. (V. B.,
I had this lucid dream when I was ten years old.
Feeling like a frightened victim, I am high in a stone tower with my younger
sister Diane. A witch has tied us up and is about to stuff us into gunnysacks
and throw us out the window to drown in the water far below. My sister is
crying and near hysteria. Suddenly my panic turns to lightness and wonder. I
laugh. “Diane! This is only a dream! My dream! Let her throw us out the window
because I can make us do anything we want!” The witch is now background
material, no longer the imposing “control. “ We laugh as we fall through the
air, gunnysacks melting away. The warm, friendly water gently supports us to
the shore where we run, giggling, in the grass. For days after that dream I
felt an inner strength, a sense that fear is now what I’d let it be up to that
point. (B. H-.
As a child I participated in and controlled many of my
own dreams. My own lucid dreaming started when I was about nine or ten years
old. One night I had a dream in which I was being chased by an evil giant. In
the dream 1 suddenly remembered my parents telling me there are no such things
as monsters. It was then that I realized I must be dreaming. In the dream I
stopped running, turned around, and let the giant pick me up. The outcome of
the dream was good, and I awoke with a pleasant and confident feeling. Over
the next two years I developed more skill at lucid dreaming, so much so that
bedtime became exciting because of this new world I had discovered where
anything was possible and I was the Boss. (R. M.,
Many people have reported discovering lucid dreaming as a
means of coping with childhood nightmares, as in the cases above. Children tend
to have more nightmares than adults, but fortunately, they appear to have little
difficulty putting into practice the idea of facing their fears with lucid
dreaming.
In her book Studies in Dreams published in 1921,
Mary Arnold-Forster mentioned having helped children overcome nightmares with
lucidity. 25 I can relate a similar experience myself. Once, when I
was making longdistance small talk with my niece, I asked her about her
dreams. Madeleina, then seven years old, burst out with the description of a
fearful nightmare. She had dreamed that she had gone swimming, as she often
did, in the teal reservoir. But this time, she had been threatened and
terrified by a shark. I sympathized with her fear and added, matter-of-factly,
“But of course you know there aren’t really any sharks in
Whether or not this approach to children’s nightmares
always produces such impressive results we do not yet know, but it is certainly
worth exploring. If you are a parent with children suffering from nightmares,
you I should first make sure that they know what a dream is and then tell them
about lucid dreaming. For more information on children’s nightmares and how to
treat them, see Patricia Garfield’s excellent book Your Child’s Dreams. 26
That lucid dreaming promises to banish one of the terrors of childhood seems reason enough for all enlightened parents to teach the method to their children. In addition, an important bonus of the lucid dreaming approach to children’s nightmares is that it results in an increased sense of mastery and self-confidence as can be seen in all of the examples above. Think of the value of discovering that fear has no more power than you let it have, and that you are the master.
Health can be defined as a condition of adaptive responsiveness
to the challenges of life. This definition applies in both physiology and
psychology. For responses to be adaptive they must resolve challenging
situations in ways that do not disrupt the integrity, or wholeness of individual. Taking medication that helps
you sleep but prevents you from functioning the next day is not very adaptive.
However, getting more exercise can make you sleepier at night and increase
your general health and vigor. This is a truly adaptive response to a
difficulty. Optimal responses result in a creative adaptation that leaves the
person at a higher level of functioning than before the challenge. In a psychological
frame, avoiding situations that make you nervous may prevent you from feeling
anxiety, but it also may limit your enjoyment of life. Learning to face those
situations will increase the options available to you. In this sense, being
healthy involves more than the mere absence of disease. If our familiar
behaviors are inadequate to cope with a novel situation, a truly healthy
response requires learning new, more adaptive behaviors. Learning new behaviors
is part of psychological growth, which leads to increased wholeness, a concept
close to the ideal of health. It is no accident that the words whole,
healthy, and holy come from the same root
Psychologist Ernest Rossi has proposed that an important
function of dreaming is integration: the synthesis of separate
psychological structures into a more comprehensive personality. 1
Human beings are complex, multileveled biopsychosocial systems. Our psyches
have many different aspects; these different parts may or may not be in
harmony. When one part of a personality is in conflict with another part, or
denies the existence of other parts, unhappiness or antisocial behavior can
result. Achieving wholeness requires reconciling all aspects of one’s personality.
Integration, however, need not be only a matter of repairing malfunctional
relationships between the different parts of the personality. It can also be a
natural developmental process.
Psychotherapeutic theory, once based on the idea that the
goal of therapy was to help people overcome developmental flaws, or neuroses,
has been broadened by theories encompassing the idea that even healthy people
can integrate disparate parts of their personality to enrich their experience
of life—to grow. According to Rossi, integration is the means by which
personality growth takes place:
In dreams we witness something more than mere wishes; we
experience dramas reflecting our psychological state and the process of change
taking place in it. Dreams are a laboratory for experimenting with changes in
our psychic life.... This constructive or synthetic approach to dreams can be
clearly stated: Dreaming is an endogenous process of psychological growth,
change, and transformation. 2
Lucidity can greatly facilitate this process. Lucid dreamers
can deliberately identify with and accept, and thereby symbolically integrate,
parts of their personalities they had previously rejected, or disowned. The
stones once rejected by the builder of the ego can then form the new foundation
of wholeness.
In the same vein, the poet Rainer Maria Rilke advised:
If only we arrange our life according to that principle
which counsels us that we must always hold to the difficult, then that which
now seems to us the most alien will become what we most trust and find the most
faithful. How should we be able to forget those ancient myths that are at the
beginning of all peoples, the myths about dragons that at the last moment turn
into princesses; perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses only
waiting to see us once beautiful and brave. Perhaps everything terrible is in
its deepest being something helpless that wants help from us. 3
Carl Jung observed that disowned features of the
personality are frequently projected onto others and symbolized in dreams,
taking the form of monsters, dragons, devils, and so on. Jung referred to these
symbolic figures as “The Shadow. “ The
presence of shadow figures in dreams indicates that the ego model of the self
is incomplete. When the ego intentionally accepts the shadow, it moves toward
wholeness and healthy psychological functioning.
The importance of being willing to take responsibility for
the shadow elements in one’s dreams is illustrated by the difficulties that
plagued the dream life of lucid dreaming pioneer Frederilc van Eeden: “In a
perfect instance of the lucid dream, “ he wrote, “I float through immensely
wide landscapes, with a clear blue, sunny sky, and a feeling of deep bliss and
gratitude, which I feel impelled to express by eloquent words of thankfulness
and piety. “4 Van Eeden found that these pious lucid dreams were
unfortunately very frequently followed by what he called “demon-dreams, “ in
which he was typically mocked, harassed, and attacked by horned devils to whom
he attributed independent existence as “intelligent beings of a very low moral
order. “5
Jung would have probably considered van Eeden’s
demon-dreams as an example of compensation, an attempt to correct the mental
imbalance produced by his ego’s sense of self-righteousness and inflated piety.
In Nietzsche’s words, “If a tree grows up to heaven, its roots reach down to
hell. “ In any case, van Eeden could not bring himself to believe that it was
his own mind that was responsible for “all the horrors and errors of dreaming
life. “6 Because he could not understand this, he was never able to
free himself from his “demon-dreams. “ Rather than denying responsibility for
his own demons, he should have accepted them as a part of himself.
So, how does one go about accepting shadow figures in dreams?
There are many approaches, all of which involve entering into a more harmonious
relationship with the darker aspects of yourself. One approach mentioned in
chapter 10 is to engage shadow figures in friendly dialogues. 7
This will make a difference with most people you encounter in dreams (or waking
life) and might have surprising effects when you try it on threatening figures.
Don’t slay your dream dragons; make friends with them. Paul Tholey’s dialogue
approach is illustrated by a case reported by Scott Sparrow. Sparrow explains
that the fol-
lowing dream of a young woman was “one of a long series of
nightmares in which she continually fled from an aggressive, somewhat mentally
unbalanced man. This dream was the first in which she became lucid; and, as we
might suspect, it was one of the last dreams in this series”:
I’m in a dark, poor section of a city. A young man
starts chasing me down an alley. I’m running for what seems like a long time in
the dream. Then I become aware that I am dreaming and that much of my dream
life is spent running from male pursuers. I say to myself, ‘ ‘Is there anything
I can do to help you ?” He becomes very gentle and open to me and replies,
“Yes. My friend and I need help. “ I go to the apartment they share and talk with
them both about their problem, feeling compassionate for them both. 8
Remember that evil, like beauty, may be in the eye of the
beholder. As the Afghan Sufi master Hakim Sanai observed eight hundred years
ago:
If you want the mirror to reflect the face, hold it
straight and keep it polished bright; although the sun does not begrudge its
light, when seen in a mist it only looks like glass; and creatures comelier
than angels even seem in a dagger to have devil’s faces. 9
To the extent that your thinking is distorted by fear,
greed, anger, pride, prejudice, and faulty assumptions, you cannot tell what is
really reflected in your consciousness. If your mind resembles a fun-house
mirror, don’t be surprised if in your dream an angel seems a demon. Therefore,
you would do well to assume the best. When you meet a monster in your lucid
dream, sincerely greet him like a long-lost friend, and that is what he will
be.
One of Gary Larsen’s Far Side cartoons illustrates
the proper approach: Two old ladies behind their locked front door are peering
out the window at a “monster from the Id” standing on their doorstep. The wiser
of the two ladies says, “Calm down, Edna... Yes, it’s some giant hideous
insect... but it could be some giant hideous insect in need of help. “10
You don’t need to talk to shadow figures to make peace
with them. If you can find it in your heart to genuinely love your dream
enemies, they become your friends. Embracing the rejected with loving
acceptance symbolically integrates the shadow into your model of your self, as
illustrated by one of my own dreams: I was in the middle of a riot in a
classroom. A violent mob of thirty or forty was taking the place apart,
throwing chairs and people through windows, grappling convulsively with each
other, and letting fly random shrieks, war cries, and insults; in short, the
sort of thing that is likely to happen in certain grade schools when the
teacher steps out of the classroom for a moment. The leader, a huge, repulsive
barbarian with a pockmarked face, had locked me in an iron-clad grip and I was
desperately struggling to get away. Then, I realized that I was dreaming, and
in a flash, I remembered the lessons of past experience.
I stopped struggling, for I knew that the conflict was
with myself. I reasoned that the barbarian was a dream personification of
something I was struggling with in my self. Or perhaps it represented someone,
or some quality in another, that I disliked. In any case, this barbarian was a
shadow figure if I had ever seen one! Experience had shown me that in the dream
world, if nowhere else, the best way to bring hate and conflict to an end was
to love my enemies as myself. What I needed to do, I realized, was to
completely accept with open arms the shadow I had been attempting to disown.
So, I tried to feel loving as I stood face to face with
the shadow barbarian. I failed at first, feeling only repulsion and disgust. My
gut reaction was that he was simply too ugly and barbarous to love. Determined
to overcome the initial shock of the image, I sought love within my heart.
Finding it, I looked the barbarian in the eyes, trusting my intuition to supply
the right things to say. Beautiful words of acceptance flowed out of me, and as
they did, my shadow melted into me. The riot had vanished without a trace, the
dream faded, and I awoke, feeling wonderfully calm.
1 became lucid when I realized the absurdity of what was
happening: I was at a swim meet where we were about to begin a race, swimming
across the carpeted floor of a locker room. Delighted to be lucid, I was about
to fly out of the room to find an outdoor vista. But then I reflected on my
goal of approaching and resolving problems in dreams. Looking about the room I
asked myself if anything there was a problem to me. My eyes settled on a woman
whom I had a great distaste for in waking life. I recognized that such strong
dislike was unwarranted and Probably stemmed from my wishing to disown some aspect
of myself represented by her. So, I walked over to her, took her hands in mine,
and looked into her eyes. I looked for tenderness inside of myself and
projected it toward her. Her aspect transformed to that of a young, helpless,
and shy girl. I felt compassion for her. At this woke up, and realized that I
now understood why she behaved in the way that annoyed me. I also understood
that the same kind of fearfulness that motivated her behavior was also a part
of myself. (C. L.,
In reality I have a great fear of water, and swimming
was one of the possible choices for me to try in a lucid dream. In the dream
I’m in my backyard and am immediately aware that I’m dreaming. I decide that it
would be great fun to swim. Instantly there is water all around me. / swim
several hundred feet and make many adjustments to my swimming form. I start to
stand up in what is chest-deep water and start to feel fearful. I remind myself
that in a dream there is no reason for fear. I immediately feel comfortable and
start to walk back around the house, when I observe that the water has
disappeared. (L. B.,
I am in high school, in a hall. I don’t know why I’m
there and think I’m supposed to go downstairs to the basement and find the gym.
I get in the elevator, but the door slams shut on me. Then the buttons don’t
work. I notice there’s a button for a lower level and a basement. I’m afraid of
the lower level and manage to get the elevator to stop in the basement. I find
the pool there, but it’s in a big, dark room. Then, somehow, I know I’m
dreaming. I ponder what to do. I think of Tholey ‘s article and that I should
seek the darkest and lowest. I find I am quite afraid of doing this. I realize,
however, that I like the idea of self-integration. So, I decide to go to the
lower level. I go to the stairs, sit, and look down. It’s dim and scary. I wonder
what I fear to find. I go down, peering about nervously. There’s no one and no
living thing. It looks like a hall of lab rooms. I fly down the hall making
sounds that in the echoey hall sound like eerie ghost wails. I think I’m seeing
how it feels to be a ghost. I see two mirrors on top of the lockers and fly up
to look at my naked body, and focus on developing a positive appreciation of
myself. I’m interrupted by a dark-haired woman with a gun. I float on my back
as she points it at me. She is pointing it at my crotch and I think it’s funny.
Clearly she thinks I ought to be afraid. I say things like, “Put it to me,
baby!” Momentarily, I’m afraid of what sensation might be produced if she did
shoot. But then she kissesme. 1 encourage her. She is still angry, but she does
it again, until I think I’ve convinced her to do that instead of threaten me.
Then she says, “Go to sleep, “ and I close my eyes and wake up. (A. L.,
I had this dream when I was in third grade.... On the
other side of the street instead of seeing the usual line of houses, there are
all kinds of huge, beautiful flowers, like a scene out of
“If you have no difficulties, buy a goat, “ advises an
Eastern proverb. 11 Beyond the obvious admonition that goats are
troublesome, this aphorism holds a deeper meaning. We grow in wisdom and inner
strength by learning to cope with difficulties. Challenging experiences force
us to consider who we really are and what is of real importance. As long as we
are content and never face any conflicts or dilemmas, we have no need to
think. The great Sufi master Jalaludin Rumi put it thus:
Exalted Truth imposes on us
Heat and cold, grief and pain,
Terror and weakness of wealth and body
Together, so that the coin of our innermost
being Becomes evident. 12
As hard as it may be to believe at first, our worst experiences
can be our best friends. As Rilke suggests in the passage quoted earlier, if we
hold to the difficult, and do not run from our troubles, the whole world can become
our ally.
Thus, we propose that in your lucid dreams you can benefit
from seeking out difficulties, facing and overcoming them. At the
least, when faced with a terror you cannot escape—a pursuer or attacking
monster, for instance—you should stay with the dream and resolve the conflict,
using the methods suggested in this book. As a next step, if anything appears
in your dream world that causes you discomfort, you can take its presence as an
opportunity to investigate that problem and see if you can resolve or accept
whatever it is that repels you.
Those who are even more adventurous or serious about their
desire to find personal wholeness can deliberately “look for trouble” in their
lucid dreams. This means to search the dream world for things that you find
frightening or distasteful. Psychologist Paul Tholey recommended this idea to
subjects in a study of the use of lucid dreaming for promoting self-healing. He
quotes the German psychologist Kuenkel as stating that “the true way to
healing” is to seek out the “barking dogs of the unconscious” and reconcile
with them. Emotional balance, according to Kuenkel, can only be obtained
through this process. 13
Tholey gave his subjects several hints on how to find the
hidden “barking dogs” of the psyche in dreams. These were to move from areas of
light to areas of darkness, from higher places to lower ones, and from the
present to the past. This makes sense, if you consider that we tend to
associate deep, dark places with fear and evil, and that childhood generally
holds more terrors than adulthood.
The participants in Tholey’s self-healing study clearly
benefited by coming to terms with threatening figures and situations in lucid
dreams. Sixty-six percent of the sixty-two subjects resolved some problem or
conflict in their life with their lucid dreams. The program also improved the
general quality of their waking lives. Many felt less anxious and more
emotionally balanced, open-minded, and creative. However, negative consequences
in the form of increased anxiety or discouragement occasionally appeared if
the participant forgot the instructions and fled from a threatening figure.
Tholey analyzed his findings further, and concluded that
facing fearful situations in dreams contributes to people’s self-reliance and
ability to respond flexibly to challenging situations. In the terms used in
this book, Tholey’s subjects became better adjusted both within themselves and
in regard to the world, because of their learning to cope with difficult
circumstances in dreams.
The following exercise is to guide your efforts to reconcile
yourself with your personal anxieties and difficulties. If you wish to try
this exercise, it is important that you firmly set your intention to do so
while awake. Otherwise, you may find that in the emotional heat of the dream,
you will lack the willpower to face your fear.
EXERCISE: SEEKING OPPORTUNITIES FOR INTEGRATION
1. Set your intention
Resolve now, while you are awake, that the next time you
are lucid you will deliberately seek out a problem: something that frightens,
disgusts, or disturbs you. Assert that you will courageously and openly face
the difficulty until you can accept it or no longer fear it. Encapsulate your
intention in a pithy phrase, such as “Tonight I will openly face a fear in my
dreams. “ Repeat the phrase to yourself until your intention is set.
Using your preferred technique (see chapters 3 and 4),
induce a lucid dream.
Repeat your intention phrase when you realize you are
dreaming. Look around for anything that is a problem to you. Is there any thing
or character that you wish to avoid? If not, seek out a place where you might
find a difficulty. For example, go into a basement, a cave, or a dark forest,
or find some scary place from your childhood. In frightening or disturbing
places, you are likely to find problems.
Deliberately approach the problem person, thing, or
situation you have selected. Be open and ask yourself why this thing bothers
you. If it is a character, involve it in a dialogue. (See the exercise on
conversing with dream characters, page 238. ) Try to reconcile with the
character, or accept the fearful or distasteful thing. Assert to yourself that you
can handle it. Do not turn from it until you are comfortable in its
presence. It may help to talk to yourself, because this helps you to focus your
will. For example, say, “This is okay. I can deal with this. See, it does not
harm me. I wonder if it can be of use to me, or if I can help it?”
When you have resolved the problem, or when it disappears,
indulge in any pleasure you like in the lucid dream. Doing this will reward you
for courageously facing difficulties, making it more likely that you will want
to do it again. If you awaken before you reach this step, reward yourself while
awake with something you especially enjoy.
When my grandmother died several years ago, I was terribly
unhappy for many months. She had been my artistic inspiration and mentor. I had
been extremely close to her, how close I did not realize until after her death.
Nothing I did seemed to help me feel all right about it.
My husband reminded me of my ability to have lucid
dreams. I had been dreaming about her and he suggested that I could use seeing
her as a lucidity cue. I decided to do so, for once lucid I could ask her how
she was and where she was, and to tell her once again how I loved her and how
much she had given me as an artistic legacy.
The next time she appeared in my dream, I was too sad;
I didn’t remember my intention to recognize I was dreaming, so I couldn’t carry
out my plan.
A few nights later I dreamed of her again. I had prepared
myself in advance by telling myself during the days, “If I dream of Grams, I
will remember that it is a dream. “ This time, I did become lucid. I knew
clearly it Was a dream, and yet she was so vivid and real; it was just as if
she were alive. When I asked her how she was, she answered with some despair,
“Oh darling, I don’t know.... / don’t seem to know where I am.... “ This dream
left me feeling both elated that I had made contact with her, and distraught
that she was disturbed. Of course, many questions tumbled out from my troubled
mind: Is she really “someplace”? Is this only my imagination? I was unsure
what to think. So I was eager to talk with her again.
Two weeks later I dreamed of her again and immediately
became aware that I was dreaming. I asked her how she was, and where she was.
She said, “I am not feeling so unsettled, Laurie, “ and said something I could
not quite understand, about existing fairly happily “somewhere. “ I hugged her
a long time and told her, trying not to cry more than a little, how I loved her
and always would, and how she had inspired my dancing, and that she would
always be with me. In the dream, she looked exactly like she had in life, with
her beautiful, noble face, and I awoke reassured.
Perhaps I truly contacted her spirit; perhaps I simply
spoke with my inner self. I do not know. I just know that after those two
dreams, something settled in me; I felt in touch with some part of my
grandmother and had said what I had so much wanted to say to her. I was able
very soon after these dreams to let my sadness slip away from me. (L. C.,
When I was thirty I broke up with a boyfriend that I
had dated for nearly nine years. It was very difficult and especially hard on
me when he married only one year later. Through a series of nonlucid dreams I
started to accept the situation that he had married someone else—/ came to meet
his wife, his in-laws, and experienced seeing them together. One of the last
dreams regarding them and my acceptance was a lucid dream. It went like this:
I dreamed I met K. and his wife, only this time he
invited me to his house for dinner, along with his folks and sister. I remember
noticing that K. and his wife appeared to get along quite well, and that they
seemed everything he and I weren’t. A twinge of melancholy went through me,
but in general I felt that everything seemed alright. They were both very nice
to me and liked my company. As I left the house at the end of the evening I
suddenly wanted to thank them again for the wonderful evening. It occurred to
me to wait and call later on the phone, but then I realized I wouldn’t be able
to reach them in the morning because I’d be awake in the “waking reality,
“unable to reach these dream characters. I decided to walk back and leave a
note. Just then they walked out of the house and saw me. I explained that I
wanted to thank them again, especially his wife, who was so pleasant toward me.
I explained that in fact they were dream characters in my dream, but to me they
seemed very real. I hoped that a part of me was really meeting with a part of
them at some level, although I realized they would never recall this meeting in
the waking world. They smiled and said they understood and felt that in spite
of what the “outside” world remembers, they felt that a side of them had
interacted with me. I woke up shortly after that and felt quite happy and
assured that our parting was for the best. (B. O.,
Recently, I had a wonderfully comforting dream in which
my father, who died only a year ago, came to me early in the morning to tell me
it was almost time to get up— just like he used to do when I was a little girl.
He never spoke to me in the dream but we were communicating. He came into my
room to tell me to get up soon. Then he walked from room to room in my house.
He conveyed to me that everything looked good—there were some things that
needed to be done, but nothing I could not handle. He also conveyed to me the
thought that while he was not there with me physically, his presence would
always be with me. Then he came and sat on the side of the bed and held my
hand. I kept saying, “thank you” to him and woke up feeling that he really had
been there with me. I knew I was dreaming while I was dreaming, but 1 would not
have interfered with that dream in any way. (J. A.,
My father died of cancer this summer, and I had a long
series of dreams in which I was aware that I was dreaming, and insisted that I
didn ‘t want to wake up because I was talking to my father, telling him once
more that I loved him, but he ‘d insist that I wake up and accept that he was
fine and had to go off on his long journey. In a dream I finally saw him off at
the station and was relieved that he’d made the train: he’d delayed so long in
saying goodbye that he’d almost missed his connections to go off to his
wonderful vacation. That last dream was the last in the series. (C. M.,
When I was twenty-three, my family moved from
Seeking and resolving difficulties in lucid dreams can
help you achieve greater emotional balance and ability to cope with life’s
troubles. It may help you solve problems that you were not conscious of but
that, nonetheless, were limiting your happiness. Lucid dreaming can also be
used intentionally to address specific difficulties that people are very much
aware of. Personal relationships can be the source of some of the most trying
problems people have to deal with. In many cases, we cannot work out the
difficulty with the person involved and have to deal with it on our own. Such
problems fall into the category of internal maladjustment, since they cannot be
resolved by changing one’s interactions with the world. As demonstrated by the
examples above, lucid dreaming can help people settle unfinished emotional
business with family members and intimate friends.
When an important relationship ends, people often find
that they are left with unresolved issues that cause anxiety and possibly even
strain later relationships. In waking life, it is impossible to say those
things you never said to your father before he died. And, in waking life, it is
often impractical to track down a former mate and talk about unresolved issues.
In lucid dreams, however, it is possible to achieve resolution.
Of course, the absent partner is not really there, but the missing person’s
representation in your own mind is present. This is enough, since it is your
own inner conflicts that you need to settle. Dreams do not raise the dead. But,
as the examples above testify, lucid dream encounters with the dead are real
enough to allow us to feel we are with them once more, and that they live on in
our hearts. As Jalaludin Rumi’s epitaph reminds us:
When we are dead, seek not our tomb in the earth, but find
it in the hearts of men. “14
Tholey has studied the use of lucid dreaming as a means of
achieving resolution of such unfinished relationships. 15 He
concludes that it is possible to achieve resolution with inner representations
of important people in one’s life by engaging in conciliatory dialogues during
lucid dreams.
I was sliding along a snow-covered country road on my
belly, but without a sled. On both sides of the road were dense forest and huge
rocks. The road was very hilly and curvy and I was going at a good rate of
speed, fearing I was going to slide at any moment into a tree or rock. While I
was moving along I said to myself: “This is a dream, so I can’t get hurt, even
if I do crash, so why not go faster?” I willed myself to go at a breakneck
speed over this dangerous road only to find myself having the time of my life.
I actually controlled the whole dream, knowing it was a dream and no danger was
involved! (K. H.,
Lucidity greatly enhances your mental flexibility, making
it easier to master whatever challenges your dream world presents. Experiencing
how it feels to be flexible, knowing what it’s like to trust your ability to
come up with imaginative solutions to unforeseen problems, can become a
resource in your waking life. Flexibility can help you choose the best actions
to get what you want and live in harmony with the rest of the world. Indeed,
responding creatively may be the only course of action available. You can’t
always get other people to act the way you want them to. But you can always
creatively reframe your situation, flexibly control your behavior, mindfully
create multiple perspectives, and optimize your outlook.
The Harvard psychologist Ellen Langer has studied two
contrasting modes of mental function: mindfulness and mindlessness. 16
Mindfulness is a state of attentive awareness in which environmental
information is consciously controlled and manipulated while people are engaged
in the process of making new distinctions and constructing new categories.
Mindlessness, in contrast, is a state of reduced awareness,
in which people process information from their environments in an automatic
manner. They rely on habitual categories and distinctions without reference to
possible novel aspects of the information, resulting in behavior that is
rule-governed and rigid. According to Langer’s research, “much of the behavior
we assume to be performed
mindfully instead is
enacted rather mindlessly;...
unless there is a well-learned script to follow or effortful response to make,
people may process only a minimal amount of information to get them through
their day. “17 As an example, in one study, people about to use a
Xerox machine were asked in one of several ways to let another person use it first.
We will compare only the two most interesting conditions. One of two requests
were made: (A) “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine?” or
(B) “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine because I have
to make some copies?” Sixty percent of the people given Request A agreed, but
93 percent given Request B agreed. 18
In the case of Request B, the people seemed to respond to the fact that they
were given a reason to relinquish their place in line. Even though the “reason”
was empty of content, they responded without thinking. Our mental functioning
in ordinary dreams frequently exhibits remarkable mindlessness; this is how we
can fail to notice and correctly interpret the most absurd anomalies. Mental
functioning during lucid dreams, in contrast, is characterized by mindfulness.
People have generalized expectancies about the degree to
which they can influence the world. They locate the control of their experience
either within themselves (internals) or in the outside world (externals).
Internals are people who believe their own behavior has a substantial impact on
events. They are flexible in their approach to the world, because they believe
that they can affect the course of their lives by changing their own behavior. Externals
don’t believe their behavior has much influence on the course of events; they
think that most of what happens in their lives is the result of luck, chance,
fate, or other external influences and powers beyond their personal control.
If you think this way, please reflect upon the following:
Properly practiced, lucid dreaming can enhance your
ability to see the “stars” in any situation, to mindfully look for a better way
of doing things, to become an active shaper of your destiny, to move your
control expectations from external toward internal. Very little of the external
world can be controlled by any of us, but our “inner worlds” can in principle
be reprogrammed to reflect any reality we choose. By adopting a flexible
attitude we can enhance our ability to act in a way that will help us find in
the myriad of potential realities the most useful and rewarding actuality.
Ellen Langer’s research suggests “that mindfulness, a creatively
integrative mastery of life experience, leads to improved health and longevity
either directly or by increasing awareness of adaptive responses. “20
If this is so, given the connection between mindfulness and lucid dreaming,
this may be one of many ways that lucid dreaming can lead to improved health.
The next section illustrates how lucid dreaming may even be effective for
promoting physical healing.
In 1979 I cracked my foot. I am a dancer and there was
no way I could afford to be out of work, nor did I have any desire to stay off
my foot for three months. The doctor said I had better not think of dancing for
at least six months. So every night I tried to dream about that day at dance
rehearsal when the accident happened, until I could change in my dream the
dance move that made me land on my foot in the wrong way. It took several
tries, but eventually in my dream the fall didn’t happen and I tried to set
that in my mind. After three weeks of this, I started to dance on my bad foot.
I went back to the doctor after three months and didn’t tell him I’d been
dancing. He said my foot was mending very well and to continue to stay off it.
(D. M.,
In 1970 I was hit by a car when I was a passenger on a
motorcycle. I received a broken leg and some injuries to my gallbladder. I
underwent emergency surgery to remove my gallbladder. A few days after the
surgery when I was recovering in the hospital, I had a dream in which I was
whole and floating about the hospital room. I saw my body lying in bed with the
casted leg suspended slightly above my body and various tubes in every orifice,
it seemed. I hovered over my own body, sometimes feeling the pain of my
injuries and sometimes feeling the wholeness and ability of my dream body to
fly about the room. I decided in the dream state to give the gift of this wholeness
to my physical body. I told my physical body that I loved it and that it would
recover. When I awoke that day I was able to stop taking medication for pain
and had all tubes removed. On the next day I was able to convince the staff
that I was ready to start hopping around on crutches. (R. B.,
These experiences suggest that lucid dreaming might be
useful for physical as well as mental healing. Although this is one of the most
speculative ideas for the application of lucid dreaming, anecdotal and
theoretical evidence supports the possibility. The use of dreams for healing
was widespread in the ancient world. The sick would sleep in temples of
healing, seeking dreams that would cure or at least diagnose their illnesses
and suggest a remedy. Of course, we have no means of evaluating the validity of
claims of such antiquity.
Most people assume that a major function of sleeping and
dreaming is rest and recuperation. This popular conception has been upheld by
research. Thus, for humans, physical exercise leads to more sleep, especially
delta sleep. Growth hormone, which triggers growth in children and the repair
of stressed tissues, is released in delta sleep. On the other hand, mental
exercise or emotional stress appears to result in increases in REM sleep and
dreaming.
Health is usually defined as a state of optimal functioning
with freedom from disease and abnormality. This chapter begins with a
definition of health framed in broader terms, as a condition of adaptive
responsiveness to the challenges of life. “Adaptive” means, at minimum, that
the responses must resolve challenging situations in ways that do not disrupt
the integrity, or wholeness, of the individual.
Being healthy is something more vigorous than the mere
absence of disease. For example, if we cannot cope with a novel situation, it
would be healthy to learn more adaptive behaviors. This sort of psychological growth
helps us to become increasingly better equipped to deal with the challenges of
life.
Human beings are extremely complex, multileveled living
systems. As I wrote in Lucid Dreaming: It is useful, although an oversimplification,
to distinguish three main levels of organization that make up what we are:
biological, psychological, and social. These reflect our partial identities as
bodies, minds, and members of society. Each of these levels affects every
other level, to a lesser or greater extent. For example, your blood sugar level
(biology) affects how good that plate of cookies looks to you (psychology) and
perhaps even whether you are hungry enough to steal (sociology). On the other
hand, the degree to which you have accepted society’s rules and norms affect
how guilty you feel if you do so. So how the cookies appear (psychology)
depends on how hungry you are (biology) as well as on who else is around
(sociology). Because of this three-leveled organization, we can view humans as
“biopsychosocial systems. “21
When we sleep, we are relatively withdrawn from environmental
challenges. In this state we are able to devote energy to recovering optimal
health—that is, the ability to respond adaptively. The healing processes of
sleep are holistic, taking place on all levels of the biopsychosocial system.
The healing processes of the higher psychological levels probably are normally
accomplished during the dreams of REM sleep. However, due to maladaptive mental
attitudes and habits, dreams do not always properly fulfill this function, as
we have seen in the case of nightmares.
Lucid dreaming, as a form of mental imagery, is related
to daydreaming, hypnagogic reverie, psychedelic drug states, and hypnotic
hallucinations. Dr. Dennis Jaffe and Dr. David Bresler have written that
“mental imagery mobilizes the latent, inner powers of the person which have
immense potential to aid in the healing process and in the promotion of health.
“22 Imagery is used in a great Variety of therapeutic approaches
ranging from psychoanalysis to behavior modification, and to help physical
healing.
For purposes of illustration, let us examine one
well-studied form of potent imagery—hypnosis. People who have hypnotic dreams
while in deep trance relate experiences that have much in common with lucid
dreams. Hypnotic dreamers are almost always at least partly lucid in their
dreams, and in the deeper states, like lucid dreamers, they experience imagery
as real.
Deeply hypnotized subjects are able to exert remarkable
control over many of their physiological functions: inhibiting allergic
reactions, stopping bleeding, and inducing anaesthesia at will. Unfortunately,
these dramatic responses are limited to the one person in ten or twenty capable
of entering very deeply into hypnosis. Unlike lucid dreaming, this capability
does not seem to be learn-able. Thus, lucid dreaming could hold the same
potential for self-regulation as deep-trance hypnosis, yet be applicable to a
much greater proportion of the population.
Let us consider another example of the therapeutic use of
imagery: Dr. Carl Simonton’s work with cancer patients. Dr. Simonton and his
colleagues found that patients with advanced cancer who practiced healing
imagery in addition to taking standard radiation and chemotherapy treatments
survived, on the average, twice as long as expected by national averages. 23
Unfortunately, we don’t yet know how replicable these results are or how
exactly it works. Still, they suggest some exciting possibilities.
Recent evidence supports the idea that the experimental
reality, or vividness of mental imagery, determines how strongly it affects
physiology. 24 Dreams, which everyone experiences every night, are
also the most vivid form of mental imagery most people are likely to experience
under normal circumstances. Dreams are so vivid that we have difficulty in
telling them from waking reality. Therefore, they are also likely to be a
source of highly effective healing imagery. Furthermore, laboratory studies at
Since while dreaming we generate body images in the form
of our dream bodies, why should we not be able to initiate self-healing
processes by consciously envisioning our dream bodies as perfectly healthy
during our lucid dreams? Further, if our dream bodies do not appear in a state
of perfect health, we can heal them symbolically in the same manner. We know
from our investigations that such things can be done. Here is a question for
future lucid dream research to answer: “If we heal the dream body, to what
extent will we also heal the physical body?”25
Five years later, the question remains as intriguing as
ever and has yet to receive a definite answer. There are, however, intriguing
anecdotes:
My findings are that healing is possible in lucid
dreams. I had a lump in my breast which I took apart inside my body in a lucid
dream. It was a beautiful, geodesic cathedral-like structure! A week later the
lump was gone. (B. P.,
About a year ago, I sprained my ankle.... It was very
swollen and difficult to walk. In a dream I remember running... and suddenly I
realized that I couldn’t possibly be running with this ankle so I must be
dreaming. At this point I began to come out of my dream, the pain of my ankle
started to fade in, but then I reached for my ankle with my dream hands which
caused me to tumble in my dream. As I held my ankle I felt a vibration similar
to electricity. Amazed, I decided to throw lightning bolts around in my dream.
That’s all I remember of the dream, but I awoke with next to no pain in my
swollen ankle and was able to walk on it with considerable ease. (C. P.,
Of course, these stories are anecdotal. We have no
way of knowing whether lucid dreaming had anything to do with the reported
improvements. B. P. ‘s lump could have gone away by itself anyway, and
C. P. ‘s sprained ankle might have been on the threshold of healing just
at that moment. Controlled scientific studies are the only certain way to
determine the true potential of the healing dream.
I am standing quietly alone in a room when I become
aware that I am dreaming. After enjoying a few soft somersaults in the air
near the ceiling, I consider what to do next. Shall I fly somewhere? Visit
someone? Then I recall my intention of seeking the meaning of life and decide
to Pursue this task. Realizing I would prefer to be outdoors, I leave the room
and walk into the kitchen. My sister appears to be engaged in some activity
near the sink. I Pause to ask if she would like to go flying with me. She
Declines the invitation, saying she is about to fix a cup of tea. I tell her I
will be right back, and feel mischievous as I’m fully aware that I’m about to
go off on an adventure.
Outside, the evening is clear and quiet with stars
shining brightly. I float comfortably on my back, gazing up at the heavens. I
notice the moon is not visible and assume it has already gone down. I’d like
to see it, though and figure that if I rise high enough I should be able to.
Immediately I begin to ascend, still in the same position.
When I come to some power lines I hesitate and wonder
how my body will react if I try to float through them. This concerns me only
briefly as I say almost aloud, “Wait a minute, whose dream is this, anyway?
This is no obstacle!” Having expressed this, I find I am now either beyond them
or they have disappeared and I am beginning to rise a bit faster.
I decide at this point to visit the moon. I hold my
hands out in front of me and fly upwards into the sky. Moving more and more
rapidly, soon I sense a roundish shape appearing behind my hands. I lower my
hands, expecting to see the moon. The shock of what I see is very dramatic and
startling: It is not the moon at all, but quite clearly it is the planet Earth!
It is an exquisitely lovely vision, a gem glowing in soft greens and blues with
swirling whites against the sable sky.
Quickly replacing the sense of shock is a feeling of
great elation and I jump up and down in space, clapping my hands and shouting
joyfully. I’ve always wanted to be out here—I feel a thrilling rush and a sense
of accomplishment.
I became so excited that I have to remind myself to
calm down again, fully aware that if I lose my balance / will awaken. I shift
my focus to my surroundings: I am floating in the midst of a vast, limitless
darkness that is at the same time brilliant with countless stars, and very much
alive. This aliveness is somehow almost audible: I, feel I am “hearing” with my
entire being, sensing the “deafening silence” as in a deep forest. This is an
exquisitely wonderful place to be. Now I am beginning to move away from the
stars and Earth, which becomes smaller and smaller until it disappears. Soon I
am seeing entire solar systems and galaxies, moving and spinning harmoniously,
growing smaller and smaller as they, too, gradually fade into the distance. I
hover in space totally amazed. There is a profound sense of eternal energy everywhere.
Again I remember the experiment and decide to try a
question. I feel rather uncertain of how to put it and wish I had given more
thought to formulating the question. But the moment seems most auspicious and I
don’t want to miss this opportunity, so I ask, “What’s the meaning of the
Universe ?” This sounds too presumptuous so I rephrase the question, and ask,
“May I know the meaning of the Universe?”
The answer comes in a wholly unexpected form. Something
is emerging from the darkness. It looks like some kind of living molecular
model or mathematical equation—an extremely complex, three-dimensional network
of fine lines glowing like neon lights. It’s unfolding itself, multiplying,
constantly changing, filling up the Universe with increasingly complex
structures and interrelationships.
This growing movement is not erratic but consistent and
purposeful, rapid but at the same time unhurried,
determined. When it has expanded beyond me, continuing
to multiply, I think of returning to the ordinary world.
When almost back, I call out a very sincere “Thank you!
Thank you!” to the Universe for the spectacular
vision. I awake
with wonder, excitement and delight, as well as a renewed and deeply moving
respect for the Universe. This
experience left me with a renewed feeling of awe and respect for the nature and
splendor and creative energy force of the Universe. It’s as if I was seeing the
invisible relationships connecting all things—the intimate molecular level
superimposed over the vast and limitless universe. This was indeed a powerfully
moving and impressive event. It also led me to believe that in some way I, too,
am a unique and essential part of whatever is going on here—the Divine is
within as well as without. (P. K.,
Knowing that I was dreaming, I found myself in an infinite
void, no longer an “I” but a “We. “ This “We” was a sphere of pure light
shining forth in the darkness. I was one of many centers of consciousness on
the outer surface of this Sun of Being. We were an integrated collection of
energy and consciousness and though we could work independently of each other
it was as though we were one consciousness and worked in perfect harmony and
balance.
I did not have a body or spirit. We were just energy
and all-knowing consciousness. All opposites were perfectly complemented and
cancelled out by each other.
I believe there was a tone vibrating through the galaxy
but I can’t remember it now. Later in the dream, I/We created a rectangle in
the void—the door to life on earth. We created nature scenes in it and I moved
forward into it and took a human form and experienced them. There were about
ten scenes in all. All the while my consciousness was not separate and We all
worked as one, though there were separate nodes of consciousness. I was very
lucid as this all went on. (C. C.,
Over a year ago, I was researching Eastern religions,
especially Buddhism, Jainism, and Hinduism. During that time, I had a lucid dream
in which I experienced what I believe is called the “Dance of Shiva. “ I
dreamed of a weather-beaten Hindu statue. As I looked at it, my entire field of
vision began to break down. The scene resembled “snow” in a bad TV reception. I
wondered during the dream if perhaps my retina had come loose from the optic
nerve.
I then realized I was dreaming and that what I was
perceiving was the primal energy underlying the Universe. I felt deeply
interconnected and at one with every thing around me. I seemed to have
rediscovered eternity. Either time had stopped or I had stepped beyond the arch
of time. (T. D.,
The final phenomenon is the fullness of light. This light
has appeared only while I dreamed lucidly, but it has not been brought about
obviously by my own action. It has appeared while I was in darkness or in a
significant room or while engaged in religious activity. It usually appears
like the sun moving down from above my head until all I see is brilliant
light. There remain no images. I become aware of the presence of God and feel
spontaneous great joy. As long as I direct my attention to the light, I
gradually lose awareness of my dreamed body.
To lose awareness of myself and my dream images in the
evident presence of God, is to experience transcendence of myself. This is the
experience, whatever the explanation. Fullness of light, awareness of God,
gradual loss of awareness of myself, joy (often called bliss), and uncontrollable
devotion are phenomena mentioned commonly in mystical literature. These
experiences of mine have proceeded only out of the context of lucid dreaming. 1
“What endless questions vex the thought, of Whence and
Whither, When and How?” wrote Sir Richard Burton in his Kasidah. 2
Since thought began, reflective individuals have asked countless variations
on the question, “Why am I here?” They have received as many answers as there
have been questioners, but the answers have seldom been Put in words.
Likewise, when dreamworker Keelin asked in her lucid dream recounted above, “May I know the meaning of the Universe?” she was answered with an infinitely complicated living mathematical equation impossibly beyond her capacity to comprehend intellectually. One might take this answer as equivalent to “No, you may not!” However, the intellect may simply not be the proper organ with which to perceive the “meaning of life.”
Peter Brent has described the problem in an article on Sufi teaching practices:
We create what we become aware of, at least to some
extent, by the sense we use to apprehend it. If you show a dog a book of
philosophy, the dog will use its nose in order to decide what it is. It will
have a series of categories—food/not food, dog/not dog and so on—that
will serve as its criteria for judging the scents that are its primary data. It
will as a result very soon lose interest in the book. That will not be because
of a defect in its sense of smell, it will be because ability, instinct and experience
force it to use the wrong sense for the task. In the same way, the manner in
which we perceive the world may not be inadequate, given the senses we are
employing; it may simply be irrelevant because we are employing the wrong
senses. 3
What is the proper sense with which to perceive the
hidden meaning in life? Brent hints that it is a form of intuition and that
its cultivation requires the direction of a teacher who already has the
capacity. This fact may limit how far lucid dreaming can take you without
guidance.
Nevertheless, lucid dreaming can give you a taste of the
infinite, an intimation of a far wider world beyond the limits of ordinary
reality. Whatever your views on spirituality and the nature of the self, you
can use your lucid dreams to plumb the depths of your identity and explore the
frontiers of your inner world.
Tibetan teacher Tarthang Tulku has said:
Dreams are a reservoir of knowledge and experience, yet
they are often overlooked as a vehicle for exploring reality. 4
For more than a thousand years, the Tibetan Buddhists have
used lucid dreaming as a means of experiencing the illusory nature of personal
reality and as one part of a set of practices said to lead to enlightenment and
the discovery of the ultimate nature of the self.
The Sufis may also use lucid dreaming, or something like
it, for spiritual purposes. The famous twelfth-century Spanish Sufi Muhiyuddin
Ibn El-Arabi reportedly recommended that “a person must control his thoughts
in a dream. The training of this alertness... will produce great benefits for
the individual. Everyone should apply himself to the attainment of this ability
of such great value. “5
Tarthang Tulku explains the benefits of lucid dreaming as
follows: “Experiences we gain from practices we do during our dream time can
then be brought into our daytime experience. For example, we can learn to
change the frightening images we see in our dreams into peaceful forms. Using
the same process, we can transmute the negative emotions we feel during the
daytime into increased awareness. Thus we can use our dream experiences to
develop a more flexible life. “6
“With continuing practice, “ Tulku continues, “we see less
and less difference between the waking and the dream state. Our experiences in
waking life become more vivid and varied, the result of a lighter and more
refined awareness.... This kind of awareness, based on dream practice, can help
create an inner balance. Awareness Irishes the mind in a way that nurtures the
whole living organism. Awareness illuminates previously unseen facets of the
mind, and lights the way for us to explore ever-new dimensions of reality. “7
According to The Doctrine of the Dream State, an ancient
Tibetan manual of lucid dream yoga, the practice of certain dream control
techniques lead to the capacity to dream anything imaginable. 8
Tulku makes a similar claim: “Advanced yogis are able to do just about anything
in their dreams. They can become dragons or mythical birds, become larger or
smaller or disappear, go back into childhood and relive experiences, or even
fly through space. “9
The wish-fulfillment possibilities of this degree of dream
control may seem compelling, but Tibetan dream yogis set their sights far above
the pursuit of any trivial pleasures. For them, the lucid dream represents “a
vehicle for exploring reality, “ an opportunity to experiment with and
realize the subjective nature of the dream state and, by extension, waking experience
as well. They regard such a realization as bearing the profoundest possible
significance.
Realizing that our experience of reality is subjective,
rather than direct and true, may have practical implications. According to
Tulku, when we think of all of our experiences as being subjective, and
therefore like a dream, “the concepts and self-identities which have boxed us
in begin to fall away. As our self-identity becomes less rigid, our problems
become lighter. At the same time, a much deeper level of awareness develops. “10
As a result, “even the hardest things become enjoyable and easy. When you
realize that everything is like a dream, you attain pure awareness. And the way
to attain this awareness is to realize that all experience is like a dream. “11
A commentary on The Doctrine of the Dream State explains
that long practice and much experience is necessary to understand dream yoga;
both theory and experience is needed to complete the journey. Those who
successfully follow the path of dream yoga to the end learn that:
1. DREAMS CAN BE CHANGED BY WILL
“... matter, or form in its
dimensional aspects, large or small, and its numerical aspects, of plurality
and unity, is entirely subject to one’s will when the mental powers have been
efficiently developed by yoga. “12 As a result of diligent
experimentation, the dream yogi learns that any dream can be transformed, by
willing it so. Most lucid dreamers will already know this by experience. Also
recall from our discussion in chapter 5 the powerful effect of expectation on
dream content.
2. DREAMS ARE UNSTABLE
“A step further and he learns
that form, in the dream-state, and all the multitudinous content of dreams, are
merely playthings of mind, and, therefore as unstable as mirages. “13
Experienced lucid dreamers also will have observed this for themselves. Dreams
are as realistic, but not as stable, as waking perceptions.
3. WAKING-STATE PERCEPTION IS AS UNREAL AS UNREAL
DREAMS
“A further step leads him to
the knowledge that the essential nature of form and of all things perceived by
the senses in the waking-state are as equally unreal as their reflexes in the
dream-state, both states alike being sangsaric, “ that is to say,
illusory. 14 At this stage, the yogi’s
knowledge is a matter of theory, rather than experience. From chapter 5, you
should remember that the dream state and waking state both use the same
perceptual process to arrive at mental representations or models of the world.
These models, whether of the dream or physical world, are only models. As such
they are illusions, not the things they are representing, just as the map is
not the territory, and the menu is not the meal.
4. THE GREAT REALIZATION:
ITS ALL A DREAM
“The final step leads to the Great Realization, that nothing within the sangsara [phenomenal world of space and time] is or can be other than unreal like dreams. “15 If we compare the mind to a television set, the Great Realization is understanding that nothing that appears on the screen can be anything other than an image, or an illusion. Simply having the idea, for example, “that the mind cannot contain anything but thoughts, “ is not the Great Realization, which is a matter of experience, not of theory.
In this light, “the Universal
Creation... and every phenomenal thing therein” are seen to be “but the content
of the Supreme Dream. “16 The dream yogi directly experiences this
new perspective on reality.
5.
“With the dawning of this
Divine Wisdom, the micro-cosmic aspect of the Macrocosm becomes fully awakened;
the dew-drop slips back into the Shining Sea, in Nirvanic Blissfulness
and At-one-ment, possessed of All Possessions, Knower of the All-Knowledge,
Creator of All Creations—the One Mind, Reality Itself. “17 Here, I
take refuge with philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein: “Whereof one cannot speak,
thereof one must remain silent. “
Plainly, this is not the sort
of knowledge that is subject to public verification and scientific testing.
However, this qualification is in no way intended to deny the possible value of
mystical experiences, since there is no reason to believe that the limits of
science are the limits of knowledge. Nor do we intend to imply that you should
follow the ways of the Tibetan yogis in seeking your own knowledge of “Divine
Wisdom. “ The methods and symbology of the Tibetan mystical schools were
designed to function within the cultural context of Tibetan culture. If you are
serious about pursuing your highest potential, we recommend that you find a
guide or teacher who can speak to you in a language that you can
understand.
Nasrudin went into a bank to cash a check. The teller
asked him if he could identify himself. “Yes, I can, “ Nasrudin replied, taking
out a mirror with which he scrutinizes his features. “That’s me, all right. “18
Who we really are is not necessarily the same as who we
believe ourselves to be. We are not who we think we are in our dreams (or
indeed while awake). You can readily observe this fact for yourself in your
next lucid dream. Ask yourself about the nature of each thing you find in your
lucid dream. For example, you may be sitting at a dream table, with your
feet on the dream floor. And yes, that’s a dream shoe, on a dream
foot, part of a dream body, so this must be a dream me\ All
you need to do is to reflect on your situation in a lucid dream and you see
that the person you appear to be in the dream cannot be who you really are: it
is only an image, a mental model of your self, or to use the Freudian term,
your “ego. “
Seeing that the ego cannot be who you really are makes it
easier to stop identifying with it. Once you no longer identify with your ego,
you are freer to change it. Simply recognizing that the ego is a simplified
model of the self gives you a more accurate model of the self, and makes it
more difficult for you to mistake the map for the territory.
If you can see your ego objectively in its proper role as
the representation and servant of the self, you won’t need to struggle with
your ego. You cannot get rid of it in any case, nor would it be desirable to do
so—the ego is necessary for effective functioning in the world. The fact that
both ego and self say “I” is a source of confusion and misidentification. The
well-informed ego says truly, “I am what I know myself to be. “ The self says
merely, “I am. “ If I know that I am not my ego, I am detached enough to be
objective about myself, as in the story in which a monk boasts to Nasrudin, “I
am so detached that I never think of myself, only of others. “ Nasrudin
replies, “Well, I am so objective that I can look at myself as if I were another
person; so I can afford to think of myself. “19
The less we identify with who we think we are, the more
likely we are to discover who we really are. In this regard, the Sufi master
Tariqavi wrote:
When you have found yourself you can have knowledge.
Until then you can only have opinions. Opinions are based on habit and what
you conceive to be convenient.
The study of the Way requires self-encounter along the
way. You have not met yourself yet. The only advantage of meeting others in the
meantime is that one of them may present you to yourself.
Before you do that, you will possibly imagine that you
have met yourself many times. But the truth is that when you do meet yourself,
you come into a permanent endowment and bequest of knowledge that is like no
other experience on earth. 20
Before feeling the sincere desire to “meet yourself, “ you
may find the fulfillment of your ego’s wants and wishes far more compelling.
This is natural, and it would probably be counterproductive and frustrating for
you to try to pursue more sublime aspects of yourself when part of you is still
crying for the satisfaction of drives and passions unsatiated in waking life.
Likewise, you should not seek transcendence as a means of
escapism. Remember van Eeden’s demon-dreams. You must first be willing to deal
with whatever problems you may find on your personal level. But, after having
resolved any problems within the dream, and after a sufficient amount of
wish-fulfillment activity, you may feel the urge or need to seek possibilities
beyond what you have known or conceived. You may seek to meet your Self.
I suddenly became lucid in the dream as I was walking
Bin the hallway of my high school. I was very glad to be lucid, and to be virtually
as aware as in waking life. As usual, I wanted to get outside, into the light.
Walking down the hallway, I came to the exit, but my attempt to open the door
was thwarted by the hulk of a wrecked truck. Realizing it was only a dream, I
managed to get through the door enough to grasp the vehicle with both hands and
heave it to the side almost without effort.
Outside, the air was clean, the sky blue, the scene
pastoral and brilliantly green. I ran through the grass and leaped into the air
joyously. Soaring through the treetops, I became entangled in the branches, and
had to hover while extricating myself. Finally above the limbs, 1 continued my
flight to a few hundred feet high. While flying, I thought, “I’ve flown so many
times before, maybe I’ll try a floating meditation in the sky. “ Having decided
on the attempt, I asked for help from the “Higher, “ saying aloud, “Highest
Father-Mother, help me to get the most out of this experience!” I then rolled
over backwards and ceased attempting to control my flight, without fear of
falling. Immediately, I began to float through the sky, upside down, with my
eyes closed, the sun beaming brilliantly down on me, filling my head with
light. I felt like a feather floating lazily through the air. During about the
five minutes of floating, I gently but firmly pushed thoughts out of my mind,
as in my waking meditation practice. The less distracted I was by thoughts, the
more intensely aware and genuinely joyous the experience became—what I can
only describe as ecstasy. Gradually I became aware of my body in bed, and as I
awoke I felt a lightness and well-being which is hard to describe. 21
I enter a church and know that I am expected to speak.
The congregation is singing hymn #55 from a red hymnal. While they go through
the usual preliminary exercises, I decide to go outside to gather myself. I am
worried and afraid because I don’t know what I will say. I sit down in the
grass and suddenly come up with a topic which feels right—“The Way of
Surrender. “
At this point I look up in the eastern sky and see a
large orb of white light many times the size of the moon. I realize that I’m
dreaming. I yell out in joy knowing it is coming for me. As soon as I do, the
Light withdraws into the sky as if it is awaiting a more appropriate response
on my part. I know that I must turn my eyes away and trust. As I do, the Light
descends. As it approaches, a woman’s voice says, “You’ve done well reflecting
this Light within yourself. But now it must be turned outward. “
The air becomes charged and the ground is brilliantly
lit. The top of my head begins to prickle and be warmed by the Light. I awaken.
22
To go beyond the ego’s model of the world, the lucid
dreamer must relinquish control of the dream (“surrender”) to something beyond
the ego. The concept of surrender is illustrated by the dreams above. Each of
us probably has a different conception of this “something beyond, “ the form of
which depends on our upbringing, philosophy or exposure to mystical ideas.
A common theme, expressed in religious terms, is
“Surrender to the Will of God. “ However, if you don’t like or don’t understand
religious terminology, you may wish to express your desire in a different
manner. In the context of what we have been discussing here, the phrase could
easily be “I surrender control to my true self. “ Whatever you assume about the
nature of your true self, surrendering control from who you think you are to
who you truly are will be an improvement. Because it includes everything you
know, whether consciously or unconsciously, the true self is capable of making
wiser decisions than your ego.
Despite having surrendered ego-control of the direction
of your dream, you must maintain your lucidity. If you do not, your ego’s
drives and expectations are likely to regain command. Furthermore, lucidity can
help you to respond creatively and intuitively to the flow of the dream, and to
remember that there is no need to hold back from new experiences because of
fear of the unknown.
“The Highest” is a particularly satisfying formulation for
the transcendent goal. No assumptions need be made about “The Highest” except
that whatever it is, it is hierarchically speaking, prior to everything else,
and also more valuable than anything else. The following two accounts provide
some sense of what may happen when lucid dreamers seek “The Highest. “ In the
first case,
Scott Sparrow dreamed:
I am sitting in front of a small altar which has
figurines upon it. At first, I see an ox. I look away momentarily, then look
back, only to find that there is a figure of a dragon in its place. I begin to
realize that I am dreaming. I turn my head away and affirm that when I look
back, I will see the highest form possible. I slowly turn back and open my
eyes. On the altar is the figure of a man in meditation. A tremendous wave of
emotion and energy overwhelms me. I jump up and run outdoors in exhilaration. 23
Sparrow comments that this dream showed him what the
highest was to him, after which it could be consciously established as an ideal,
to serve thereafter as a “veritable measuring device by which the inner experiences
can be evaluated. “24 However, we need to remember that making an
image into an idol, that is, a fixed idea or belief, can inhibit further
growth.
Here is the second account, one of my most memorable and
personally meaningful lucid dreams:
Late one morning several years ago, I found myself driving
in my sports car down a dream road, delighted by the vibrantly beautiful
scenery, and perfectly aware that I was dreaming. After driving a short
distance further, I saw a very attractive hitchhiker on the side of the road
just ahead. I hardly need to say that I felt strongly inclined to stop and
pick her up. But I said to myself, “I’ve had that dream before. How about something
new?” So I passed her by, resolving instead to seek ‘ “The Highest. As soon as
I opened myself to guidance, my car took off into the air, flying rapidly
upwards, until it fell behind, like the first stage of a rocket and I continued
to fly higher into the clouds. I passed a cross on a steeple top, a star of
David, and other religious symbols. As I rose still higher, beyond the clouds,
I entered a space that seemed a limitless mystical realm: a vast emptiness that
was overflowing with love, an unbounded space that feu somehow like home. My
mood had lifted as high as I had flown, and I began to sing with ecstatic
inspiration. The quality of my voice was truly amazing—it spanned the entire
range from deepest bass to highest soprano. I felt as if I were embracing the
entire cosmos in the resonance of my voice. 25
This dream gave me a vastly expanded sense of identity. I
felt as if I had discovered another form of being to which my ordinary sense of
self stood in relation as a drop of water to the sea. Of course, I have no way
of evaluating how close this vision comes to the ultimate nature of reality (if
there is any such thing) and I say this in spite of the conviction of certainty
that came with the experience.
As convincing as these experiences may be at the time, it
is difficult to evaluate their ultimate validity. As George Gillespie has
repeatedly emphasized, the fact that someone has a dream in which he
experiences some transcendental reality, whether God, the Void, Nirvana, and
so on, does not allow us to conclude that the dreamer actually experienced the
transcendental reality. 26 To assume otherwise would be like
expecting that if you dream you have won the lottery, you will wake up rich
overnight. Therefore, it is probably sensible to maintain a healthy reserve of
judgment in your explorations: remember they are dreams, and as such, can as
easily represent delusion or truth. Neither believe nor disbelieve them, but
keep their lessons in mind as showing you that there is more to life than you
presently know. Psychologist Charles Tart has similarly recommended caution in
interpreting the meaning of experiences:
Knowledge or experience of the psychic, meditation, lucid
and ordinary dreams, altered states, mystical experiences, psychedelics: All of
these can open our minds to new understandings, take us beyond our ordinary
limits. They can also temporarily create the most convincing, “obviously”
true, excitingly true, ecstatically true delusions. That is when we must
practice developing our discrimination. Otherwise the too-open mind can be
worse off than a closed but reasonably sane mind. 27
Fariba Bogzaran conducted a study on what happens when
people deliberately seek the Divine in lucid dreams. Her inquiry focused on the
effect that people’s prior conceptions of divinity and their approach to
seeking it had on their actual dreamed experience of God. Some people conceive
of God as a personal divinity—a wise old man, Christ, or all-encompassing
Mother. Others see the Divine as a force in the universe, or some other
intangible, nonpersonal power. Significantly, of the people in her study who
succeeded in encountering an image of “The Highest” in lucid dreams, more than
80 percent of those who believed in a personal divinity found God in their
dreams represented as a person. Also, more than 80 percent of those who
believed in an impersonal divinity experienced the Divine as something other
than a person.
The way people approach seeking the Divine also affects
their experience. Bogzaran divided her subjects into two groups: those who
actively sought God in their lucid dreams, and those who opened themselves up
to whatever experience of the Divine might come to them. The difference in
approach was evident in the way the dream seekers phrased their intentions.
Active seekers tended to say that they planned to “seek the Highest” in their
lucid dreams. Those who opened themselves, surrendering to Divine Will, as it
were, expressed their intentions more as wishing to “experience the Divine, “
or to open themselves to the Divine. The passive, surrendering group seemed to
have less expectations about the appearance of God, and experienced more
unexpected outcomes than the active, seeking group. The “surrenderors” usually
encountered some representation of divinity without looking for it; the
“seekers” also usually found a God, often the one they expected to find.
EXERCISE: SEEKING THE HIGHEST
Think about what is ultimately most important to you.
Formulate a phrase in the form of an affirmation or question that best
captures your highest aspirations. Make sure it is a question you genuinely
want answered, or an affirmation that you can make without reservations. Some
possibilities might be:
·
“I seek God (or Truth, The Highest, the Divine,
the Ultimate Mystery, etc). “
·
“I want to meet my True Self. “
·
“Let me see the Beginning of All. “
·
“Who am I?”
·
“I don’t know my Heart’s Desire. How can I find
it?”
·
“I have a duty to perform. What is it?”
·
“Where did I come from, why am I here, and where
am I going?”
·
“What is the most important thing for me to know
(or do) now (or next)?”
·
“Guide me to Love and Light. “
·
“Let me remember my mission. “
·
“Let me be awakened. “
Pick only one phrase at a time. Write down and memorize
your affirmation or question.
At bedtime, remind yourself of your affirmation or question
and your intention to ask or affirm the phrase in your next lucid dream.
Once in a lucid dream, repeatedly state your affirmation
or ask your question while going along with the flow of the dream. Remember
what the phrase means to you. Open yourself to guidance from a higher source.
Strive to be sensitive to where the dream wants to take you, and go with it.
Detach as much as you can from preconceptions about what should happen, and
you will be able to accept what is given to you.
Commentary
If you have trouble deciding what you want to seek, you
may find it helpful to imagine that the Angel of Death has just come for you.
“More time! More time!” you plead. “That’s what everybody says, “ he replies,
“but in fact you are allowed the traditional last wish. Most people waste it
calling their priest or lawyer, or smoking a cigarette, so be careful. What do
you want to do with your final dream?” Putting the question in this context
certainly clears away the trivial, leaving what is of real importance to you.
In the twelfth century, the great Afghan Sufi Hakim Sanai
wrote that “humanity is asleep, concerned only with what is useless, living in
a wrong world. “29 Nearly a thousand years later, the situation is
little altered: humanity is still asleep. Some may find this hard to believe.
You might suppose that if it were true, you ought to know it! However, if it
were indeed true that while in the state we ordinarily call “awake, “ we are
virtually sleepwalking through life, it would be difficult for us to observe
this fact directly. The one thing the sleepwalker doesn’t see is that he is
asleep.
Similarly, as we walk down the road of life, we almost
always assume we are awake. Sleeping, we think, is inaction; this is
action, so this is waking. We don’t think of ourselves as being asleep,
but then neither does the sleepwalker or the nonlucid dreamer. Indeed, a Sufi
aphorism puts the matter pointedly:
O you who fear the difficulties of the road to annihilation—do
not fear.
Sometimes lucid dreamers become acutely aware of their
usual sleeping state, as in the following experience of J. H. M. Whiteman, a
South African mathematician:
After [attending a concert by a celebrated string quartet]...
I remember going to bed with mind peacefully composed and full of a quiet joy.
The dream during the night that followed was at the beginning quite irrational,
though perhaps more keenly followed than usual. I seemed to move smoothly
through a region of space where, presently, a vivid sense of cold flowed in on
me and held my attention with a strange interest.
1 believe that at that moment the dream became lucid.
Then suddenly,... all that up to now had been wrapped in confusion instantly
passed away, and a new space burst forth in vivid presence and utter reality,
with perception free and pinpointed as never before; the darkness itself seemed
alive. The thought that was then borne in upon me with inescapable conviction
was this: “I have never been awake before. “31
It’s ordinarily very difficult to conceive how you might
not yet be fully awake, unless you have had experiences like lucid dreams. But
if you have, you can understand by thinking through this analogy: as ordinary
dreaming is to lucid dreaming, so the ordinary “sleep-walking” state is to what
we could call “the lucid waking” or “awakened-waking” state.
I’m not saying that lucid dreaming is the same thing as
enlightenment, only that a comparison of the two levels of awareness in dreams
can show us how there might be a level of understanding of our waking lives far
beyond our present one.
Consider how muddled and confused most of us are when trying
to comprehend the origin and purpose of our lives, and compare this confounded
state of mind to that of the nonlucid dreamer trying to rationalize the bizarre
events of the dream in the wrong terms. Our dream worlds make much more sense
and offer many more possibilities when we realize we are dreaming. Thus, an
analogous realization in our waking lives would lead to increased understanding
of the context of our lives, and greater access to our potentials and
creativity.
As I said above, I do not regard lucid dreaming as a
complete path to enlightenment. Perhaps in the hands of the Tibetan Buddhists,
with the right guidance, and combined with other necessary techniques, seekers
could use lucid dreaming to take them to their spiritual goals. However, I see
it primarily as a signpost pointing to the possibility of higher
consciousness, a reminder that there is more to life than people are ordinarily
aware of, and an inspiration to seek a guide who knows the way.
Idries Shah has vividly described our situation in the
following story.
Once upon a time, on a hot summer’s day, two tired men who
were on a very long journey came to a riverside, where they stopped to rest.
Moments later, the younger man had fallen asleep and—as the other watched—his
mouth fell open. Can you believe it when I tell you that a little creature, to
all appearances a beautiful miniature butterfly, then flew out from between his
lips?
The insect swooped onto a small island in the river, where
it alighted upon a flower and sucked nectar from its cup. Then it flew around
the tiny domain (which must have seemed huge to an insect of that size) a
number of times, as though enjoying the sunshine and the soft breeze. Soon it
found another of its own kind and the two danced in the air, as if flirting
with one another.
The first butterfly settled again on a gently swaying
twig; and, after a moment or two, it joined a mass of large and small insects
of several kinds which swarmed around the carcass of an animal lying in the
lush green grass.... Several minutes passed.
Idly, the wakeful traveller threw a small stone into the
water near the little island; and the waves which this created splashed the butterfly.
At first it was almost knocked over; but then, with difficulty, it shook the
droplets from its wings and rose into the air.
It flew, with wings beating at top speed, back towards the
sleeper’s mouth. But the other man now picked up a large leaf, and held it in
front of his companion’s face, to see what the little creature would do.
The butterfly dashed itself against this obstruction
again and again, as if in panic: while the sleeping man started to writhe and
groan.
The butterfly’s tormentor dropped the leaf, and the
creature darted, quick as a flash, into the open mouth. No sooner was it inside
than the sleeper shuddered and sat up, wide awake.
He told his friend:
“I have just had a most unpleasant experience, a dreadful
nightmare. I dreamt that I was living in a pleasant and secure castle, but
became restless and decided to explore the outside world.
“In my dream I travelled by some magical means to a far
country where all was joy and pleasure. I drank deep, for instance, from a cup
of ambrosia, as much as I wanted. I met and danced with a woman of matchless
beauty, and I disported myself in endless summer. I played and feasted with
many good companions, people of all kinds and conditions, natures, ages and
complexions. There were some sorrows, but these only served to emphasize the
pleasures of this existence.
“This life went by for many years. Suddenly, and without
warning, there was a catastrophe: huge tidal waves swept over the land. I was
drenched and I very nearly drowned. I found myself hurtling back towards my
castle, as if on wings; but when I reached the entrance gate I could not get
in. A huge green door had been put up by a giant evil spirit. I threw myself
against it again and again, but it did not yield.
“Suddenly, as I felt that I was about to die, I remembered
a magic word which was reputed to dissolve enchantments. No sooner had I spoken
it than the great green portal fell away, like a leaf in the wind, and I was
able to enter my home again and to live thenceforth in safety. But I was so
frightened I woke up. “32
Shah comments: “NOW IT IS SAID that you, as you may have
guessed, are the butterfly. The island is this world. The things which
you like-and dislike-are therefore seldom what you think they are. Even when
your time arrives to go (or when you think about it) you only find distortions
of the facts, which is why this question cannot ordinarily be understood. But
beyond ‘the butterfly’ is ‘the sleeping man. ‘ Behind both of these is the true
Reality. Given the right opportunity, ‘the butterfly’ can learn about these
things. About where it comes from; about the nature of the ‘sleeping man. ‘ And
about what lies beyond these two. “33
You have learned a great deal about your dreaming mind,
and you are on your way to becoming an expert oneiro-naut. If you have not yet
succeeded at having lucid dreams after reading this book, and experimenting
with the exercises and techniques—don’t give up! How quickly you can learn this
skill depends on a number of factors, such as what other matters are demanding
your attention, or how well you remember your dreams. Nevertheless,
perseverance will pay off.
Be sure to devote sufficient time to developing the basic
skills necessary for practicing the induction techniques. If you are having
poor success with the induction techniques, concentrate on the basic exercises
and also practice the supplementary exercises in the appendix-Remember, a tall
building will not stand on a weak foundation.
This book is not the final word on lucid dreaming. Our
research continues, searching for better, easier ways to achieve lucidity. As
described in chapter 3, we have developed a lucid dream induction device
called the DreamLight™, and have found it can help people to have lucid dreams.
This is true both for people who have never had lucid dreams before as well as
those with more experience. We also continue our search to develop ways to
apply lucid dreaming to the problems of life. For those of you who would like
to learn more or to join us in exploring the world of lucid dreaming, I would
like to introduce you to the Lucidity Institute.
The media interest in lucid dreaming, and the numbers of
letters I received over the past decade, made it clear to me that others find
the experience or prospect of being awake in their dreams as fascinating and
compelling as I do. Lucid Dreaming and the present book are part of my
response to the burgeoning public interest in lucid dreams.
With the invaluable assistance of Michael LaPointe, a
management consultant and oneironaut who feels a duty to bring the benefits of
lucid dreaming to the public, I have established the Lucidity Institute. The
purpose of the Lucidity Institute is to promote research on the nature and
potentials of consciousness, with an emphasis on lucid dreaming, and to apply
the results of this research to the enhancement of human health and well-being.
The Lucidity Institute works to make the benefits of lucid
dreaming available to as many people as possible, and this effort takes several
forms. The DreamLight lucid dream induction device is available, so if you are
interested in trying out the device, contact the Lucidity Institute at the
address below. We have a membership society for people interested in
participating in and helping to advance research on lucidity in dreams and
waking life.
We conduct training programs and publish a quarterly
newsletter, NightLight, that allows members to learn about, participate
in, and support ongoing research on consciousness during sleep.
In each issue of NightLight, Lucidity Institute members
are presented with experiments on lucid dreaming— different ways of inducing,
studying, or using lucid dreams. The Lucidity Institute oneironauts report
their results to the editors of NightLight who publish summaries of the
results in subsequent issues. In addition, NightLight answers common
questions about lucid dreaming, provides updates on the activities of the Lucidity
Institute (workshops, technological developments, and networking ideas), and
showcases examples of inspirational lucid dreams. NightLight helps
oneironauts and researchers learn from each other.
I hope you will join us in the exciting adventure of exploring
the world of lucid dreaming. For more infor-mation, contact:
The Lucidity Institute
During after-dinner conversation with the prophets Ezekiel
and Isaiah, William Blake asked, “Does a firm persuasion that a thing is so,
make it so?” Isaiah replied: “All poets believe that it does, and in ages of
imagination this firm persuasion removed mountains; but many are not capable
of a firm persuasion of any thing. “1
Many lucid dream induction procedures require the specific
use of intention—the active mode of that elusive characteristic known as “will.
“ Like other aspects of Personality, will seems to be distributed unevenly
through the population. Some people seem to accomplish things through sheer
“force of will, “ while many people seem to “have no willpower. “ Fortunately,
it appears that the will can be strengthened by the application of appropriate
exercises.
Roberto Assagioli described methods for strengthening the
will in his book The Act of Will. 2 The next exercise is a
means of empowering by impressing upon yourself the value of your will.
EXERCISE: UNDERSTANDING THE VALUE OF THE WILL
Sit down with a pad of paper. Close your eyes and think
about the possible negative consequences that might result from your
present lack of will. If you smoke or drink or eat too much, if you can’t bring
yourself to claim something you deserve or protect yourself from injury, if you
can’t seem to do what you know is best for you, then dwell on the unpleasant
consequences for a moment, and make sure you write each of them down as you
think of them and contemplate them. Think of lost opportunities, or pain and
aggravation inflicted on yourself and others. If these images invoke negative
emotions, allow yourself to feel them. You don’t have to write an essay or
even a sentence. Simply make a list. After you have finished your list, read it
over. As you read, resolve to change or avoid negative consequences. Derive
some power from the repugnance of these images, and use that power to
strengthen your resolution.
Now paint an equally vivid picture in your mind’s eye,
this time depicting all the positive consequences of building a stronger
will. Just as in the first part of the exercise, first examine and contemplate
each potential positive result of a stronger will, then write it down. Again,
if you feel strong positive emotions as you contemplate the benefits that could
be yours—the satisfaction, recognition, enjoyment, achievement—allow yourself
to dwell on these emotions. Then focus on transforming your feelings into a
powerful desire to develop the necessary will.
Now see yourself already possessing a strong will,
thinking and acting the way you would think and act if your will was fully
developed. Fantasize about the best of the possible worlds that would be within
your reach with a highly developed will. See yourself as you could be. Let this
“Ideal Model” of yourself, as Assagioli called it, power your intention to
develop your will.
As with other organs and functions of our bodies and
minds, the will can be strengthened by exercise. To specifically strengthen a
particular muscle group, we employ exercises aimed at exercising just that
group. In strengthening the will, likewise, it is useful to train the will in
isolation from other psychological functions. 3 This can be done by
performing “useless” exercises. William James, the founder of American
psychology, wrote that you should “keep alive in yourself the faculty of making
efforts by means of little useless exercises every day. “4 An
example of this sort of exercise is one proposed by Boyd Barrett in his book Strength
of Will and How to Develop It. 5 Every day, for seven days, the
trainee should stand on a chair for ten minutes, while trying to remain contented.
One man who practiced this exercise reported after the third day’s session,
“Have had a sense of power in performing this exercise imposed by myself on
myself. Joy and energy are experienced in willing. This exercise ‘tones me up’
morally, and awakens in me a sense of nobility.... “6
You can make many daily activities and experiences into
exercises of the will. For example, you could make an exercise of remaining
serene in trying situations at work, or retaining your patience when stuck in
traffic. Below, we provide a program for training your will.
EXERCISE: STRENGTHENING YOUR WILL
Below is a list of “useless” exercises:
·
Move fifty paper clips from one box to another,
one at a time, deliberately and slowly.
·
Get up and down from a chair thirty times.
·
Stand on a chair for five minutes.
·
Repeat quietly, but aloud: “I will do this,
“ while beating time for five minutes.
·
Walk back and forth in a room, touching in turn
a certain object on each side of the room (say, a vase on one side, and a
window on the other) for five minutes.
·
Get out of bed fifteen minutes earlier than
necessary in the morning.
·
Resist completely the impulse to complain for an
entire day.
·
Write 100 times, “I will write a useless
exercise. “
·
Say hello to five people to whom you’ve never before
spoken.
·
Find a poem you like, about twenty lines, or 200
words long, and memorize it.
1. Start with one task
from the list above
On the first day, select one of the tasks above, and do only
that one. Focus on the task and your feelings as you perform it. Try to
maintain a calm state of mind, free from impatience or speculation about the
results of the exercise. When you are done, take notes on the thoughts and
feelings you experienced. If you succeeded in completing the task, the next
day go on to Step 2. If you failed to finish or do the task, try again with the
same task the next day.
2. Add another task
After completing Step 1, select another task, and perform
both it and the one you did in Step 1 on the same day. Again, maintain a placid
frame of mind during the tasks and take notes after you are done. Do these two
tasks for two days (or until you successfully complete them on two days).
On the fourth day, add a third task. Do all three tasks
for two more days. Continue to take notes for the rest of the exercise.
After completing three tasks on two days, drop one of the
old tasks, and add a new one, so that you still have three tasks. Again,
perform all three tasks on two days. Continue to drop one task and add a new
one after two days with a set of three until you have succeeded with all of the
tasks.
Continue the exercise under your own direction. You can
make up your own tasks, and add as many as you like to your daily regimen.
Don’t give yourself too many, however, or you might get discouraged. Remember
to try to feel contented as you perform the tasks—don’t feel impatient, or
eager for reward.
Many of the lucidity induction procedures in this book
involve visualization. For example, the dream lotus and flame exercise in
chapter 4 requires that you be able to visualize a flame located in the center
of a lotus flower and concentrate on it until you enter a dream. If you don’t
feel that you have the ability to visualize vividly enough, don’t despair—your
skill will improve if you practice. The following exercises are designed to strengthen your capacity to
visualize mental images by adapting your visual perception of external objects
to an internal ability to see imagery.
EXERCISE: CANDLE CONCENTRATION
1.
Watch a candle flame
Place a burning candle in front of you. Seat yourself
about three or four feet away from the candle so that you can see the flame
easily. Look steadily at the flame. Do this for as long as you can, but not so
long as to tire your eyes.
2.
Rest when you need to
When you begin to feel eye strain, close your eyes and sit
quietly for a while, picturing the flame before you. Practice this regularly,
and you will soon increase your power to focus for indefinite periods of time.
(Adapted from Mishra. 7)
EXERCISE: VISUALIZATION TRAINING
Practice Part A once or twice a day for two or three days.
Each session need not be longer than five minutes. Then move on to Part B.
PART A
1. Sit
facing a simple object
Choose an object to gaze at, such as an apple, a rock, a
candle, or a coffee cup. Choose something small, simple, and stationary. Put
it a few feet away from you and sit comfortably.
2.
Concentrate on looking at the object
With your eyes open, try to encompass the entire object
with your vision. Try to soak in an overall visual impression, rather than
concentrating on any specific fea-
ture of the object. Acknowledge distracting thoughts and
perceptions and then just let them float away.
3. Close
your eyes and observe the afterimage of the object
After a few minutes, close your eyes and watch the afterimage
of the object until it fades. Then open your eyes and look intently at the
object again. Repeat this several times; the afterimage should become more
clear, vivid, and crisp each time. Don’t strain to create the image. Let the
clarity emerge as if of its own will.
PART B
1. Warm up
by concentrating on an object in front of you
Warm up by repeating Part A several times.
2.
Visualize the object hanging in space in front of you
With your eyes open, move your gaze away from the object
and try to picture it directly in front of you, several feet away, floating at
eye level. It might seem strange at first, but don’t strain. Simply try to let
the outlines of the image emerge in space. You might want to start by
concentrating on the way you feel about the object rather than its detailed
structure. Just accept that the object occupies the space where you are
gazing, and pay attention to that feeling—that the image occupies the space
because you intend it to. The sense of seeing an image will emerge from that
awareness and feeling.
3.
Visualize the object inside of you
When you can visualize the object in front of you, then
repeat Step 2, except this time visualize it inside your body. Since some of
the lucid dream induction techniques require visualizations of objects in the
throat area, try to see the object in your throat. Then move it out again.
Shift your visualization from external to internal positions again and again,
until it is effortless. (Adapted from Tulku. ‘)
Notes
1: THE WORLD OF
LUCID DREAMING
1. Principally Lynne
Levitan and Robert Rich, under the sponsorship of Dr. William Dement.
2. T. Tulku, Openness
Mind (Berkeley, Calif.: Dharma Publishing, 1978), 74.
3. G. S. Sparrow, Lucid
Dreaming: The Dawning of the Clear Night (Virginia Beach: A. R. E. Press,
1976) 26-27.
4.
5. W. James, Principles
of Psychology (New York: Dover, 1891/1950).
2: PREPARATION FOR
LEARNING LUCID DREAMING
1. S. Rama, R.
Ballantine, and
2. P. D. Ouspensky, A
New Model of the Universe (London: Rout-ledge & Kegan Paul, 1931/1971),
244.
3. S. LaBerge, Lucid
Dreaming (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1985).
4.
5. For further
discussion of dream journals, see G. Delaney, Living Your Dreams (New
York: Harper & Row, 1988); A. Faraday, The Dream Game (New York:
Harper & Row, 1974); P. Garfield, Creative Dreaming (New York:
Ballantine, 1974); M. Ullman and N. Zimmerman, Working with Dreams (New
York: Delacorte, 1979).
6 O. Fox, Astral Projection (New
Hyde Park, N. Y.: University Books, 1962), 32-33.
7. See J. M. Williams,
ed., Applied Sport Psychology (Palo Alto, Calif.: Mayfield Publishing,
1986).
8 E. A. Locke et al., “Goal Setting and Task
Performance, “ Psychological Bulletin 90 (1981): 125-152.
9. D. Gould, “Goal
Setting for Peak Performance, “ in Applied Sport Psychology, ed. J. M.
Williams (Palo Alto, Calif.: Mayfield Publishing, 1986).
10. LaBerge, op. cit.
11. A. Worsley,
“Personal Experiences in Lucid Dreaming, “ in Conscious Mind, Sleeping
Brain, eds. J. Gackenbach and S. LaBerge (New York: Plenum, 1988), 321-42.
12. E. Jacobsen, Progressive
Relaxation (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958).
13. S. Rama, Exercise
Without Movement (Honesdale, Pa.: Himalayan Institute, 1984).
14. Adapted from Rama.
3: WAKING UP IN THE DREAM WORLD
1. O. Fox, Astral
Projection (New Hyde Park, N. Y.: University Books, 1962), 35-36.
2. P. Tholey,
“Techniques for Inducing and Maintaining Lucid Dreams, “ Perceptual and
Motor Skills 57 (1983): 79-90.
3. C. McCreery, Psychical
Phenomena and the Physical World (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1973).
4. W. Y. Evans-Wentz,
ed., The Yoga oftheDream State (New York: Julian Press, 1964).
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Tholey, op. cit.
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid,
82.
10. Tholey,
op. cit.
11. S.
LaBerge, Lucid Dreaming. -An Exploratory Study of
Consciousness During Sleep (Ph. D. diss., Stanford University, 1980).
(University Microfilms International No. 80-24, 691).
12. J.
Harris, “Remembering to Do Things: A Forgotten Topic, “ in Everyday Memory, eds. J. Harris and P. Morris
(London: Academic Press, 1984).
13. LaBerge,
op. cit.
14. P.
Garfield, “Psychological Concomitants of the Lucid
15. P.
Garfield, Pathway to Ecstasy (New York:
Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1979).
16. LaBerge,
op. cit.
17. Tholey,
op. cit.
18. C.
Tart, “From Spontaneous Event to Lucidity: A Review of Attempts to Consciously
Control Nocturnal Dreams, “ in Conscious Mind,
Sleeping Brain, eds. J. Gackenbach and S. LaBerge (New York-Plenum,
1988), 99.
19. LaBerge,
op. cit.
20. J.
Dane, An Empirical Evaluation of Two Techniques for Lucid Dream Induction (Ph.
D. diss., Georgia State University, 1984).
21. S.
LaBerge, et al., “ This Is a Dream’: Induction of Lucid Dreams by Verbal
Suggestion During REM Sleep, “ Sleep Research 10
(1981): 150.
22. W.
Dement and
23. R.
Rich, “Lucid Dream Induction by Tactile Stimulation During REM Sleep” (Unpublished
honors thesis, Department of Psychology, Stanford University, 1985).
24. S.
LaBerge et al., “Induction of Lucid Dreaming by Light Stimulation During REM
Sleep, “ Sleep Research 17 (1988): 104.
25. DreamLight™
is a registered trademark of the Lucidity Institute, Inc., Woodside,
26. S.
LaBerge, unpublished data.
27. S.
LaBerge, Lucid Dreaming (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1985), 149.
28. S.
LaBerge, “Induction of Lucid Dreams Including the Use of the DreamLight, “ Lucidity Letter 1 (1988): 15-22.
29. J.
Gackenbach and J. Bosveld, Control ‘Your Dreams
(New York: Harper & Row, 1989), 36.
30. Ibid.,
57.
31. S. LaBerge and R. Lind, “Varieties of Experience from Light-Induced Lucid Dreams, “ Lucidity Letter 6 (1987): 38-39.
4: FALLING ASLEEP
CONSCIOUSLY
1. S. LaBerge, Lucid
Dreaming: An Exploratory Study of Consciousness During Sleep (Ph. D.
diss., Stanford University, 1980). (University Microfilms International No.
80-24, 691)
2. S. LaBerge,
unpublished data.
3. Ibid.
4. S. LaBerge, Lucid
Dreaming, (
5. P. Tholey,
“Techniques for Inducing and Maintaining Lucid Dreams, “ Perceptual and
Motor Skills 57 (1983): 79-90.
6. D. L. Schacter,
“The Hypnagogic State: A Critical Review of Its Literature, “ Psychological
Bulletin 83 (1976): 452-481; P. Tholey, “Techniques for Inducing and
Maintaining Lucid Dreams, “ Perceptual and Motor Skills 51 (1983):
79-90.
7. P. D. Ouspensky, A
New Model of the Universe (London: Ron-tledge & Kegan Paul, 1931/1971),
252.
8. Ibid., 244.
9. N. Rapport,
“Pleasant Dreams!” Psychiatric Quarterly 22 (1948): 314.
10. Ibid., 313. 11.
Tholey, op. cit., 83.
12. Ibid.
13. T. Tulku, Hidden
Mind of Freedom (Berkeley, Calif.: Dharma Publishing, 1981), 87.
14. W. Y. Evans-Wentz,
ed., The Yoga of the
15. R. deRopp, The
Master Game (New York: Dell, 1968).
16. T. N. Hanh, The
Miracle ofMindfulness: AManual on Meditation (Boston: Beacon Press, 1975).
17. Evans-Wentz, op. cit.
18. Ibid.
19. T. Tulku, Openness
Mind (Berkeley, Calif.: Dharma Publishing, 1978).
20. L. A. Govinda, Foundations
of Tibetan Mysticism (London: Ryder & Co., 1969).
21. Tulku, op. cit.
22. LaBerge, Lucid
Dreaming: An Exploratory Study, op. cit.
23. Ibid. See also
24. Tholey, op. cit.
25. S. Rama, Exercise
Without Movement (Honesdale, Pa.: Himalayan Institute, 1984).
26. Tholey, op. cit.,
84.
27. LaBerge, Lucid
Dreaming, op. cit.
28. Tholey, op. cit.
29. Rama, op. cit.
30. Tholey, op. cit., 85.
31. Ibid.
32. Ibid.
5: THE
1. G. J. Steinfleld, “Concepts of Set and Availability and Their Relation to the Reorganization of Ambiguous Pictorial Stimuli, “ Psychological Review 74 (1967): 505-525.
2. F. C. Bartlett, Remembering (London:
Cambridge University Press,
1932), 38.
3. B.
R. Clifford and R. Bull, The Psychology of
Person Identification (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978).
4. D.
Rumelhart, quoted in D. Goleman, Vital Lies,
Simple Truths (New York: Simon
& Schuster, 1985), 76. 5. Rumelhart, op. cit., 77.
6. S.
LaBerge, Lucid Dreaming (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, § 1985).
7. 1.
Shah. The Sufis (New York: Doubleday, 1964), 87.
8. P.
D. Ouspensky, A New Model of the Universe (London: Rout-ledge &
Kegan Paul, 1931-1971), 281.
9. C.
Green, Lucid Dreams (Oxford: Institute for Psychophysical Research,
1968), 85.
10. P. Garfield, Creative Dreaming (New York: Ballantine, 1974) 143.
6: PRINCIPLES AND
PRACTICE OF LUCID DREAMING
1. L.
Magallon, “Awake in the Dark: Imageless Lucid Dreaming, “ Lucidity Letter 6 (1987):
86-90.
2. H.
von Moers-Messmer, “Traiime mit der gleichzeitigen Erkennt-nis des
Traumzustandes, “ Archiv fttr Psychologie 102 (1938): 291-318.
3. G.
S. Sparrow, Lucid Dreaming: Dawning of the Clear Light (Virginia Beach:
A. R. E. Press, 1976).
4. C.
Castaneda, Journey to Ixtlan (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972).
5. Sparrow,
op. cit., 43.
6. A. Hobson, The Dreaming Brain (New York: Basic Books, 1988).
7. K.
M. T. Heame, Lucid Dreams: An Electrophysiological and Psychological Study (Unpublished
Ph. D. diss., Liverpool University, 1978).
8. A.,
Worsley, Personal communication, 1982.
9. Sparrow,
op, cit., 41.
10. S.
LaBerge, Lucid Dreaming: An Exploratory Study of Consciousness During Sleep
(Ph. D. diss., Stanford University, 1980). (University Microfilms
International No. 80-24, 691).
11. A.
Worsley, “Personal Experiences in Lucid Dreaming, “ in Conscious Mind,
Sleeping Brain eds. J. Gackenbach and S. LaBerge (New York: Plenum, 1988),
321-342.
12. P.
Tholey, “Techniques for Inducing and Maintaining Lucid Dreams, “ Perceptual
and Motor Skills 57 (1983): 87.
13. F.
Bogzaran, “Dream Marbling, “ Ink & Gall: Marbling Journal 2 (1988):
22.
14. Worsley,
“Personal Experiences, “ op. cit.
15. Ibid.,
327.
16. Tholey,
op. cit., 79-90.
17. Ibid.,
87.
18. Ibid.,
88.
19. Worsley, “Personal Experiences” op. cit.
7: ADVENTURES AND
EXPLORATIONS
1. H.
Ellis, quoted in W. C. Dement, Some Must Watch While Some Must Sleep (San
Francisco: Freeman & Co., 1972), 102.
2. K.
Kelzer, The Sun and the Shadow: My Experiment with Lucid Dreaming (Virginia
Beach, Va.: A. R. E. Press, 1987), 140-141.
3. R.
Ornstein and D. Sobel, Healthy Pleasures (Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley,
1989).
4. P.
Garfield, Pathway to Ecstasy (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston,
1979), 45.
5. F.
Ungai, ed., Goethe’s World View (New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing
Co., 1983), 94.
6. J.
Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces (Princeton, N. J.: Princeton
University Press, 1973).
7. Ibid., 30.
8: REHEARSAL FOR
LIVING
1. C.
A. Garfield and H. Z. Bennett, Peak Performance: Mental Training Techniques of
the World’s Greatest Athletes (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1984).
2. R.
S. Vealey, “Imagery Training for Performance Enhancement, “ in Applied Sport
Psychology, ed. J. M. Williams (Palo Alto, Calif.: May field Publishing,
1986), 209-234.
3. C.
Corbin, “The Effects of Mental Practice on the Development of a Unique Motor
Skill, “ NCPEAM Proceedings (1966); I. B. Ox-endine, “Effect of Mental
and Physical Practice on the Learning of Three Motor Skills, “ Research
Quarterly 40 (1969): 755-763; A. Richardson, “Mental Practice: A Review and
a Discussion, part I, Research Quarterly 38 (1967): 95-107; K. B. Start,
“The Relationship between Intelligence and the Effect of Mental Practice on
the Performance of a Mental Skill, “ Research Quarterly 31 (1960):
644-649; K. B. Start, “The Influence of Subjectively Assessed Games Ability on
Gain in Motor Performance after Mental Practice, “ Journal of Genetic
Psychology 67 (1962): 169-173.
4. Vealey,
op. cit., 211-212.
5. R.
M. Suinn, “Behavioral Rehearsal Training for Ski Racers, “ Behavior Therapy 3
(1980): 519.
6. M.
Jouvet, “Neurophysiology of the States of Sleep, “ Physiological Reviews 47
(1967): 117-177.
7. Vealey,
op. cit.
8. P.
Tholey, “Applications of Lucid Dreaming in Sports. “ Unpublished manuscript.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid.
11. Ibid.
12. A.
Bandura, Social Foundations of Thought and Action (New York: Prentice
Hall, 1986) 19.
13. Ibid.,
19.
14.
9: CREATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING
1. R.
Harman and H. Rheingold, Higher Creativity (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher,
1984).
2. C.
Rogers, On Becoming a Person (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1961), 350.
3. O.
Loewi, “An Autobiographical Sketch,” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 4
(1960): 17.
4. E.
Green, A. Green, and D. Walters, “Biofeedback for Mind-Body Self-Regulation:
Healing and Creativity,” in Fields Within Fields . . . Within Fields (New
York: Stulman, 1972), 144.
5.
6. F.
Bogzaran, “Dream Marbling,” Ink & Gall: Marbling Journal 2 (1988):
22.
7. R. L. Stevenson, “A Chapter on Dreams,” in Across the Plains (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1901), 247.
10: OVERCOMING
NIGHTMARES
1. E.
Hartmann, The Nightmare (New York: Basic Books, 1984).
2. S.
LaBerge, L. Levitan, and W. C. Dement, “Lucid Dreaming: Physiological
Correlates of Consciousness during REM Sleep,” Journal of Mind and Behavior
7 (1986): 251-258.
3. S.
Freud, “Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis,” in Standard Edition of the
Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, vol. 15 (London: Hogarth
Press, 1916-17), 222.
4. Hartmann,
op. cit.; A. Kales et al., “Nightmares: Clinical Characteristics of
Personality Patterns,” American Journal of Psychiatry 137(1980):
1197-1201.
5. J.
A. Gray, “Anxiety,” Human Nature 1 (1978): 38-45.
6. C.
Green, Lucid Dreams (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1968);
7.
8. H.
Saint-Denys, Dreams and How to Guide Them (London: Duckworth, 1982),
58-59.
9. P.
Tholey, “A Model of Lucidity Training as a Means of Self-Healing and Psychological
Growth,” in Conscious Mind, Sleeping Brain, eds. J. Gackenbach and S.
LaBerge (New York: Plenum, 1988), 263-287.
10. G.
S. Sparrow, Lucid Dreaming: Dawning of the Clear Light (Virginia Beach:
A.R.E. Press, 1976), 33.
11. See
LaBerge, Lucid Dreaming, chapter 9, for a discussion of out-of-body
experiences.
12. K.
Stewart, “Dream Theory in
13. P. Garfield, Creative
Dreaming (New York: Ballantine, 1974).
14. Tholey, op. cit.
15. Ibid., 265.
16. S. Kaplan-Williams, The Jungian-Senoi Dreamwork Manua (Berkeley, Calif.: Journey Press, 1985).
17. Tholey, op. cit.
18.
19. Tholey, op. cit., 272.
20. C. McCreery, Psychical Phenomena and the Physical World (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1973), 102-104.
21. Kaplan-Williams, op. cit., 204.
22. J. H.
Geer and
23.
24. N. Bishay, “Therapeutic Manipulation of Nightmares and the Management of Neuroses,” British Journal of Psychiatry 147 (1985): \ 67-70.
25. M. Arnold-Forster, Studies in Dreams (New York:
Macmillan, 1921).
26. P. Garfield, Your Child’s Dreams (New York: Ballantine, 1984).
11: THE HEALING DREAM
1. E. Rossi, Dreams and the Growth of Personality (New York: Bru-< ner/Mazel, 1972/1985).
2. Ibid, 142.
3. R. Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet (New York: Random House, 1984), 91-92. I am grateful to Gayle Delaney for first having drawn my attention to this reference.
4. F. van Eeden, “A Study of Dreams,” Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 26 (1913): 439.
5. Ibid., 461.
6. Ibid.
7. P.
Tholey, “A Model of Lucidity Training as a Means of Self-Healing and
Psychological Growth,” in Conscious Mind,
Sleeping Brain, eds. J. Gackenbach and
8. G. S. Sparrow, Lucid Dreaming: Dawning of the Clear Light (Virginia Beach: A.R.E. Press, 1976), 31.
9. D.
Pendlebury, The Walled
10. G. Larsen, Beyond the Far Side (Kansas City: Andrews, McMeel & Parker, 1983).
11.
12.
13. Tholey, op. cit.
14. Shah, op. cit., 110.
15. Tholey, op. cit.
16. E. Langer, Mindfulness (Menlo Park, Calif.: Addison-Wesley, 1989).
17. E. Langer, “Rethinking the Role of Thought in Social Interaction,” in New Directions in Attribution Research, eds. H. Harvey, W. Ickes, and R. F. Kidd (Hillsdale, N.J.: Erlbaum, 1978), 50.
18. Langer, op. cit.
19.
20. B. Strickland, “Internal-External Control Expectancies: From Contingency to Creativity,” American Psychologist 44 (1989): 1-12.
21. S. LaBerge, Lucid Breaming (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1985), 153-154.
22. D. T. Jaffe and D. E. Bresler, “The Use of Guided Imagery as an Adjunct to Medical Diagnosis and Treatment,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology 20 (1980): 45-59.
23. O. C. Simonton, S. Mathews-Simonton, and T. F. Sparks, “Psychological Intervention in the Treatment of Cancer,” Psychosomatic! 21 (1980): 226-233.
24. A. Richardson, “Strengthening the Theoretical Links between Imaged Stimuli and Physiological Responses,” Journal of Mental Imagery 8 (1984): 113-126.
25. LaBerge, op. cit., 156.
12: LIFE IS A DREAM: INTIMATIONS OF A WIDER WORLD
1. G.
Gillespie, “Ordinary Dreams, Lucid Dreams and Mystical Experience,” Lucidity Letter 5 (1986): 31.
2. R.
F. Burton, The Kasidah of Hajt Abdu El-Yezdt (New
York: Citadel Press, 1965), 13.
3. P.
Brent, “Learning and Teaching,” in The World of
the Sufi (London: Octagon Press, 1979), 216.
4. T.
Tulku, Openness Mind (Berkeley, Calif.:
Dharma Press, 1978), 74.
5.
6. Tulku,
op. cit., 77.
7. Ibid.,
90.
8. W.
Y. Evans-Wentz, ed., The Yoga of the
9. Tulku,
op. cit., 76.
10. Ibid.,
78.
11. Ibid.,
86.
12. Evans-Wentz,
op. cit., 221.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.
15. Ibid.,
221-222.
16. Ibid., 222.
17. Ibid.
18. Shah, The Subtleties of the Inimitable Mulla
Nasrudin (London: Octagon Press, 1983), 90.
19. Ibid.,
54.
20.
21. D. Hewitt, Personal communication, 1990.
22. G. S. Sparrow, Lucid Dreaming: Dawning of the Clear Light (Virginia Beach, A.R.E. Press, 1976), 13.
23. Ibid., 50.
24. Ibid.
25. S. LaBerge, Controlling Your Dreams (audiotape) (Los Angeles: Audio Renaissance Tapes, 1987).
26. G.
Gillespie, “Ordinary Dreams, Lucid Dreams and Mystical Experience,” Lucidity
Letter 5 (1986): 27-31; G. Gillespie, “With-out a Guru: An Account of My
Lucid Dreaming,” in Conscious Mind, Sleeping Brain, eds. I. Gackenbach
and
I num, 1988), 343-352.
27. C. T. Tart, Open Mind, Discriminating Mind (San Francisco: [ Harper & Row, 1989), xvi.
28. F. Bogzaran, Experiencing the
Divine in the
29. Shah, The Sufis, xxviii.
30. Shah, The Way of the Sufi (London: Octagon Press, 1968), 252.
31. J. H. M. Whiteman, The Mystical Life (London: Faber & Faber, 1 1961), 57.
32. A. Musa, Letters and Lectures ofldries Shah (London: Designist I Communications, 1981), 18-20.
33. Ibid.
APPENDIX: SUPPLEMENTARY EXERCISES
1. W. Blake, The Portable
Blake (New York: Viking Press, 1968), 256.
2. R. Assagioli, The
Act of Will (New York: Viking Press, 1973).
3. Ibid.
4. W. James, quoted in
Assagioli, op. cit., 40.
5. B. Barrett, quoted
in Assagioli, op. cit., 39.
6. B. Barrett,
Strength of Will and How to Develop It (New York, 1931).
7. R. Mishra, Fundamentals
of Yoga (
1959).
8. T. Tulku, Hidden Mind of Freedom (Berkeley, Calif.: Dharma
Publishing, 1981).
About the Authors
Stephen LaBerge entered this world in 1947. As the son of
an air force officer, he saw much of the planet and developed a keen interest
in science as a means of understanding the cosmos. In 1967 he obtained his
bachelor’s degree in mathematics after two years at the
Howard Rheingold is the author of Excursions to the Far
Side of the Mind and the coauthor of Higher Creativity and The
Cognitive Connection. He currently resides in