Author Topic: Lucid dream inducing sounds (POST THEM HERE) (WILL BE COMPILED INTO A LOOP)  (Read 1223 times)

http://vocaroo.com/i/s0jlYh5c1e6B

Microsoft sam tries his best to help

if this doesnt work you could just listen to my video at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rXDMmMskqg
"You hair asleep"
LOL.
Being still is a matter of getting comfortable and just trying not to move. If you need to move, do it, because otherwise you will obsess over staying and will become tense (and you won't sleep).

For best results WILD should be done after you have slept for a few hours so your REM cycle has kicked in. If you go to bed at 8 or 9 PM you'll want to try and WILD at 1 or 2 AM. If you go to bed at midnight, you'll want to try around 5AM.
kthx.



how good is the recall?
Will my recall be just as good when not using it?

It's some sort of subconscious thing, it has barely audible voices saying things like, "remember your dream" along with a relaxing thunderstorm in the background. it's supposed to work with your subconscious or something like that if you listen to the whole thing before bed. but as with anything, your mileage may vary. I used it when I was first getting started to remember some fragments to latch onto and improve my recall from there.

also, I forgot I posted in this topic until just now, sorry.

I don't really like bursting peoples bubbles, but sounds inducing lucid dreams is about as ridiculous as binaural beat drugs. No sounds are going to help you lucid dream. Truth is when you go to sleep your brain has exceptional reduced sensitivity to sounds so only loud ones will even be noticed, and at that point the sound would probably prevent you from falling asleep. Secondly, lucid dreaming is simply realizing you're dreaming. A sound making you realize you're dreaming is about as possible as a sound making you realize it's day time.

I don't really like bursting peoples bubbles, but sounds inducing lucid dreams is about as ridiculous as binaural beat drugs. No sounds are going to help you lucid dream. Truth is when you go to sleep your brain has exceptional reduced sensitivity to sounds so only loud ones will even be noticed, and at that point the sound would probably prevent you from falling asleep. Secondly, lucid dreaming is simply realizing you're dreaming. A sound making you realize you're dreaming is about as possible as a sound making you realize it's day time.

Personally I don't use bianural beats while I'm asleep, as I can't fall asleep with headphones on. Supposedly biannual beats help put your brain in a state where it is easier to realize you are dreaming before you fall asleep, you still have to go the extra mile and practice awareness.

Edit: also, what I posted weren't biannual beats, they were subconscious reminders, which may or may not be harder to believe for some people.
« Last Edit: April 30, 2012, 11:19:22 PM by Robo »

I don't really like bursting peoples bubbles, but sounds inducing lucid dreams is about as ridiculous as binaural beat drugs. No sounds are going to help you lucid dream. Truth is when you go to sleep your brain has exceptional reduced sensitivity to sounds so only loud ones will even be noticed, and at that point the sound would probably prevent you from falling asleep. Secondly, lucid dreaming is simply realizing you're dreaming. A sound making you realize you're dreaming is about as possible as a sound making you realize it's day time.
k.