I hold great value in dreams. In fact I have been practicing lucid dreaming - the ability to know you're dreaming, while you're dreaming. This comes from understanding how your mind works when you're in a dream. Usually when a person dreams, they're so confused and disoriented, but the senses are so real, that they assume they're in reality.
If you perform reality checks you can avoid that when you're dreaming. Instead you realize "but warping hands means I'm dreaming.." Once you get this "aha" moment during a dream, you become lucid and can control the dream. You also remember the dream, because a part of your mind is awake that usually isn't. I suggest checking out Google on lucid dreaming for more information because it's worth it.
My first lucid dream, I was in a very creepy room. It seemed like a holo-deck or a computer room, but very dark, and I knew it was possessed by an evil ghost. I wanted to escape. There was no door. Everything was scary and I'm pretty sure I saw a mosquito too. Nightmare mode. THEN I looked at my hands (I had been reading about lucid dreaming for a few nights so I knew the procedure). My fingers looked like I was on mushrooms, warping around, so I realized I was dreaming. At that moment I had a sense of overwhelming power, like a god, and I walked out of the room and down the hall, climbed out a window, then woke up.
My second lucid dream was very short. I was at a friends house in the dream, when I looked at my hands. I realized I was dreaming. Before then, I had been wanting to shoot fireballs in a dream, so when I was dreaming I decided "Fireball time". I shot fireballs for about 1 second then woke up in a cold sweat...
Another dream in the same room of the same house, I realized I was lucid, then I literally spun in a circle as I fell to the floor. And fell back asleep. It was strange. Apparently, it happens a lot to people who get lucid dreams to get dizzy and/or 'spin'.
More recently I had a dream where I became lucid, so I began 'gliding' down a hill (like a paper airplane). Then I "woke up", only it was a false awakening, and I was still dreaming but no longer lucid. I distinctly recall climbing out of my bed and heading to my computer, in my dream, then everything faded into oblivion. I should have looked at my hands again (always do a reality check when you first wake up). From then on, I lost memory like a normal dream and woke up a couple hours later going "wtf was that"
My interpretation of lucid dreaming? Awesome! But after twenty lucid dreams, I always have the same problem. I get excited and wake myself up. It's simply too.. overwhelming. Like you're a god of your own imagination, but it applies to your senses. If we could do that all the time, people wouldn't want to exist in a physical form

Your turn

Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2013 2:27 am