Lucid Dreaming Quotes
Quotes tagged as "lucid-dreaming"
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“So they gave me love in form of poison and tiny little pills, programming my emotions, teaching me how to feel. To act correct and talk correct and answer without knowing the question, because that, my dear, is how you get love. Yes that, dear youth, is how you'll be loved. I tried to medicate my own fucked up little mind with chemicals and adrenaline, tasting sweeter every night, shaking louder every time. Sitting wide awake in bed until the world disappears, writing poetry to concentrate on something real while waiting for the love to arrive.
I've been looking for it night after night, waiting patiently for it to show up, maybe somewhere in between the state of awake and asleep, alive and not so alive, sober and not so sober.
(I lost track of the difference somewhere in between.)”
― Empty Roads & Broken Bottles: in search for The Great Perhaps
I've been looking for it night after night, waiting patiently for it to show up, maybe somewhere in between the state of awake and asleep, alive and not so alive, sober and not so sober.
(I lost track of the difference somewhere in between.)”
― Empty Roads & Broken Bottles: in search for The Great Perhaps
“Chapter 4: Recording Your Dreams (page 42)
Write titles that will help you to quickly recall the dream or determine its main theme.
You needn't confine your journaling to words, at least if you hand-write your dreams. Draw maps of the setting or pictures of important images from your dreams. Not every dream will necessarily have something worth drawing. Maybe most of your dreams won't. But, sometimes, you can more clearly communicate the appearance of something meaningful by drawing it rather than writing about it.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Write titles that will help you to quickly recall the dream or determine its main theme.
You needn't confine your journaling to words, at least if you hand-write your dreams. Draw maps of the setting or pictures of important images from your dreams. Not every dream will necessarily have something worth drawing. Maybe most of your dreams won't. But, sometimes, you can more clearly communicate the appearance of something meaningful by drawing it rather than writing about it.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 47)
One woman reported to me that she has, at times, had frequent sexual dreams in which a dream orgasm occurred, leading to physical orgasms at the same time. I suspect that these dreams were provoked by the flow of blood to her clitoris during REM sleep.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
One woman reported to me that she has, at times, had frequent sexual dreams in which a dream orgasm occurred, leading to physical orgasms at the same time. I suspect that these dreams were provoked by the flow of blood to her clitoris during REM sleep.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 51)
Many years later, I read about the phenomenon of hypnopompic sleep paralysis. This phenomenon is rare, but many people have experienced it once or twice in their lives. And a very few people are tortured by it nightly. I have known several people to mention such experiences, all of them expressing the same fearful elements of the phenomenon. We can awaken so abruptly from REM sleep that our natural bodily paralysis hasn't yet had time to wear off. It can take some moments before full bodily movement is regained.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Many years later, I read about the phenomenon of hypnopompic sleep paralysis. This phenomenon is rare, but many people have experienced it once or twice in their lives. And a very few people are tortured by it nightly. I have known several people to mention such experiences, all of them expressing the same fearful elements of the phenomenon. We can awaken so abruptly from REM sleep that our natural bodily paralysis hasn't yet had time to wear off. It can take some moments before full bodily movement is regained.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 57)
There is no sharp boundary between waking consciousness and dream consciousness.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
There is no sharp boundary between waking consciousness and dream consciousness.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (pages 58-59)
Lucid means clear, rational, or intelligible. During a lucid dream, the dreamer gains awareness of the fact that he or she is dreaming. This opens up many possibilities for the dreamer, including the capacity to deliberately direct the dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Lucid means clear, rational, or intelligible. During a lucid dream, the dreamer gains awareness of the fact that he or she is dreaming. This opens up many possibilities for the dreamer, including the capacity to deliberately direct the dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 59)
Toilets almost always have some oddity about them in my dreams. I'm not alone. I've read similar reports from other dreamers. Upon encountering these toilets, my limited consciousness tries to make sense of their oddities. I fail to and am often left confused.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Toilets almost always have some oddity about them in my dreams. I'm not alone. I've read similar reports from other dreamers. Upon encountering these toilets, my limited consciousness tries to make sense of their oddities. I fail to and am often left confused.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (pages 60-61)
These toilets were odd because they were dream toilets and dreams are weird. My consciousness tried to make sense of their strangeness. That's all. My awareness led me to make changes to the dream. Would the dream, the one with symbolic meaning that represents something I need to learn about myself, have gone in the direction of a search for a working toilet if it hadn't been for either the need to urinate or the intrusion of my consciousness? Probably not. Does the confusion itself have any meaning? Again, probably not. So don't get hung up on trying to interpret the meaning of so many dreams in which you are confused. It doesn't necessarily reflect, as an example, confusion during your waking life. Examine the source of the confusion in your dreams to see if you can identify the intrusion of your conscious mind into your dreams. If so, then make a note of it in your journal after the entry for that dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
These toilets were odd because they were dream toilets and dreams are weird. My consciousness tried to make sense of their strangeness. That's all. My awareness led me to make changes to the dream. Would the dream, the one with symbolic meaning that represents something I need to learn about myself, have gone in the direction of a search for a working toilet if it hadn't been for either the need to urinate or the intrusion of my consciousness? Probably not. Does the confusion itself have any meaning? Again, probably not. So don't get hung up on trying to interpret the meaning of so many dreams in which you are confused. It doesn't necessarily reflect, as an example, confusion during your waking life. Examine the source of the confusion in your dreams to see if you can identify the intrusion of your conscious mind into your dreams. If so, then make a note of it in your journal after the entry for that dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 61)
Light switches not working is a common prompt for experienced lucid dreamers.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Light switches not working is a common prompt for experienced lucid dreamers.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 62)
Lucid dreaming is dreaming in which your consciousness is active and you aware of the fact that you are dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Lucid dreaming is dreaming in which your consciousness is active and you aware of the fact that you are dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 63)
Awareness of dreaming is the essence of lucid dreaming. Any dream in which you recognize that you are dreaming is a lucid dream. But you need not necessarily have control over the dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Awareness of dreaming is the essence of lucid dreaming. Any dream in which you recognize that you are dreaming is a lucid dream. But you need not necessarily have control over the dream.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 65)
There is a second way of losing a lucid dream. You can, while lucid, believe that you have woken up and are no longer dreaming at all. This is often called a 'false awakening.' You are in effect still lucid, but you just don't think you're dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
There is a second way of losing a lucid dream. You can, while lucid, believe that you have woken up and are no longer dreaming at all. This is often called a 'false awakening.' You are in effect still lucid, but you just don't think you're dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 66)
Lucid dreaming can provide much joy and even serve as an aid for your waking life — such as preparing for athletic or business events — or even in your spiritual life. But lucid dreams are not meaningful for the limited purpose of interpretation. While you will certainly record your lucid dreams in your journal, you will not include them in your analysis of dream patterns. But you must first recognize your lucid dreams and false awakenings so that you do not include them in your analysis. Fortunately, they are easy to recognize. Keep your eyes open for them and have fun when you do realize you're dreaming. The more you work with your dreams in general, the more likely you are to have lucid dreams.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Lucid dreaming can provide much joy and even serve as an aid for your waking life — such as preparing for athletic or business events — or even in your spiritual life. But lucid dreams are not meaningful for the limited purpose of interpretation. While you will certainly record your lucid dreams in your journal, you will not include them in your analysis of dream patterns. But you must first recognize your lucid dreams and false awakenings so that you do not include them in your analysis. Fortunately, they are easy to recognize. Keep your eyes open for them and have fun when you do realize you're dreaming. The more you work with your dreams in general, the more likely you are to have lucid dreams.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 72)
Note: If you find yourself trying to figure out whether or not your dream is a "big dream," then it's not. These dreams are forces you can feel during the dream and upon awakening. You'll know it when you have one.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Note: If you find yourself trying to figure out whether or not your dream is a "big dream," then it's not. These dreams are forces you can feel during the dream and upon awakening. You'll know it when you have one.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 5: What Dreams Are Made Of (page 73)
Try recording your dreams in the third-person if you need help distinguishing your whole self from your limited dream self.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Try recording your dreams in the third-person if you need help distinguishing your whole self from your limited dream self.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 6: The Dream Report (page 75)
Studying your dreams requires more than recording them and thinking about them in isolation each morning. You must return to them days, weeks, or even years later and think about your dreams in relation to one another. It is through this periodic review of dreams that you will find the patterns in them. It is these patterns that are the meaningful parts of most of your dreams. It is these patterns that reveal the unseen patterns of your waking life. Once revealed, you will then work to change your unhelpful patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Studying your dreams requires more than recording them and thinking about them in isolation each morning. You must return to them days, weeks, or even years later and think about your dreams in relation to one another. It is through this periodic review of dreams that you will find the patterns in them. It is these patterns that are the meaningful parts of most of your dreams. It is these patterns that reveal the unseen patterns of your waking life. Once revealed, you will then work to change your unhelpful patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 6: The Dream Report (page 76)
As you review your dreams, think about our six questions: who, what, where, when, why, and how? Who appears in your dreams? What appears in your dreams? What objects, feelings, and actions? Where do your dreams take place? When do these dreams take place? Night time? Winter? In your childhood? In the distant future? For why, consider the motivations of the characters and their goals. How are things done in your dreams? Are they done the same way as in waking life? Or is there something strange about it?
Don't just think about the answers to these; organize them, write them down, be systematic.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
As you review your dreams, think about our six questions: who, what, where, when, why, and how? Who appears in your dreams? What appears in your dreams? What objects, feelings, and actions? Where do your dreams take place? When do these dreams take place? Night time? Winter? In your childhood? In the distant future? For why, consider the motivations of the characters and their goals. How are things done in your dreams? Are they done the same way as in waking life? Or is there something strange about it?
Don't just think about the answers to these; organize them, write them down, be systematic.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 6: The Dream Report (page 77)
After reviewing all your dreams for the previous two weeks, count up all of the marks for each item and write down the number.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
After reviewing all your dreams for the previous two weeks, count up all of the marks for each item and write down the number.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 7: Finding your Dream Pattern (page 98)
When you first read the phrase "dream patterns" you may have thought of recurring dreams. Recurring dreams certain represent a dream pattern, but they are a special category of them. Usually dream patterns are the repetition of particular clusters of dream images or themes. Recurring dreams, however, are dreams that occur over and over the same way, perhaps even identically.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
When you first read the phrase "dream patterns" you may have thought of recurring dreams. Recurring dreams certain represent a dream pattern, but they are a special category of them. Usually dream patterns are the repetition of particular clusters of dream images or themes. Recurring dreams, however, are dreams that occur over and over the same way, perhaps even identically.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 8: Breaking and Making your Patterns (page 105)
Often, simply acknowledging an undesirable pattern in your waking life isn't enough. You may have to work to replace that pattern. As you do so, you will find confirmation of your efforts in your dreams. As you replace the waking-life patterns, the dream patterns will dissolve.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Often, simply acknowledging an undesirable pattern in your waking life isn't enough. You may have to work to replace that pattern. As you do so, you will find confirmation of your efforts in your dreams. As you replace the waking-life patterns, the dream patterns will dissolve.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 8: Breaking and Making your Patterns (pages 109-110)
As you become more mindful and self-aware, you will be better able to penetrate the waking-life patterns that your dreams are pointing to. Moreover, you will start to become more aware of the deep source of your patterns. With awareness comes the ability to accept those patterns, determine whether they're helpful or not and, if not, to let them go. As you do so, write down all of your observations about yourself and your dream patterns.
Write up your interpretations of your dream patterns in your dream journal. Write about the waking-life patterns they represent. Note your efforts to change your waking-life patterns and how those changes affect your life. And, of course, identify and discuss changes in your dream patterns as a result of the changes in your waking-life patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
As you become more mindful and self-aware, you will be better able to penetrate the waking-life patterns that your dreams are pointing to. Moreover, you will start to become more aware of the deep source of your patterns. With awareness comes the ability to accept those patterns, determine whether they're helpful or not and, if not, to let them go. As you do so, write down all of your observations about yourself and your dream patterns.
Write up your interpretations of your dream patterns in your dream journal. Write about the waking-life patterns they represent. Note your efforts to change your waking-life patterns and how those changes affect your life. And, of course, identify and discuss changes in your dream patterns as a result of the changes in your waking-life patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Chapter 8: Breaking and Making your Patterns (pages 111-112)
Take Action
Answer the following questions in your dream journal. They will help you analyze your dream patterns and your waking-life patterns.
1. Briefly describe one of the dream patterns you've recognized. It may be the same you recognized in the workbook for the previous chapter.
2. Link the above dream pattern to a waking-life pattern. If you're unsure of the link, identify several possible links. Describe the waking-life pattern(s) in your dream journal.
3. Consider how you might work to change an undesirable waking-life pattern. Take some notes on how you might recognize, acknowledge, and let go of the pattern.
4. As you work on that pattern, write some notes in your journal on your efforts. Are you able to recognize, acknowledge, and let go of the waking-life pattern? How is this affecting your life? How is it affecting your dreams?
5. Develop a daily meditation, mindfulness, or qigong practice to help you cultivate the self-awareness necessary for recognizing and letting go of your waking-life patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
Take Action
Answer the following questions in your dream journal. They will help you analyze your dream patterns and your waking-life patterns.
1. Briefly describe one of the dream patterns you've recognized. It may be the same you recognized in the workbook for the previous chapter.
2. Link the above dream pattern to a waking-life pattern. If you're unsure of the link, identify several possible links. Describe the waking-life pattern(s) in your dream journal.
3. Consider how you might work to change an undesirable waking-life pattern. Take some notes on how you might recognize, acknowledge, and let go of the pattern.
4. As you work on that pattern, write some notes in your journal on your efforts. Are you able to recognize, acknowledge, and let go of the waking-life pattern? How is this affecting your life? How is it affecting your dreams?
5. Develop a daily meditation, mindfulness, or qigong practice to help you cultivate the self-awareness necessary for recognizing and letting go of your waking-life patterns.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (page 143)
dream pattern
A cluster of recurring images or themes in your dreams. It is in these recurring patterns, rather than individual images or dreams, that we will generally find meaning. Our dream patterns reflect conscious or unconscious patterns in our attitudes, feelings, or behaviors in our waking lives.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
dream pattern
A cluster of recurring images or themes in your dreams. It is in these recurring patterns, rather than individual images or dreams, that we will generally find meaning. Our dream patterns reflect conscious or unconscious patterns in our attitudes, feelings, or behaviors in our waking lives.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (page 143)
false awakening
A lucid dream in which a person believes incorrectly that he or she has woken up and is no longer dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
false awakening
A lucid dream in which a person believes incorrectly that he or she has woken up and is no longer dreaming.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (page 143)
hypnopompic sleep paralysis
A rare event related to sleep paralysis. In these cases, the dreamer awakens, but the normal sleep paralysis has not yet worn off and the now awake person remains paralyzed. This can result in a sense of panic. Such cases are often accompanied by the clear sighting of a face or figure in the room with the dreamer. The person perceives the figure to be frightening or hostile. The paralysis and the frightening figure typically fade away on their own accord within a few seconds.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
hypnopompic sleep paralysis
A rare event related to sleep paralysis. In these cases, the dreamer awakens, but the normal sleep paralysis has not yet worn off and the now awake person remains paralyzed. This can result in a sense of panic. Such cases are often accompanied by the clear sighting of a face or figure in the room with the dreamer. The person perceives the figure to be frightening or hostile. The paralysis and the frightening figure typically fade away on their own accord within a few seconds.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (page 144)
lucid dream
A dream in which the person is conscious of dreaming. Such awareness often brings with it a feeling of bliss and an ability to control the contents of the dream.
non-lucid dream
A normal dream. A dream in which the person is not aware of dreaming and the normal operations of waking consciousness are not present.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
lucid dream
A dream in which the person is conscious of dreaming. Such awareness often brings with it a feeling of bliss and an ability to control the contents of the dream.
non-lucid dream
A normal dream. A dream in which the person is not aware of dreaming and the normal operations of waking consciousness are not present.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (page 145)
sleep paralysis
A natural and helpful condition during dreaming. Our body paralyses the muscles we use to move so that we don't physically carry out the actions from our dreams, which would result in injury. Some of our muscles, such as eye muscles, and those that regulate involuntary actions, such as our breathing, remain functional. See hypnopompic sleep paralysis for a special and frightening case.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
sleep paralysis
A natural and helpful condition during dreaming. Our body paralyses the muscles we use to move so that we don't physically carry out the actions from our dreams, which would result in injury. Some of our muscles, such as eye muscles, and those that regulate involuntary actions, such as our breathing, remain functional. See hypnopompic sleep paralysis for a special and frightening case.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Glossary (pages 145-146)
sublucid dream
Dreams in which a person's conscious mind is operating and trying to make sense of the dream, but does not realize that it is dreaming. This attempt to make sense of the dream can alter the content of the dream to meet the expectations of the dreamer. However, unlike with lucid dreams, the dreamer cannot deliberately control the contents of the dream. We are often sublucid when, in our dreams, our conscious mind intrudes to try to make sense of the inherent strangeness of the dream. We often experience confusion in such dreams.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
sublucid dream
Dreams in which a person's conscious mind is operating and trying to make sense of the dream, but does not realize that it is dreaming. This attempt to make sense of the dream can alter the content of the dream to meet the expectations of the dreamer. However, unlike with lucid dreams, the dreamer cannot deliberately control the contents of the dream. We are often sublucid when, in our dreams, our conscious mind intrudes to try to make sense of the inherent strangeness of the dream. We often experience confusion in such dreams.”
― Dream Patterns: Revealing the Hidden Patterns of Our Waking Lives
“Lucid dreaming is not a trick or a rare gift. It’s a natural capacity. You are always dreaming, always travelling, always experiencing other dimensions of consciousness while you sleep.”
― Consciousness Rising
― Consciousness Rising
“You are always dreaming, always travelling, always experiencing other dimensions of consciousness while you sleep.”
― Consciousness Rising
― Consciousness Rising
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