Lucid Dreaming
Lucid Dreaming
Lucid Dreaming
Introduction
Lucid Dreaming is the ability to have control of the events that happen in your dreams. A lucid dream, also known as a conscious dream, is a dream in which the person is aware that he or she is dreaming while the dream is in progress. During lucid dreams, it is sometimes possible to exert conscious control over the dream characters and environment, and have them perform feats which would be physically impossible in the waking world. Lucid dreams can be extremely real and vivid depending on a person's level of self-awareness during the lucid dream. 1
Hypnos and Thanatos Sleep and his half-brother death John Williams Waterhouse
A lucid dream can begin in one of two ways. A dream-initiated lucid dream (DILD) starts as a normal dream, and the dreamer eventually concludes that he or she is dreaming, while a wake-initiated lucid dream (WILD) occurs when the dreamer goes from a normal waking state directly into a dream state with no apparent lapse in consciousness. Lucid dreaming has been researched scientifically, and its existence is well established.2 3 Scientists such as Allan Hobson, with his neuro-physiological approach to dream research have helped to push the understanding of lucid dreaming into a less speculative realm4. The projection of thoughts has always been a part of hermetic teachings in the Kabalah and the Corpus Hermeticum, the Golden Dawn system of Magic5 and the Works of Franz Bardon6. They talk of an Out of body experience (OBE) and contacting your holy guardian angel (HGA). What better approach than to use the existing visualization skills that you possessed since birth7. However we should not limit ourselves to the constructs of these old forms of thought because the realm of the unconscious mind is still Tarra incognito. We are called on to interpret without trying to understanding because the reasoning is fluid in the dream world8.
Greek Mythology9
Hypnos () was the personification of sleep; the Roman equivalent was known as Somnus. His twin was Thanatos ("death"); their mother was the goddess Nyx ("night"). His palace was a dark cave where the sun never shines. At the entrance were a number of poppies and other hypnogogic plants. Hypnos's three sons or brothers represented things that occur in dreams (the Oneiroi). Morpheus, Phobetor and Phantasos appear in the dreams of kings. According to one story, he lived in a cave underneath a Greek island; through this cave flowed Lethe, the river of forgetfulness. Endymion, sentenced by Zeus to eternal sleep, received the power to sleep with his eyes open from Hypnos in order to constantly watch his beloved Selene. But according to the poet Licymnius of Chios, it was Hypnos himself who fell in love with the young shepherd Endymion, and allowed him to sleep with his eyes open, the better for the god to enjoy the beauty of his beloved boy. In art, Hypnos was portrayed as a naked youthful man, sometimes with a beard, and wings attached to his head. He is sometimes shown as a man asleep on a bed of feathers with black curtains about him. Morpheus is his chief minister and prevents noises from waking him. In Sparta, the image of Hypnos was always put near that of death.
Chaos Born of the 4 elements Nyx (Night) Hypnos = Somnus (Sleep) Oneiroi (Tribe of Dreams) Morpheus Thanatos (Death)
Family Tree
Stages of Sleep
Non REM Stage 1: Disappearance of Alpha waves. Theta wave of the EEG, Hypnic jerks or Flibbity Gibbets Stage 2: unconscious sleep (Lethe, the river of forgetfulness), sleep spindles and K complexes on the EEG Stage 3: Delta waves deep sleep Stage 4: slow wave sleep Delta waves. Parasomnia: caught in between a sleep and waking state include Confusional arousals (uncontrolled crying in children) Sleepwalking (somnambulism) Sleep terrors (night terrors) REM (Rapid Eye Movement) starts in 90 min, 20 25% of sleep, 90 -120 in duration, 4 -5 periods, and newborns experience 80% REM sleep starts with Sleep paralysis Hynogogic hallucinations Tonic tonic REM sleep and effort involve an increase in the metabolism of cerebral glycogen the stage where lucid dreaming occurs Phasic (delta REM activity and delta REM density) involve the transfer of glucose from the body to the brain. it seems clear that the primary function of REM sleep is to re-energize the brain. The primary functions of REM sleep Andrew E. Bernhard. High level of phasic REM sleep is linked to depression.
The awake state: beta frequency (>13 Hz) dominates. Stage I: alpha waves (8-12 Hz) dominate. Stage II: sleep spindles and K-complexes appear. Stage III and IV (slow-wave sleep): delta waves (0.5-2 Hz) at 20-50% and more than 50%, respectively. REM phase: mixed but mostly high-frequency waves. Active part of the brain pontine tegmentum pons The monoamines are shut down Anti depressants inhibit REM Morphine increases REM Benadryl increases the chances of Lucid Dreaming17 Scopolamine delayed the onset of REM sleep18, as well as suppressed REM sleep and phasic REM activity to comparable extent in both adolescents and adults19.
Dream Spinning When you are lucid and your dream seems to be ending start spinning in the dream after you stop the clarity returns. False Awakenings You dream that you are awake but you are not. Always perform your reality check when you appear to wake up. Breath Control Practice holding your breath and timing how long you can do it with the aim to increase this time, if you are a trumpet player try to play a song on a single breath. Try flight of the bumble bee in one breath24. Now analyze the mind set required to stay calm while holding your breath. This way of thinking helps you stay in the lucid dream25.
Further reading http://www.lucidity.com/ http://www.web-us.com/lucid/luciddreamingFAQ.htm http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Lucid_Dreaming http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_LaBerge http://www.dreamhawk.com/bible.htm Private Myths: Dreams and Dreaming (Paperback) God Dreams Revelation Christian Interpretation http://www.lucidipedia.com/misc/index.php?section=applications http://www.lucidipedia.com/misc/index.php The Lucid Dream Manifesto The Interpretation of Dreams and LUCID DREAMS http://www.here-be-dreams.com/psychology/jung.html http://www.dreamanalysis.info/ Jungian dream interpretation: a handbook of theory and practice by James A. Hall - Self-Help - 1983 - 127 pages C.G. Jung: Lord of the Underworld by Colin Wilson
Jung, Carl (1934). The Practice of Psychotherapy. "The Practical Use of Dream-analysis", 147. ISBN 071001645X. Bollingen Series 17
http://www.cgjungpage.org http://kybele.psych.cornell.edu/~edelman/Psych-231/week7.html Between the Gates Mark Stavish Feb 2008 Suggested reading from the fratres after the paper was presented. The Art of Dreaming Carlos Castaneda Harper Paperbacks Dream Yoga: Writings on Dreams and Astral Travel by Samael Aun Weor The Yoga of Sleep and Dreams by Aurobindo and The Mother The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche and Mark Dahlby
Appendix
Source28
Lucid Dreaming FAQ LaBerge, S. & Levitan, L. (2004). Version 2.3 Watanabe Tsuneo (March 2003). "Lucid Dreaming: Its Experimental Proof and Psychological Conditions". Journal of International Society of Life Information Science 21 (1): 159-162. 3 LaBerge, Stephen (1990). in Bootzen, R. R., Kihlstrom, J.F. & Schacter, D.L., (Eds.): Lucid Dreaming: Psychophysiological Studies of Consciousness during REM Sleep Sleep and Cognition. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, pp. 109 126. 4 Wikipedia Lucid Dreaming 5 Mark Stavish (Feb 2008) Between the Gates page 1 6 Richard Tschudis paper on Franz Bardon., Franz Bardon Introduction to Hermetics 7 Ibid page 2 8 Carl Gustaf Jung The practice of Psychotherapy Collected Works 16 chapter on the application of dream analysis 9 Hypnos Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnos 10 Jung's Rediscovery of the Dream http://www.dreamanalysis.info/ note: because this article doesnt site its sources and I was not able to verify the attribution Martin Luther or St. John Chrysostom on dreams. For instance I found Project Wittenberg silent on this and nothing on the Homilies of or St. John Chrysostom. 11 Carl Gustaf Jung The practice of Psychotherapy Collected Works 16 chapter on the application of dream analysis 12 Genesis 28:11-19 13 Genesis 41 14 Perchance to Dream by Anita Stratos http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/dream.htm 15 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphiareion_of_Oropos I think that Amphiaraos most of all dedicated himself to interpreting dreams: it is clear that, when he was considered a god, he set up an oracle of dreams. And the first thing is to purify oneself, when someone comes to consult Amphiaraos, and the purification ritual is to sacrifice to the god, and people sacrifice to him and to all those whose names are on (the altar), and - when these things are finished they sacrifice a ram and spread out its skin under themselves, lie down waiting for the revelation of a dream. Pausanias Description of Greece 1.34.5 16 Lecture 7: dreaming http://kybele.psych.cornell.edu/~edelman/Psych-231/pp-week7.html Electroencephalography http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography 17 : YouTube anamomda vlog 18: my favorite lucid dream 18 Age-Related Effects of Scopolamine on REM Sleep Regulation in Normal Control Subjects: Relationship to Sleep Abnormalities in Depression. Neuropsychopharmacology (1999) 21 723730.10.1038/sj.npp.1395391. Uma Rao1,2,3 MD, Preetam Lutchmansingh1 Ph.D and Russell E Poland1,2,3 Ph.D 19 ibid 20 LUCIDITY INSTITUTE http://www.lucidity.com/ Dream Views http://www.dreamviews.com 21 Lucid dreaming: Evidence that REM sleep can support unimpaired cognitive function and a methodology for studying the psychophysiology of dreaming http://www.lucidity.com/slbbs/index.html 22 NovaDreamer http://www.lucidity.com/novadreamer.html 23 What Do You Care What Other People Think?: Further Adventures of a Curious Character by Richard Phillips Feynman, Ralph Leighton, and Richard P. Feynman (Paperback - Jan 2001) pp 53-54 24 YouTube Zooter1940s (January 29, 2007) Rafael Mendez - Flight of the Bumble Bee & Mexican Hat Dance January 29, 2007 25 YouTube anamomda (January 17, 2007) VLog 17 Lucid Dreaming 26 Lucid Dreaming: Psychophysiological Studies of Consciousness during REM Sleep by Stephen LaBerge, Ph.D. http://www.lucidity.com/SleepAndCognition.html 27 List of dream diaries http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dream_diaries 28 NEW HORIZONS By /par Cdr A.R. Wamback http://wps.cfc.forces.gc.ca/papers/csc/csc30/exnh/wamback.htm
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