Find hypnosis or guided meditation CDs or downloads and listen to them while falling asleep. These have worked for me.
No, lucid dreaming occurs while one is still fully asleep, but becomes aware that one is dreaming as the dream is taking place. Once one awakens, the dream, lucid or otherwise, has ended.
Lucid dreaming comes very easily to some individuals, while others are never able to take control of their dreams. It is not always effective to attempt lucid dreaming as one first falls asleep. Not all information about lucid dreaming (that is found on the internet) is reliable. It may be helpful to allow one's self to relax and fall asleep naturally, then become aware once a dream has begun.
A "lucid dream" is nothing more than a dream in which you realize that you are dreaming while remaining asleep. There is a tremendous amount of nonsense circulating on the Internet about lucid dreams along with opportunities to spend money on useless instruction books and gadgets claiming to produce lucid dreams.> Some individuals are able to become aware that they are dreaming quite easily and direct their dreams just as they would a daydream or waking fantasy. But that does not mean that everyone can or should have lucid dreams.
Lucid dreaming existed since the cavemen, I know because ANYONE can lucid dream.
A dream-initiated lucid dream starts as a normal dream, and the dreamer eventually concludes it is a dream.
The question probably means to ask about "DILD" and "WILD" lucid dreams. These words stand for "Dream Initiated Lucid Dreaming" and "Wake Initiated Lucid Dreaming." The first refers to entering a lucid state from within a dream while the second refers to entering directly into a lucid dream from being awake.
Unfortunately, If you are asking about dreams that occur while you are sleeping, the answer is that you cannot have the dream that you want. Dreams that occur during sleep are involuntary. Their content and images are produced by your subconscious mind without conscious (voluntary) control. Some individuals are able to "incubate" a dream, in the sense of focusing on a particular subject before falling asleep. But even if that person succeeds in dreaming of the chosen subject, they do not have control over how that matter appears in the dream. Another method of trying to control dreams is "lucid dreaming," meaning becoming aware of dreaming while still asleep. There is great variation in the amount of control different individuals achieve in lucid dreams.
it means you're very smart because if you Dream while you know your in it, it's a proven fact because the brain still works when you're asleep but the rest of the body doesn't, or you get many dreams that you're so used to it you kind of feel like you're in your imagination... The phenomenon of realizing you are in a dream while dreaming is called "lucid dreaming." It does not "mean" anything in particular, other than the conscious mind has become active during the dream without fully awakening.
If you would like to lucid dream, you should start trying to remember your "normal" dream after you wake up. The purpose of this is: If you can't remember regular dreams, there isn't any way you'll be able to remember if you had a lucid dream. All lucid dreaming really is is being conscious of your surroundings while in a dream. If you can realize that you are in a dream while in your dream, you will become lucid. There are hundreds of different ways to learn to lucid dream. The most commonly used one is asking yourself throughout the day if you are in a dream. Chances are, if you do this in your dream out of habit, you will realize that you ARE dreaming, and become lucid.
Yes, pretty much anything you can imagine is possible in a lucid dream.
The question probably refers to "lucid dreaming."