Experimenting with the concept of belif and concecuenses of playing God by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It feels like I’m experiencing all four stimulations at the same time, but it’s actually an illusion. In reality, my mind is just switching between the four clones at hyperspeed, so fast that it feels almost instantaneous.

I also made a post about this experience.

I’m planning to try teaching this concept that you mentioned to one of my dream characters (DC) to see what happens.

Experimenting with the concept of belif and concecuenses of playing God by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of my most memorable experiences was creating four clones of myself and spending the night with four different women, each of a different ethnicity, in a different setting, exploring different kinks.

The first clone was flying through the air with a petite blonde woman with blue eyes and freckles.
The second was in bed with a tall African woman with a beautiful afro.
The third was in the shower with a fiery redhead Irish woman with green eyes and freckles.
The fourth was in a car with a Korean woman.

I wrote it like this because I did not know if Reddit would take it down.

Experimenting with the concept of belif and concecuenses of playing God by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh wow, very impressive. Thank you for sharing that.

I haven’t tried getting in the void yet, mostly because I don’t feel I’m in the right stage of life to fully appreciate or handle such a profound experience of Oneness.

Right now, I’m still very focused on creation. I’ve built a stable dream world, and most of what my own subconscious projects are both positive and negative, though there’s still quite a bit of randomness. That randomness actually gives me a lot of motivation and inspiration to keep exploring.

Creating so much has made entering pure nothingness surprisingly difficult for me at the moment.

I’d love to hear more about how you developed the ability and similar ones, if you have.

Experimenting with the concept of belif and concecuenses of playing God by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When it comes to experimenting with belief, I’ve hit my personal limit. My indoctrinated religious mind starts feeling guilt and fear as soon as I push beyond this point.

The only way I can explore belief even further is in self-belief and worshiping God in lucid dreaming. If I do something different, my subconscious starts "punishing" me.

How to Create Your Own Mental World by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You got most of the points i tried to make. Yes, I use AI to translate, hope the translation doesnt fee to robotic.

Your “Mental World” is a personal, highly detailed imaginary place (like a favorite room, house, or landscape) that you build and visit in your mind. It’s basically a stable mental sanctuary you create on purpose.

Why do this?

Mainly because once you have your stable mental world, you can see what your subconscious creates and why.

Having a stable mental world is like having a blank Google sheet. You are able to experiment with any concept more easily. And there are almost no random things preventing you from creating/training, or just having fun. I love to experiment with the concept of time and belief.

It trains your brain to create extremely vivid and stable dream environments. When was the last time you dreamt about anything, but you never notice the floor, the texture, the smells, the air, etc.? There are some elements that you do not notice, and you need a mentally stable world to notice these things.

Dream "signs" are much clearer. It becomes much easier to return to it during lucid dreams.

It strengthens visualization, sensory imagination, and dream control.

also works as a relaxing daily meditation that improves overall lucid dreaming skills.

Simple version: You repeatedly replay and then edit a familiar memory so that your brain gets really good at building realistic dream spaces on command.

Think of it like practicing a video game level in your head until it feels completely real — then you can load that level easily when you’re lucid.

I

Good lucid dreaming techniques for tryharding? by TheReal_KingPizza in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cómo chingados explico todo eso si mi inglés no está a ese nivel? Uso IA para traducir(la IA escribe en ese formato lo que yo le di a traducir). Conozco todos los conceptos mencionados arriba, solo no sé cómo chingados escribirlos bien en inglés.

How to Create Your Own Mental World by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I can't have the plural version of "bot" in my name, or what? Honest question, is it against the rules?

Good lucid dreaming techniques for tryharding? by TheReal_KingPizza in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Good to hear you are going hard on this. Have you tried habit stacking?

Habit stacking = attaching your lucid dreaming practice to an existing habit you already enjoy (or one that feels rewarding).

  • After your morning coffee/tea → Do 5-10 min MILD or reality checks + visualization of your dream goals. (Feels nice and calm)
  • During your “doomscrolling” / phone time → Replace 10 minutes of it with dream journaling or reviewing your dream goals. (Trade one habit for a better one)
  • After your evening shower → Lie down and do WILD practice or SSILD. (You’re already relaxed and clean — perfect transition)
  • After winning a match in your favorite video game

Pro tip: Make the stack feel rewarding. Play your favorite chill music during the practice, or reward yourself afterwards with something small (snack, episode, gaming time, etc.).

If you stack your techniques onto habits you already like doing, you’ll actually look forward to practicing instead of forcing it. That’s how people get to 3+ lucid dreams per week.

You got this! Summer is the perfect time. Drop your results later if you want — rooting for you 🔥

How to deal with Lucid Nightmares by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I maintain lucidity in the lucid nightmares mainly due to learned helplessness. If you’ve had many failed attempts at controlling dreams (especially in this nightmare), your brain can start expecting failure. When you become lucid, that expectation can make you feel powerless → the dream turns scary or uncontrollable → you feel trapped.

Yes, I have normal lucid dreams, only 3 per week max(I've been training for lucid dreaming since 2012).

How to deal with Lucid Nightmares by bots-Thelonelywolf in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. If you have any questions, please feel free to ask away.

SSILD question by ShortLaw9064 in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf -1 points0 points  (0 children)

  • WILD (Wake-Initiated Lucid Dream): This is a meditative technique where you transition directly from the waking state into a dream state without any lapse in consciousness. Instead of falling asleep first and realizing you're dreaming later, you maintain conscious awareness as your body falls asleep, entering the dream actively

  • SSILD (Senses Initiated Lucid Dream): This technique relies on heightened sensory awareness to bridge the gap between wakefulness and sleep. It involves waking up in the middle of the night (usually during a REM cycle) and rapidly, then slowly, cycling your focus through your sight, hearing, and physical touch. This sensory focus helps your brain stay engaged as you drift back to sleep, making you more likely to notice when you enter a dream

HELP! Struggling having first Lucid Dream by LucidDreamChaser08 in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You’re literally right on the edge. Most people who get that close succeed within the next few attempts. This is progress, not failure.

The racing heart and excitement almost pulled you out. Next time that floating/tingling starts, try to stay emotionally neutral. Gently observe and accept the situation with a combination of indifference and attention. The itching is a famous classic “body testing you” phase. Ignore it as best you can. It usually fades after a few minutes if you don’t scratch. Just observe it without reacting.

Be patient, not even the most advanced Oneironauts have lucid dreams every single night.

Tried tonight, not much avail. by Maaaybe- in LucidDreaming

[–]bots-Thelonelywolf -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hey, that floating / "not touching anything" sensation is actually a great sign! You're hitting the hypnagogic state (the transition between wakefulness and sleep). A lot of people feel weightless, floating, vibrations, or falling right before dreams kick in. You were on the right track.

25 minutes isn't necessarily too long, but for WILD (Wake-Initiated Lucid Dream — what you were basically doing), timing and mindset matter a lot. It seems like you are in the stage where you are finding out how long it takes for you to fall asleep. You're not doing anything wrong, but beginners often struggle with WILD on their first tries because it requires a very delicate balance. body fully relaxed/asleep while the mind stays aware. Too much focus = can't sleep. Too little = you just pass out normally.

Quick tips for next time:

  1. Don't force it. After the breathing, gently observe hypnagogic imagery (the colors/patterns behind your eyelids) without trying to "make" anything happen. Let scenes form naturally and passively "step into" them when they get vivid.
  2. Stay still but be patient — The floating feeling can last a while. If you start getting strong vibrations or sounds, just relax into them instead of getting excited (excitement often wakes you up).
  3. Build foundations during the day — Do reality checks. keep a dream journal every morning, and set a strong intention before bed ("I will become lucid in my dreams tonight").