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- CompuServe OMN-5
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- FEATURES
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- 1 Let There Be Life
- 2 Biology of Homosexuality
- 3 Design Your Own Dreams
- 4 Lab Works In Progress
- 5 Interview with Konrad Lorenz
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- Enter choice !3
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- CompuServe OMN-33
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- Design Your Own Dreams
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- [THIS FEATURE IS PART OF AN EXPERIMENT BEING SPONSORED BY OMNI TO HELP
- SCIENTISTS REFINE CERTAIN DREAM TECHNIQUES NOW BEING STUDIED IN THE LAB. THE
- FULL EXPERIMENT APPEARS IN THE APRIL OMNI MAGAZINE. THE EXERCISES PRESENTED
- HERE ARE FOR THOSE WHO MIGHT WANT TO ATTEMPT A LITTLE LUCID DREAMING ON THEIR
- OWN.]
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- Most people don't realize they've been dreaming until after they've awakened and
- the dream has come to an end. Some people, however, are conscious that they're
- dreaming. These people -- called LUCID dreamers -- can literally direct the
- content of a dream, scientists have discovered, deciding perhaps to talk physics
- with Einstein, woo and marry a movie star, or assume the powers of Superman.
- For those who have acquired the knack of lucidity, the benefits can be enormous:
- Lucid dreaming gives one the chance to experience unique and compelling
- adventures rarely surpassed elsewhere in life. These experiences can enhance
- self-confidence and promote personal growth and self-development. By facing
- fears and learning to make the best of the worst situation imaginable, lucid
- dreamers can overcome nightmares. Because recent scientific studies have
- demonstrated a strong connection between dreams and the biological functioning
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- of the body, lucid dreams might facilitate physical as well as mental health.
- And finally, because lucid dreaming allows us to tap the power of the
- unconscious, it may also be useful for creative problem solving.
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- After nearly a decade of piloting these daring nocturnal flights, 2
- psychologists -- Stephen LaBerge of Stanford University and author of LUCID
- DREAMING [Ballantine], and Jayne Gackenbach of the University of Northern Iowa
- -- have begun to develop a series of techniques aimed at helping ordinary
- dreamers "turn" lucid and lucid dreamers gain greater control over the woolly
- behemoth of night. These special techniques, still under development, have
- never before been presented in a public forum. To direct your own nightly
- dream-time show, please attempt exercises one, two, three and four as outlined
- below. LaBerge and Gackenback suggest that you do the tasks as often as
- possible over a 2-week period. Some people may succeed in having a lucid dream
- the first night they use the techniques; others, the researchers note, may need
- to practice for several weeks before getting results.
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- EXERCISE ONE
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- A number of techniques facilitate lucid dreaming. One of the simplest is asking
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- yourself many times during the day whether you are dreaming. Each time you ask
- the question, you should look for evidence proving you are not dreaming. The
- most reliable test: Read something, look away for a moment, and then read it
- again. If it reads the same way twice, it is unlikely that you are dreaming.
- After you have proved to yourself that you are not presently dreaming, visualize
- yourself doing whatever it is you'd like. Also, tell yourself that you want to
- recognize a nighttime dream the next time it occurs. The mechanism at work here
- is simple; it's much the same as picking up milk at the grocery store after
- reminding yourself to do so an hour before.
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- At night people usually realize they are dreaming when they experience unusual
- or bizarre occurrences. For instance, if you find yourself flying without
- visible means of support, you should realize that this happens only in dreams
- and that you must therefore be dreaming. If you awaken from a dream in the
- middle of the night, it is very helpful to return to the dream immediately, in
- your imagination. Now envision yourself recognizing the dream as such. Tell
- yourself, "The next time I am dreaming, I want to remember to recognize that I
- am dreaming." If your intention is strong and clear enough, you may find
- yourself in a lucid dream when you return to sleep.
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- EXERCISE TWO: DREAM FLYING
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- Many lucid dreamers report dreams in which they fly unaided, much like Superman.
- Some lucid dreamers say that flying is a thrilling means of travel; others,
- that it has helped them return from one of the more harrowing dream experiences
- -- the endless fall. Flying is so important because it's a form of dream
- control that's fairly easy to master. It gives the dreamer an exhilirating
- sense of freedom. And it's a basic means of travel in the dream world. During
- the 2-week period of your experiment, try to focus on dream flight. If you're
- falling, turn that fall into flight: Remember, there's no gravity in dreams.
- And if you're simply going from here to there, do it with flight. This simple
- activity will cue you in to the fact that you are, after all, in a dream.
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- How do you make dream flight happen at all? We suggest that before you retire
- for bed, you simply repeat these words: "Tonight I fly!" Then, while still
- awake, imagine that journey. If you find yourself flying, it will be a clear
- sign that you are in a dream. In any case, when you realize you're dreaming,
- remember that you want to fly. When you actually feel yourself flying, say,
- "This is a dream." Make sure you start modestly, by simply floating above the
- surface of your dream ground. As you gain confidence both in the notion that
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- you are dreaming and in your ability to control that experience, you might
- experiment with flying a bit more. Run, taking big leaps, and then stay aloft
- for a few seconds, so that you resemble an astronaut walking on the moon. Try
- sustained floating and then flying at low altitudes.
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- As your confidence increases, so will your flying skills. While asleep, work on
- increasing your altitude, maneuverability, and speed. As with speed sports, you
- should perfect height and maneuverability before speed. Of course, you couldn't
- really hurt yourself -- it's only a dream. But you COULD get scared. After you
- have become proficient in dream flying, remember to ask yourself these
- questions: "How high can I fly? Can I view the earth from outer space? Can I
- travel so fast that I lose awareness of my surroundings and experience the
- sensation of pure speed?" Throughout your efforts in dream flight, remember
- that you're in a dream. With this in mind, your fear will be held at bay, and
- your control over the dream will be greatly enhanced.
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- EXERCISE THREE: DREAM SPINNING
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- Even if you're a frequent lucid dreamer, you may not be able to stop yourself
- from waking up in mid-drem. And even if your dreams do reach a satisfying end,
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- you may not be able to focus them exactly as you please. During our years of
- research, however, we have found that spinning your dream body can sustain the
- period of sleep and give you greater dream control. In fact, many subjects at
- Stanford University have used the spinning technique as an effective means of
- staying in a lucid dream. The task outlined below will help you use spinning as
- a means of staying asleep, and, more exciting, as a means of traveling to
- whatever dream world you desire.
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- As with dream flying, the dream spinning task starts before you go to bed.
- Before retiring, decide on a person, time, and place you would like to visit in
- your lucid dream. The target person and place can be either real or imaginary,
- past, present or future. Write down and memorize your target person and place,
- then visualize yourself visiting your target and firmly resolve to do so in a
- dream that night. When following this procedure, it's possible that you might
- find yourself visiting your target in a nonlucid dream; you will be aware that
- this has happened, of course, only after you awaken. Nevertheless, you should
- strive for lucidity by following the techniques outlined in exercise one. Then
- proceed to your goal.
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- To do so, repeat the phrase describing your target in your dream, and spin your
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- whole dream body in a standing position with your arms outstretched. You can
- pirouette or spin like a top, as long as you vividly feel your body in motion.
- The same spinning technique will help when, in the middle of a lucid dream, you
- feel the dream imagery beginning to fade. To avoid waking up, spin as you
- repeat your target phrase again and again. With practice, you'll return to your
- target person, time and place. When spinning, try to notice whether you are
- moving in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction.
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- EXERCISE FOUR: CREATIVE DREAMING
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- Up until now we have had little control over the occurrence of creative dreams.
- But with lucid dreaming it may be possible to intentionally access the
- creativity of the dream state. You can help determine the feasibility of this
- idea by attempting to solve a problem in a lucid dream. Before bed, decide on a
- problem you would like to solve. Frame your problem in the form of a question.
- For example, "What is the topic of my next book?" "How can I become less shy?"
- If you have an illness, you might consider the problem, "How can I regain my
- health?"
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- Once you have selected a problem question, write it down and memorize it. When
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- doing the lucid-dreaming introduction exercises, remember your question and see
- yourself looking for the answer in your next lucid dream. Then, when in a lucid
- dream, ask the question and seek the solution. You might be most successful at
- problem solving if you try a direct approach. For instance, if your problem is
- health, try to heal yourself in your dream. Then reflect on how your dream
- solution relates to the waking problem. It may help to question other dream
- characters, especially if they represent people who you think might know the
- answer. You can even combine this task with the dream spinning and flying
- tasks, visiting an expert on your problem. You can also just explore your dream
- world with your question in mind, looking for any clues that might suggest an
- answer.
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- Last page !
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- CompuServe OMN-5
-
- FEATURES
-
- 1 Let There Be Life
- 2 Biology of Homosexuality
- 3 Design Your Own Dreams
- 4 Lab Works In Progress
- 5 Interview with Konrad Lorenz
-
- Enter choice !