ORPHYX

Sleep paralysis...and lucid dreaming

Started Nov 21, 2011, 09:30 PM6 posts
on Nov 21, 2011, 09:30 PM
#1

Hey, im new to this board and just wanted to ask a question to all you lucid dreamers out there...

So, I often have lucid dreams naturally but they don't last long and i usually just have a fly around. Looking at all the advice and tips here it looks like i can lots of more interesting adventures, so im excited to try these out!

What i wanted to ask is that i get sleep parasysis episodes that are quite freaky, so i usually concentrate on getting out of them. But recently i have been going more with the flow with them and have seemingly managed to turn them into what is very much like a lucid dream. Would this be counted as a real lucid dream and is this commom???

on Nov 21, 2011, 09:37 PM
#2

sp is part of the process that your body goes through to get to sleep. If you a aware of this that is fine and yes they can be freaky but just let them run and soon you will enjoy sp as it can lead to a LD

on Nov 22, 2011, 06:38 AM
#3

Sleep paralysis is the one area that I need to study and work out more. It seems that with my previous experiences I just believed in riding them out. They are rare for me so I haven't explored them yet this is the area that I'd like to know a lot more about.

on Jan 24, 2012, 01:13 PM
#4

Sleep paralysis is really just a form of lucid dream and any lucid dream can be turned into another which often happens in the SP experience. Rem atonia is not SP, rather SP seems to be a lucid false awakening inspired by atoina. What is happening in and around ones body often inspires dreams.

Here's an actual EEG recording of SP http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sARlrNoUt0

The original research of Stephen LaBerge and others had fist clenches as well as eye movements as tests of lucid dreaming. http://www.lucidity.com/slbbs/index.html Something that's impossible if one is really paralyzed during rem atonia.

Traditionally REM muscle atonia was and still is largely spoken of as just atonia or possibly paralysis, sleep researchers starting with Keithe Hearne started calling it sleep paralysis and were using it as a catch all to explain away any supernatural experience.

on Feb 2, 2012, 11:32 PM
#5

.. Again? :roll:

on Feb 4, 2012, 02:33 AM
#6

Patience...patience... :roll:

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