Thanks for bringing Robert Waggoner on, I've read his book. It has so much content to give directions; I always try to find his interviews. My lucid dreams have given me so much insight and precognitive information, as he talks about.
Very informative interview. Thank you. I've been trying to have a lucid dream for awhile now, but nothing so far. I'll keep trying. Mr. Waggoner's comments were helpful.
Thanks, Steve. Keep at it and it will happen for you. Stopping to quiz yourself throughout the day asking “what about this makes me sure I’m not in a dream right now?” helps. I’ve also heard of people setting an alarm in the middle of the night to wake themselves up and then tapping their fingers against the mattress as they fall back asleep to slip into a lucid dream. Lots of techniques out there. Check out Robert’s book too. Reading it might help trigger a lucid dream as well. After I reread the book for the first time I had several lucid dreams in the immediate aftermath. Good luck and let me know when it happens. I’m rooting for you!
@@paradigmsherpas Thanks for the encouragement and suggestions, Ryan! Just curious: do your own lucid dreams seem as real as our physical life, or more dream like?
Hmm that’s a good question. While the lucid dream is stable they mostly have a real life feel to them. It’s almost like normal reality with the benefit of being magic or having super powers. As the lucid dream becomes less stable or you lose lucidity it can quickly shift into something less realistic.
Thanks for bringing Robert Waggoner on, I've read his book. It has so much content to give directions; I always try to find his interviews. My lucid dreams have given me so much insight and precognitive information, as he talks about.
Very good analogy "the sailor doesn't control the sea" to the nature of the lucid dreamer and the dream.
Good insights to our dreams! Very interesting.
Very informative interview. Thank you. I've been trying to have a lucid dream for awhile now, but nothing so far. I'll keep trying. Mr. Waggoner's comments were helpful.
Thanks, Steve. Keep at it and it will happen for you. Stopping to quiz yourself throughout the day asking “what about this makes me sure I’m not in a dream right now?” helps. I’ve also heard of people setting an alarm in the middle of the night to wake themselves up and then tapping their fingers against the mattress as they fall back asleep to slip into a lucid dream. Lots of techniques out there. Check out Robert’s book too. Reading it might help trigger a lucid dream as well. After I reread the book for the first time I had several lucid dreams in the immediate aftermath. Good luck and let me know when it happens. I’m rooting for you!
@@paradigmsherpas Thanks for the encouragement and suggestions, Ryan! Just curious: do your own lucid dreams seem as real as our physical life, or more dream like?
Hmm that’s a good question. While the lucid dream is stable they mostly have a real life feel to them. It’s almost like normal reality with the benefit of being magic or having super powers. As the lucid dream becomes less stable or you lose lucidity it can quickly shift into something less realistic.
@@paradigmsherpas Interesting. Thanks!