dualstow wrote:
I think I mentioned on a previous page that Stephen LaBerge recommended asking oneself, "Am I awake?" but I never bothered to do that. I'm more likely to suddenly realizing that flying is not a normal part of my life, and then I try as hard as I can not to wake up so that I can enjoy.
That's about as straightforward as you can get. Sounds good. Not as exciting as trying to walk through a door or shove your finger through your hand, but whatever works.
MachineGhost wrote:
I've had dreams where I've had full blown, online text chats and could read every word, although I feel the referrents were conveyed emotionally rather than egotistically-in-the-brain.
Yeah, it's easy to fool yourself in the dream world. I wondered if I'd just "known" what these bits of text said rather than actually "read" them. But my recall of the font, color, and placement of the letters was quite specific. "North Carolina" in white letters on the street sign. "Sno" in small, black letters on an off-white business card.
Note that this was "Sno" not "Snow", so the gentleman with the card did not treat me to
the early 90s rap hit "Informer". If this had been a lucid dream, you can bet that I would have changed this person into "Snow" and had him rap for me.
Gumby wrote:
I saw the Awake finale last night and kind of enjoyed the final minutes. They went with the Inception of having themes of dreams within a dream and distant music and changing/absent totems (reality test objects) to signal those migrations. It was pretty well done for a TV show, and the ending was interesting (dream within a dream that might all be within another dream).
Is it possible to lucid dream years of consciousness Inception-style in a single night? Sounds pretty crazy.
I'm glad to hear that the finale was good. I hate when they don't get the chance to at least attempt a wrap-up.
As for years of consciousness in a dream state, I've run across a good number of self-reported experiences just like what you describe. Things like two weeks in a 30-minute nap. 2 to 3 months in a night. One guy even claimed to have experienced something like 100 years of time in a night of sleep.

(It's difficult to confirm any of this experimentally of course!)
They did do some tests of how long basic activities take in an LD state. The dreamer would do the prescribed activities and signal completion via eye movement. It generally came "pretty close" to real time. Here's a little bit more info:
http://daniel.erlacher.de/index.php/Tim ... cid_dreams This would seem to indicate that
by default, a lucid dream moves "sort of" in real time.
My uneducated take is that the dreamer controls how quickly time seems to pass and can probably influence this a great deal, intentionally or unintentionally. Once the internal universe of the brain takes over from the external universe of reality, it simply isn't clear what's possible. Crazy stuff.