dreamosis
22nd April 2009, 04:51 PM
For about nine years I've been having lucid dreams in which I try to fly into sky, but I'm stopped by endless entangling tree branches. Or, if I'm in a city, I'm stopped by building that grow ever upward.
Recently I've begun having the opposite dream: I'm trying to get to the center of the Earth (or to the "UnderWorld") only to be stamping down endless flights of stairs.
I've had these dreams in times of stress and in times of great personal satisfaction. As the experiences are lucid, I've consciously investigated the phenomenon while still in the dream. For instance, I've slowed my ascent and watched the buildings or branches creep upwards along with me, or even appear out of thin air.
Every now and then I've been able to blast through the choking branches. I've done it simply by centering myself, calming, and then shooting myself upwards with a blast of certainty that I will break the barriers.
I've tended to think over the years that these dreams represent a personal block. However, that answer doesn't fit all the facts, nor has it felt intuitively right over time. The dreams aren't always associated with stress, nor am I particularly stressed or afraid when I confront the barriers. I've confronted them so many times (probably close to hundred times or so now) that my feelings are neutral.
The only reason I've held onto the "personal block" theory is that I've talked with so many other lucid dreamers who haven't had this experience.
Lately, I've noticed another pattern associated with these experiences, and have made a tangential, but perhaps important, connection with a similar dream experience.
The new pattern I've seen is that I seem to encounter the blocks whenever I'm leaving an still-unfolding dream behind. In other words, I'm in the middle of a dream, I become lucid, and decide to leave to dream in order to try to fly into outer space. Sometimes the dream I'm leaving behind is a stressful one, sometimes not. Maybe my subconscious prevents me from trying to leave the dream scene...
The connection I've made is with a lucid dream I had a few years back. I was in a futuristic city and decided to walk as far as I could, just observing, while staying lucid. After a few minutes I came to a wall (full of video screens). The wall ran to the left and right a long ways and I couldn't see another way around the wall. So I decided to go through the wall. I pushed my hands and body into the wall but I was magnetically repulsed backward. I tried several times to just walk through the wall (I'd done it many times in other dreams), but this time I couldn't make it work. I experimented for a while: bringing my hand up to the wall very slowly and I could begin to feel the magnetic repulsion from a few inches away. In the dream I decided that I was up against the natural barrier of a dream realm.
I've heard others talk and write about dreaming being organized into realms, that there are -- in some way -- discrete dream lands. There are, of course, all kinds of connecting "doors" between realms, and I'm guessing that if this theory is right, depending on the doors you take between realms, the transition looks and feels seamless.
But it may not be as simple as I'm describing, though. There's the question of personally-generated virtual realities versus collectively-creates ones, and hybrids, and the rules governing each may be different.
At any rate, I'm beginning to think that the experiences I'm having are similar to what it's like in a 3D videogame when the character comes to the edge of the programmed space and must turn around.
Recently I've begun having the opposite dream: I'm trying to get to the center of the Earth (or to the "UnderWorld") only to be stamping down endless flights of stairs.
I've had these dreams in times of stress and in times of great personal satisfaction. As the experiences are lucid, I've consciously investigated the phenomenon while still in the dream. For instance, I've slowed my ascent and watched the buildings or branches creep upwards along with me, or even appear out of thin air.
Every now and then I've been able to blast through the choking branches. I've done it simply by centering myself, calming, and then shooting myself upwards with a blast of certainty that I will break the barriers.
I've tended to think over the years that these dreams represent a personal block. However, that answer doesn't fit all the facts, nor has it felt intuitively right over time. The dreams aren't always associated with stress, nor am I particularly stressed or afraid when I confront the barriers. I've confronted them so many times (probably close to hundred times or so now) that my feelings are neutral.
The only reason I've held onto the "personal block" theory is that I've talked with so many other lucid dreamers who haven't had this experience.
Lately, I've noticed another pattern associated with these experiences, and have made a tangential, but perhaps important, connection with a similar dream experience.
The new pattern I've seen is that I seem to encounter the blocks whenever I'm leaving an still-unfolding dream behind. In other words, I'm in the middle of a dream, I become lucid, and decide to leave to dream in order to try to fly into outer space. Sometimes the dream I'm leaving behind is a stressful one, sometimes not. Maybe my subconscious prevents me from trying to leave the dream scene...
The connection I've made is with a lucid dream I had a few years back. I was in a futuristic city and decided to walk as far as I could, just observing, while staying lucid. After a few minutes I came to a wall (full of video screens). The wall ran to the left and right a long ways and I couldn't see another way around the wall. So I decided to go through the wall. I pushed my hands and body into the wall but I was magnetically repulsed backward. I tried several times to just walk through the wall (I'd done it many times in other dreams), but this time I couldn't make it work. I experimented for a while: bringing my hand up to the wall very slowly and I could begin to feel the magnetic repulsion from a few inches away. In the dream I decided that I was up against the natural barrier of a dream realm.
I've heard others talk and write about dreaming being organized into realms, that there are -- in some way -- discrete dream lands. There are, of course, all kinds of connecting "doors" between realms, and I'm guessing that if this theory is right, depending on the doors you take between realms, the transition looks and feels seamless.
But it may not be as simple as I'm describing, though. There's the question of personally-generated virtual realities versus collectively-creates ones, and hybrids, and the rules governing each may be different.
At any rate, I'm beginning to think that the experiences I'm having are similar to what it's like in a 3D videogame when the character comes to the edge of the programmed space and must turn around.