How to become a lucid dreamer



Research on sleep has long been exploring the phenomenon of lucid dreaming, and whether this can ever be achieved at will. A new study has now identified three core techniques that could help us to be at the helm of our dreams.

Have you ever had a nightmare and woken up terrified, thinking that you had been chased by a hooded figure down a dark alley, rather than been safely asleep in your bed?

The chances are that we’ve all been in a situation similar to that at one time or another; in most cases, as we are dreaming, we are not aware that we are actually in a dream. This is despite the fact that dreams often feature blatantly surrealist, bizarre elements.

Sometimes, however, we may experience a lucid dream, or one in which we are fully aware that we are dreaming. We are able to control the dreamscape — such as in the famous movie Inception — as well as what happens in that dream.

Yet most of us are not able to experience lucid dreaming at will, and while the Internet is full of webpages promising recipes that will turn you into a lucid dreamer, researchers are still unsure about how such a feat may be achieved.

Still, some techniques have been experimented with, and now a team of researchers led by Dr. Denholm Aspy, from the University of Adelaide in Australia, have conducted a study to find out which approaches are the most effective to achieve a lucid dreaming state.

The results of this study were published recently in the journal Dreaming.

Combined techniques are most effective

The researchers worked with 169 participants (94 females, 73 males, and two who identified as “other”) who were split into three groups. Each group was then assigned to practice a different combination of lucid dream induction techniques.

Three main techniques were used. These were:

Each group was required to practice one of three approaches: reality testing on its own, reality testing and WBTB, or reality testing paired with both WBTB and MILD.

The researchers found that the third group — comprising 47 participants who practiced reality testing, WBTB, and MILD — had a mean success rate of 17.4 percent in achieving lucid dreaming over a period of a week.

Moreover, the researchers report, those “who were able to go to sleep within the first 5 minutes of completing the MILD technique” had a significantly higher success rate in achieving lucid dreaming: they attained their goal during almost 46 percent of their attempts.

“Importantly,” explains Dr. Aspy, “those who reported success using the MILD technique were significantly less sleep deprived the next day, indicating that lucid dreaming did not have any negative effect on sleep quality.”

The researchers hope that the findings of their new study might, in the future, lead to better approaches to handling nightmares and improving quality of life.


“These results take us one step closer to developing highly effective lucid dream induction techniques that will allow us to study the many potential benefits of lucid dreaming, such as treatment for nightmares and improvement of physical skills and abilities through rehearsal in the lucid dream environment.”
Dr. Denholm Aspy

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