Read A Field Guide to Lucid Dreaming Online
Authors: Dylan Tuccillo,Jared Zeizel,Thomas Peisel
Hatching the Egg
As you fall asleep, repeat the intention in your head, remem-
bering to think of one, specific sentence. For optimal results,
perform a wake-back-to-bed technique before you incubate a
dream. Instead of trying to become lucid, you’ll focus on that one
image that sums up your intention. Imagine all the sensations and
memories that are attached to it. Let your mind bathe in it.
Upon waking, recall and record the dream with as much detail
as possible. It may contain important information, guidance, or
good feelings that you can slip into your pocket and use during
waking life.
It had been nearly ten years since my stepmom’s father had
passed. I was speaking to her one evening about dreaming,
particularly lucid dreaming. I said to her, “If this were a dream
right now, what would you want to do?” “I’d want to see my
dad,” she said. “I’d want to hear his voice again.” I told her that
this was possible, and that tonight she could make that happen
through dream incubation. she went to bed that night with a
burning desire repeating over and over: her intention to see her
dad in her dreams. I woke up the next morning to see her in
the kitchen. she had tears in her eyes. “I saw him! I saw my
dad. It was so real. He was there with me in the living room. I
talked with him and I gave him a hug. I could feel him. I can’t
believe it.” —THOMAs P.
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Thomas’s stepmom experienced the power that dreams have
for healing. For the first time in ten years, she was able to hug her
dad. All she had to do was ask her subconscious for that dream, it
was that simple. Something she never knew was possible became
very real. That memory will be with her for the rest of her life.
Incubating Lucid Dreams
As with all other aspects of dreaming, being conscious during
a dream opens up new possibilities. Let’s raise the stakes a
bit by throwing the word
lucid
into the dream incubation process.
First off, you can use dream incubation as a method to become
lucid.
Beyond that, if you become lucid while inside your incubated
dream, that dream will be more useful and powerful.
Incubation as a Trigger
Stephen LaBerge and Howard Rheingold, in their book
Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming,
note that you can use
dream incubation as a trigger. Let’s say you incubate a dream about
flying in an airplane. You spend an hour before bed visualizing the
interior of the plane, the wind against your cheeks, and the clouds
flying by. Before you know it, you are in an airplane, feeling all
these things. “Wait a minute,” you think, “isn’t this the very dream
I was trying to incubate? I must be in that dream now!” Because
you are aware and conscious, the experience will be heightened.
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Setting the Stage
While many lucid dreams have the aimlessness of playing
in a sandbox, an incubated lucid dream allows you to go
after specific goals. For example, instead of wasting precious time
looking for your deceased grandmother, you can begin the dream
sitting in her living room, staring at her smiling face. Solve a spe-
cific problem, talk to a specific person, and look for the exact
guidance that you seek. You’ve asked your subconscious to set the
stage for your lucid dream, and now you can act out your role in
the play.
Flap Your Wings
Remember the picture book
Flap Your Wings
by P. D. Eastman?
Allow us to jog your memory. One day an egg falls into the
nest of Mr. and Mrs. Bird, who are very charitable and decide to
hatch the egg as if it were their own. After they give it a lot of love
and care, one day it hatches. To their surprise, their adopted child
is a very strange-looking bird, with a long green snout and sharp
teeth—they’ve just hatched a baby alligator. Do they discard this
dangerous predator? No, they raise it as their own.
Something similar to Mr. and Mrs. Bird’s story often occurs
with dream incubation; you don’t always get what you asked
for. When you ask your dream a question, don’t expect a clear-
cut answer. For example, if your question is “Should I go to law
school?” don’t expect your dream necessarily to answer back, “Sure,
sounds like a good plan, I recommend Harvard.”
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When you put a question to your dreams, you often get an
answer that’s full of symbols and codes. It seems as if your dream is
trying to tell you something, but what? In order to crack the code,
the ancient Egyptians would enlist the help of a dream priest.
These days, many of us consult dream dictionaries, which often
lead us in the wrong direction. Dream dictionaries provide generic
definitions for various symbols, but your symbols are anything but
generic. They’re very personal to you and your experiences.
It’s understandable to be frustrated with this coded language—
why won’t my dream just speak in plain English? It’s not that your
subconscious is trying to confuse or torture you. Here’s one way to
think of it: The message that your dream is conveying to you can-
not be summarized in clear-cut words. Perhaps your subconscious
provides you with metaphorical experiences (dreams) in order to
communicate with you on a deeper level. It’s up to you to interpret
your own dreams. What does your gut tell you?
So you may find yourself incubating a bird until CRACK,
there’s an alligator. Don’t be upset when you don’t receive the exact
dream you were hoping for. Your subconscious is answering your
question, just not in the way you expected. It’s smarter than you
are, and may in fact be answering the question that you should
have asked.
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Summary
• Incubation is a way to decide what dream you are going to have
before you have it.
• It’s a millennia-old skill that dreamers have always used to find
guidance and healing.
• All it takes is a passionate, specific, visual intention.
• Use incubation to set the stage for a lucid dream.
• Don’t expect your dream to give a clear-cut answer to your
questions.
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18
WILD
Consciousness can be trained to leave the physical body.
—His Holiness The Dalai Lama,
one of the world’s greatest spiritual leaders,
on his fourteenth reincarnation as of this writing
We’ve already taught you how to become lucid in your
dreams using the most typical technique. The DILD,
a lucid dream that’s sparked by a spontaneous realiza-
tion, is how 72 percent of lucid dreams happen. Hopefully you’ve
already had some success with that technique, and if you haven’t,
we’re sure you will soon enough.
But what about the other 28 percent of lucid dreams? There
are other ways to become lucid, and this chapter is dedicated to a
second and more exotic induction technique. It’s a method that’s
a bit more difficult to master, but the results are powerful and
potentially life-changing. Shamans and yogis have practiced this
approach for thousands of years.
Once you get a grip on it, you will be able to have a lucid
dream virtually at will, whenever you want. This technique was
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It is dawn. I am woken up by a text. seeing this as a good time
to do a wake-back-to-bed, I go back to sleep thinking, “Okay, the
next place I’ll be will be a dream.” I close my eyes and stare at
the blankness is front of me. I can feel my body is tired, and it has
begun to feel very heavy. After a couple of minutes, I can feel
myself even more relaxed, almost numb. I begin hearing sounds.
every so often I hear “wisps” that sound sort of like air pressure
from a teakettle. I simply observe this and focus on the darkness
ahead. Waiting for an image to appear, I remind myself that
the next image I’ll see will be a dream. Again, I hear the sound.
This time it’s loud and intense. I must be close. Next thing I
know, I feel as if I’m moving. My body feels like it’s being lifted
up and moved back and forth across the bed. I wait to open my
eyes. I don’t want to prematurely wake up and start over. I tell
myself to remain calm and go with it. If I wait this out, I’ll be in