by Richard Wilkerson, Dream Educator
Some professional dream workers question the advisability of trying to control the dream, and encourage learning to enjoy and understand it instead. The stated concerns are usually about the person getting enough deep sleep rest and the need for the unconscious to have its way for a particular amount of time per day.
But as advocates of lucid dreaming remind us, even the best of lucid dreamers have very few of them, at best 1 of 6 dreams per night for the extraordinary lucid dreamer. (If you have more lucid dreams than this per night, the Stanford Sleep Laboratories would like you to contact them, and probably offer you some good money to sleep there!) . Also, most people having lucid dreams report a higher degree of restfulness the next day.
See below for further reading and resources on Lucidity and Lucid Control.
About the Author:
Richard Wilkerson is general editor for The Internet Dream E-zine, Electric Dreams, and director of DreamGate, the Internet Communications and Dream Education Center. He writes the Cyberphile column for the Association for the Study of Dreams Newsletter.
Revised 04/27/2009 by Marlene M. Maheu, Ph.D.











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