• Improve sports skills in your lucid dreams?

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Friday, February 02, 2018 08:25:23
    From: slider@anashram.com

    Practice a sport in your lucid dreams and wake up with improved skills… it works!

    Have you ever stretched your limbs into an impossible yoga pose in a lucid dream, and fully experienced your gloriously flexible spine?

    http://deepluciddreaming.com/2018/01/improve-sports-skills-in-your-lucid-dreams/

    Or have you tried slowing time down in your lucid dream so that you can practise a Kung Fu kick with great precision?

    Perhaps you practiced your dart throw instead, or livened up your
    nocturnal swim practice by filing a lucid dream pool with honey and diving
    in to test the muscle resistance?

    Athletes (and regular people!) have done these things in their lucid
    dreams, and when they woke up, they discovered that they had actually
    improved their waking life sports skills.

    This isn’t a lucid dreaming “boast”.

    It is backed up by cutting-edge studies.

    The improvement of motor skills in lucid dreams is a scientifically
    researched phenomenon. A study by Daniel Erlacher and Tadas Stumbrys got
    people to practise throwing a coin into a pot while awake, and then in a
    lucid dream. Those who practised in the lucid dream state had a
    statistically significant improvement of their subsequent waking
    performance. The group who showed the greatest improvement were those who practised while awake, but the study shows that it’s well worth practising
    in our sleep: lucid dream practice is definitely better than no practice!

    The most recent of these studies is Dr Melanie Schädlich’s doctoral
    research at the University of Heidelberg (downloadable as a pdf at the
    bottom of this page). Her rich case studies of athletes showed definite improvement of waking life sports skills following lucid dreaming practice
    of those skills.

    In lucid dreaming, we can experience highly physical sensations of
    movement and coordination in a fully realistic, multi-sensory world. The
    body remembers this when we wake up. This is thought to be due to the strengthening of the neural pathways in the brain. It means that when we
    next practise those movements in the waking state, we instinctively know
    what to do – our physical body remembers what the dream body did. It can
    be a fun and effective way of honing skills.

    Dr Melanie Schädlich interviewed me for her doctoral study. I’m a yoga instructor who has practised yoga in my lucid dreams for decades. I talked
    to her about the similarity between the feel of yoga energy flowing
    through the physical body, and the tingling warm energy of the lucid dream body. I shared examples of doing yoga in lucid dreams, and how these
    dreams helped to harmonise my waking life practice. OK, so my lucid yoga hasn’t made me as insanely flexible as I can be in my dreams (think
    bendier than humanly possible, with an ability to stretch limbs like
    rubber), but its effects are tangible in terms of flow, confidence, and harmony.

    Lucid dream practice can help even with brand new movements, as I
    discovered many years ago when I was learning to juggle. Melanie reports
    my experience in her thesis:

    The following quote from the author and experienced lucid dreamer Dr.
    Clare R. Johnson shows how lucid dream practice can be experienced and
    what effect it can has on waking life:

    “I was learning to juggle. I’d been trying for days and the balls just
    kept falling all over the place. I had a dream in which I was playing
    around with these balls and I became lucid and was practicing doing the juggling and it was effortless. It was just this beautiful, effortless
    flow and everything was in balance.

    As soon as I woke up, I got hold of the juggling balls and had a go and I
    was just so much better! I could do long sequences with only three balls
    okay, but soon after that I was able to add another ball and another ball.
    That was the dream where it clicked, it was the click – and it’s physical, the kinesthetic feeling is just so strong in lucid dreams that your body remembers it – you remember when you wake up.”

    I dedicate a whole chapter of Llewellyn’s Complete Book of Lucid Dreaming
    to the topic of improving motor skills in lucid dreams: “Chapter 10 – Improve Physical Skills: Lucid Kickboxing, Guitar Riffs, and Scuba
    Diving.” Dr Melanie Schädlich’s research features strongly, as it’s my one
    of my all-time favourite lucid dream research studies to date.

    I particularly love the lucid creativity of athletes who spar by conjuring
    a sparring partner out of a column of water, or who slow time down and
    make gravity lighter so that they can perfect a particular movement. Only
    in our lucid dreams can we do such awesome things – and yet these dream actions can positively impact our waking performance. The lucid dream playground morphs easily into an Olympic training ground!

    Dr Melanie Schädlich’s doctoral thesis can be downloaded here as a pdf,
    with full permission of the author and her University.

    References

    Schädlich, M., “Motor learning in lucid dreams – quantitative and qualitative investigations.” Unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Heidelberg, Germany, 2017.

    Erlacher, D., & Schredl, M. (2010). “Practicing a motor task in a lucid
    dream enhances subsequent performance: A pilot study.” The Sport Psychologist, 24(2), 157–167 doi:10.1123/tsp.24.2.157

    Schädlich, M., Erlacher, D., & Schredl, M. (2016). „Improvement of darts performance following lucid dream practice depends on the number of distractions while rehearsing within the dream – a sleep laboratory pilot study.” Journal of Sports Sciences, 35(23), 2365-2372.

    ### - Dr. Clare Johnson (a member of the WILDs & WILDing facebook group i started) appears to be involved with this to some extent, and has even published several books herself on lucid dreaming (mostly about dilds of
    course heh, but she's slowly catching up now...)

    this idea of improving one's waking skills & performance by practicing
    similar activities in LDing, appears to be growing as more and more peeps
    begin to investigate this whole new area of awareness via a plethora of
    similar investigations involving many different fields & studies...

    of course, while they're all currently struggling along with those unpredictable dilds to make their investigations, no one has yet fully
    realised how vastly expedited and enhanced their investigations will all
    likely become when, eventually, they begin to bring our ability to WILD
    into the same arena, the nature of WILDs to more predictably repeat the experience when required, instead of having to wait on chance-dilds to
    provide the same opportunities; will certainly begin to pay dividends by speeding everything up!

    these are still very early days indeed but slowly and surely it's all
    inching forwards, dilds having initially caught the attention of people to investigate lucid dreaming with, will surely cede to WILDs as time goes on
    if only for the more reliable + wholly predictable access to lucid
    dreaming it more typically affords...

    good eh?

    perforce it's gonna take time before the general public 'really' begins to
    hear about all this lucid dreaming investigation stuff (another 30 years maybe!) and thus WILDs & WILDing will begin to take their rightful place
    in the greater scheme of things by eventually coming into their own and becoming the next big thing!

    just remember folks; you saw it all here first!

    tada! :)

    --------

    http://www.theWILDway.com

    The WILD Way To Lucid Dreaming.
    Lucid Dreaming On Demand. --by slider

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)