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Dream programming

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Szaxx

Hi All,
A method of creating a dream I developed as a teenager came to light recently.
It involves placing a 'suggestion' which imprints itself into the subconcious mind effecting a dream of that suggested. I've remembered some of the how to, and it worked on all 3 attempts I made.
The first example involved the thought of a castle in which strange occurances happened. These strange occurrences were left at that thought and absolutely nothing more was thought about them.
The castle was one of the last built, well presented and white. I imagined it in a countryside environment in early summer. It was a large rectangular structure built for a king. Its purpose was presentational rather than defensive. A basic picture was made and then seen in the minds eye.

To imprint this you need to have an imagination and the ability to see things in the minds eye very clearly. The intent on remembering it has to be very strong.
You create your picture, and see it before you while physical. Doing this the physical sense of vision drops into the background (like noticing during the visualisations when phasing). The scene appears in all its glory and you need to believe you are there. Your concentration on it if effective will give the scene complete visual priority over your physical sight.
Once the scene is clear you place yourself there and imagine walking or flying....
This has to give the feeling of movement akin to a projection. Remember the feeling. Place the views of the created scene with these feelings into your mind as if they were happening for real whilst physical. The exhilaration and all must be remembered. Convince yourself its real and happening. Feel the gravity and that rollercoaster dropping feeling if flying. The grass under your feet or the heat from the sun on your face. Whatever tactile experiences are natural to the scene. Think strongly these are going to appear in a dream so you can re-live the experience.
Let these feelings make your heartbeat race or give you some bodily tactile feedback. Still hold them in your thoughts and return to the physical again with them in your memory. The whole experience may fade in a similar way to a dream immediately upon waking. This is a good thing.
The memory faded its already imprinted. It could stay with you for a while then fade or stay permanently. As long as you were disassociated from the physical, even a second or two is enough.
A few attempts are required and when successful hopefully all the associted feeling get remembered too. Once familiar it can be used many times.
Most often a dream will occur that same night or the next..
The contents usually related to the created  scenario. They are generally lucid dreams and the recall is very high.

An example follows although the dream was interrupted.

http://db.tt/Xf5pQoMc
There's far more where the eye can't see.
Close your eyes and open your mind.

mindflood

so basically close your eyes and imagine  a place?
ARE YOU GOING TO ACCEPT THE BASIS OF A WORLD WITH-OUT!?

"how long shall I be with you" -Gospel of Matthew

Szaxx

Err, almost.
You are required to actually see it clearly. The vision is made that important you physical eyesight is switched on standby. Immense intent is the key.
You put yourself in the scene doing an action, if you fly feel the wind etc.
It only needs to last a few seconds but you must intend a return while sleeping.
The nearest common action is being tired and daydreaming.
The intent is to know you can create the scene in a dream.
It is similar to deep phasing where you jump into the scene and react with your surroundings.
Easy to say and quite difficult to describe accurately.
It works best if your body automatically reacts. Rapid heartbeat or vertigo, its that feedback that usually clinches it.
There's far more where the eye can't see.
Close your eyes and open your mind.

ChopstickFox

I have tried to do something like this. Not much success, I always end up with something completely different. In a completely different place.

But I have noticed that after sometimes days of intending bla bla bla, I will break from it to see what happens and it will happen. It makes me think that I'm trying to hard. :) That or I successfully implanted the idea on the days prior so once I relaxed and let my subconscious take over, it worked.

I like to do little experiments on myself.

I can continue dreams after waking up then falling asleep, but I haven't been able to continue in a different sitting before. Yet I have had dreams where I have recognized the setting from a dream from years before. Funny how that works.

I'm definitely going to try implementing your suggestions and see what comes of it.
Take to the sky, feeling so alive! Past the clouds to the Milky Way, share our secrets with the starry brigade. The stars surround us like a million fireflies. For once I see infinity... it's in your eyes.

Szaxx

It can setup a continuation of dreams for a few nights. I've managed three in a row years ago, thought it an interesting topic as its part of one exit location routine.
I can't stress enough the amount of intent required. That in itself is the key to most doors concerning the non physical.
It works far better and with immediate effect when in a NPR.
I've done this without realising it when the aircraft with a smoke trail appeared in a clairvoyant dream. Posted here in ' just a dream'. I had been at a place in the dream and went there in the RTZ immediately before things started to get emotionally connected.
There's far more where the eye can't see.
Close your eyes and open your mind.

Volgerle

I've also had interesting success with dream programming. But differently than mentioned here. It was not about creating a kind of scene to 'dream into' like in a phasing / rundown technique.

It's rather asking a question and being given an answer and the dream scenes (chosen by the subconscious / higher self ?) are then further open to interpretation. Still there were some amazing 'answers' given without any doubt.

Lionheart

Quote from: Volgerle on December 14, 2012, 05:41:20
It's rather asking a question and being given an answer and the dream scenes (chosen by the subconscious / higher self ?) are then further open to interpretation. Still there were some amazing 'answers' given without any doubt.
This happens to me quite often as well.

Sometimes it takes until the final scene of the Dream before I realize that this is my initial question being answered. For some reason my answers always come in the form of some riddle or quest. I guess it could be because I enjoy adventure/intrigue so much!  :-)

Szaxx

To ask questions while in the 3D vastness gives answers like Lionheart and Volgerle just posted.
The method initially posted initiates specifics and although the results are not perfect they are very close to that suggested. The mysteries within was such a suggestion and left at that, the result came in a way not thought of. I read a page on electogravity in the last few days and maybe my interest left something in the subconcious. It could explain the upwards drip thing, the rest, thats interesting in itself.
I've had 4 nights of lucid dreams so far trying the above method and with 5 or less hours sleep I'm feeling a little tired.
One thing consistant with each lucid dream is waking up very hot. Its not a normal occurrence and this may help. Grab some extra covers and experiment.
There's far more where the eye can't see.
Close your eyes and open your mind.