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Owned by Sina

Lucid Dreaming

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Sina Zade | Lucid dreamer, writer, sculptor. Blending dream yoga and modern methods to unlock creativity and awareness.

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2 contributions to Lucid Dreaming
Why There May Be No Real Difference Between Waking Life and Dreams
Most people divide existence into two clean categories: waking life is real, dreams are unreal. During the day, we assume we are inside objective reality. At night, we assume we are inside imagination. One is taken seriously; the other is dismissed as mental theater. But if we look carefully at direct experience, that line becomes far less certain. When you are dreaming, the dream usually feels real while it is happening. You do not normally say, “This is only a dream.” You react emotionally. You feel fear, desire, confusion, joy, embarrassment, urgency, love. Your body may even respond with sweating, racing heart, tears, arousal, relief. Entire worlds appear convincing enough that you participate in them without question. Only later, after waking, do you reinterpret the experience and call it unreal. But consider what gives waking life its feeling of reality. It is not that you personally verify every fact around you moment by moment. Rather, waking life feels real because consciousness is immersed in it. Sensations appear coherent. Memory continues across time. Social consensus supports it. The mind remains identified with the current scene. That is exactly what happens in dreams, only with different rules. In dreams, a world appears. You enter it. You identify with a character. Events unfold. You respond emotionally. You accept the environment as reality until a shift of awareness occurs. The core mechanism in both states is belief plus immersion. In waking life, we say: “This is my body, my story, my problems, my ambitions, my identity.” In dreams, we say similar things without noticing: “I must escape this danger. I need to reach that place. I love this person. I am this version of myself.” In both cases, consciousness inhabits a narrative and temporarily forgets its larger nature. This does not mean waking life and dreams are identical in every practical sense. Waking reality has greater continuity, stability, shared structure, and consequence. If you ignore gravity while awake, reality corrects you quickly. Dreams are usually more fluid and symbolic.
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What Are Dreams… and What Are We Waking Up Into? (A Tibetan Bön Perspective)
Most of us assume dreams are the unreal part of life, while waking life is the solid and unquestioned reality. Dreams are fantasy. Waking is real. But Tibetan Bön teachings challenge that division. In dream yoga, the goal is not simply to control dreams or have interesting nighttime experiences. It is to recognize something deeper: both dream experience and waking experience are appearances known through mind. One happens during sleep. One happens during waking. Both are experienced internally through perception, memory, emotion, identity, interpretation, and awareness. Even more radically: much of what later becomes “reality” first exists in the mind. Before a city is built, it exists as thought.Before a war begins, it exists as belief and intention.Before a relationship breaks, it exists in stories, judgments, and fears.Before art exists, it lives as imagination.Before change happens outwardly, it happens inwardly. Mind shapes worlds. In a nighttime dream, the mind creates landscapes, people, danger, joy, symbols, and entire narratives that feel completely real while they happen. Then you wake up. But from this perspective, the deeper question is: What are we waking up into? Because waking life also contains constructed worlds: - identity - status - fear - desire - memory - social roles - assumptions about self and others These structures feel solid, but many are mentally maintained. Dream yoga uses sleep as training. If you can realize “this is a dream” while dreaming, perhaps you can also realize while awake: “This anger is arising in mind.”“This fear is a projection.”“This identity is not fixed.”“This story I tell myself may not be true.” Then waking becomes more than getting out of bed. It becomes seeing clearly. And where do dreams come from? From the same source your waking world comes from: mind itself. The images of sleep, the stories of identity, the plans of tomorrow, the fears of today, the inventions of civilization, the poem, the painting, the symphony, the business idea, the new life you have not yet built—all arise first in that invisible field.
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Sina Zade
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Sina Zade | Lucid dreaming guide, writer, sculptor. Blending dream yoga and modern methods to unlock creativity and awareness.

Active 1d ago
Joined May 1, 2026
New York