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“Early Morning Meditation and Dream Reliving
as Catalysts for Lucid Dreams”
by Gregory Scott Sparrow, Ed.D.
There is an old Buddhist story about a man who wanted to obtain the
magic sword, with which he hoped to defeat all of his enemies. He went
to his spiritual master and asked her how he could find the sword.
Instead of discouraging the seeker, the master told him what he needed
to do. She told him to go to a certain shrine in the forest and to
engage in constant prayer, repeated prostrations, and ritual sacrifices
for a complete lunar cycle. She went on to say that at the end of the
month, a snake would appear at the foot of the shrine, and that if the
man would take it by its tail, it would turn into the magic sword.
Well, the man did just as he was told. He left his cell phone and
laptop at home, and fulfilled the requirements of his quest to the
letter. At the end of the month, the snake appeared, and the man
promptly seized it by its tail; and just as the master had told him, it
turned into the magic sword.
But the only thing that she failed to tell him became obvious at that
very moment. He no longer wanted to use it.
Lucid dreaming has been considered a magic sword of sorts that permits
the dreamer to wield considerable power and creative influence over the
dream imagery. The words from Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming
capture the immense freedom and power that lucidity bestows:
"If fully lucid, you would realize that the entire dream world was your
own creation, and with this awareness might come an exhilarating
feeling of freedom. Nothing external, no laws of society of physics,
would constrain your experience, you could do anything your mind could
conceive. Thus inspired, you might fly to the heavens. You might dare
to face someone or something that you have been avoiding; you might
choose an erotic partner with the most desirable partner you can
imagine; you might visit a deceased loved one to whom you have been
wanting to speak; you might seek self knowledge and wisdom." (LaBerge and
Reingold, 1990, p. 14-15).
I was completely unaware of all of this amazing potential when my first
lucid dream occurred in early January, 1971. At that time, there were
only two books in print that had any mention of lucid dreaming, and I
was unaware of both of them. The last thing on my mind was to try to
have a lucid dream. Indeed, I did not even know what the term meant
until I stumbled upon Celia Green’s book Lucid Dreams. Even then,
the thing that impressed me most about my first lucid dream was not the
fact that I was aware that I was dreaming, but that I had been infused
with a great light and an immense sense of spiritual purpose and
belonging. I wanted it to happen again, but I didn’t really care if I
was lucid or not. That wasn’t the point.
Actually, becoming lucid has never really been an independent goal of
mine. Before I knew enough to seek lucidity, I was already meditating
and seeking enlightenment, or spiritual fulfillment. Lucid dreaming
began to happen spontaneously, almost from the very start.
Part of the reason lucidity has accompanied my spiritual journey is
because I began to meditate in the early morning hours shortly after my
first light experience. It wasn’t my idea. Actually, I was associated
with a group of students at the University of Texas who studied the
work of Edgar Cayce along with mystical Christianity, Jungian
psychology, and Eastern spiritual practices. Cayce, I discovered, had
said on several occasions that if a person meditated for an hour at 2
a.m. for a complete lunar cycle, he or she would “know a peace that
you’ve never known.” Eventually, I did this month-long ritual twice,
but even before I committed to such an ordeal –– and it was –– I began
meditating at the more user-friendly hour of 5 a.m. as part of my daily
meditational practice. I would meditate from 15 to 30 minutes before
returning to sleep for another hour or so before rising.
The consequences of this early morning discipline were astounding. Not
only did the light experience recur, but lucid dreams began to occur on
a regular basis, along with nighttime kundalini awakenings, persistent
high-frequency tones, and gentle, pulsating waves of energy in between
waking and sleep. Indeed, there were nights when I could not easily go
to sleep because of the energetic phenomena that literally overtook me
at that formative time. I would begin to leave my body, and just to go
to sleep, I would have to sit up and shake it off. It was, as they say,
an embarrassment of riches.
One might ask, why does meditation increase lucidity? It may seem
obvious, and it may be unnecessary to discuss it with you. But there
was one research study done years ago that provides a scientific basis
for understanding why meditation promotes lucidity. It was a study of
TM meditators who were hooked up to various brain activity sensors.
Well, it was found that meditation increased the activity of the
reticular activating system, which as you probably know is related to
self awareness and the orienting response. In contrast, it reduced the
activity of the limbic system, which you probably know is part of the
so-called old brain, and is the seat of our emotions and instinctual
impulses. So, in effect, meditation produces a state of awareness that
is relatively unencumbered by our underlying drives and emotional
reactions. Of course, this is a very old study, and I’m sure there have
been many others since.
After writing my master’s thesis on "Lucid Dreaming as an Evolutionary
Process" in 1974, and my book Lucid Dreaming: Dawning of the Clear Light
in 1976, I became familiar with several other researchers who were
exploring the phenomenon, including Jayne Gackenbach, Stephen LaBerge,
and Ken Kelzer. At that time, there seemed to be two basic approaches
to lucid dreaming emerging: one that considered lucid dreaming as an
end in itself, and one that considered it as a fruit of spiritual
practice. Since I had always treated lucidity as a tool that could
assist me in recognizing the light in the dream state––or seeking the
presence of the master in its many manifestations––rather than as an
independent objective, I naturally preferred the latter approach.
However, I have since realized that early morning meditation is a
highly effective and natural avenue to lucid dreaming, regardless of
what you believe about how that “magic sword” should be used. In fact,
if you pursue lucid dreaming through early morning meditation, you may
find that not only will you have more frequent lucid dreams, but that
the quality of your response to the dream will be enhanced as well,
regardless of your original intent.
What do I mean by the quality of your response? Most lucid dreamers
that I’ve known admit that lucidity is not a very stable or consistent
state of mind. Some authorities have noted that a lucid dreamer may
still do odd and unfortunate things even while “fully” lucid, as if to
say that we are still motivated by habitual ways of responding even
after we become aware that we are dreaming. For instance, I once
counseled a woman who became lucid almost every night. How did she use
her magic sword? By flying away from anything that was stressful in the
least. Clearly, she was acting according to habit, just as much as a
nonlucid dreamer might exhibit the same knee-jerk responses to an
ordinary dream.
I have exhibited such familiar habit patterns on so many occasions in
my lucid dreams that it is sobering to say the least. In one dream, I
became lucid and decided to fly up into the morning sky. It was
exhilarating, but when I came back down to earth and encountered my
mentor, he said that the master had come for me twice, and that I had
been distracted by my own agenda. In another lucid dream, I had the
opportunity to go to a boy who had just been hit by a car on his
bicycle. I was afraid of what I would see, and didn’t know if I could
handle it, so I avoided the chance to help him. I still regret that.
Clearly, what we call lucidity is neither singular, nor stable, nor
consistent, nor always the same as our waking awareness. And so if our
principal goal is only to “become lucid,” we may achieve that objective
without appreciating how the lucid dreamer may still lapse into chronic
habit patterns and overlook a greater design that is emerging in the
dreamer-dream relationship.
I once asked my mentor what I should do when I became lucid. He said
two things: Do something creative, and look for the light. A simple
agenda, but one that is easily dismissed in the first moments of
lucidity. Lucidity itself does not confer the wisdom of how best to use
it. However, because meditation is an activity of putting one’s own
agenda aside for the sake of a greater good, I believe that it
effectively prepares the lucid dreamer to make the best use of those
precious moments of heightened awareness and fearlessness. I
believe that it “sheathes” the sword; that is, it keeps whatever power
is available to the dreamer in abeyance so that the dreamer can be more
attentive and open to the requirements of the moment. Now have I said a
lot with those words, and I don’t mean to slip my paradigm under the
door so to speak, but what I am saying is that a pursuit of lucidity in
and of itself can tilt the dream too much in the direction of the
dreamer’s narrow agenda, and may overlook a more important initiation
which is surfacing through the particular imagery of the dream.
Certainly, those dreamers and dream analysts who are steeped in Jung’s
approach to the psyche consider it essential to respect the particular
imagery and situations that arise in the dream, and would urge a
respectful if not humble approach to them. To give you the flavor of a
Jungian’s response to my own regular experiences of lucidity back in my
youthful days, Dr. Edith Wallace––a Jungian analyst in the New York
area who has since passed on––only said, “I hope you have a circle of
fire around you,” as if to say that the forces of the unconscious were
more powerful than I was. It was a warning that I never forgot, and it
turned out that she was most definitely right. But that is another
story that is much too long to tell.
While this conservative attitude may seem put a damper on the lucid
dreamer’s expression of freedom and control, it nonetheless treats the
dream experience as a relationship in process, which depends upon the
respective contributions of dreamer and dream to weave the tapestry of
the emerging Self. Obviously, lucidity can further that process, or it
may disrupt it if the dreamer dismisses the imagery as merely “self
created” and thus, by implication, less important than the dreamer’s
conscious agenda.
So, what I’m saying is that you want to have lucid dreams, go to the
shrine in the forest and...well you know what I’m saying. By practicing
early morning meditation, you can achieve lucidity, but the practice
itself will instill an attitude––if it is not already in place––that
will allow you to sheathe the sword of your personal agenda, and to use
your expanded powers to participate more fully in the unfolding dream
drama. It will assist you in having a contextually correct sense of
what to do to facilitate an integrative process that the dream is
making possible.
Another lucid dream induction practice that can be used alongside early
morning meditation is what I have called Dream Reliving. I have been
using and researching this method since the late 70s, and explored its
effectiveness in an experimental dissertation at William and Mary in
1983. While I have not taken the time to publish the results of this
and other inquiries into this method, let me say that it does work as a
therapeutic intervention, as well as a lucid dream induction method.
Personally, I have used Dream Reliving upon returning to sleep after my
early morning meditation period for many years. It has been a powerful
combo.
Dream Reliving is similar in many ways to Krakow’s Imagery Rehearsal
Therapy, which has been used successfully to reduce the frequency of
chronic nightmares associated with post-traumatic stress disorder. With
IRT, one changes the ending to a chronic nightmare, and then rehearses
the more pleasant imagery associated with the changed ending. Dream
Reliving differs from IRT slightly, by placing the emphasis on
mustering a lucid response to the dream scenarios, and then observing
the changes in imagery that occur in the dream’s imagined outcome.
Unlike some lucid dream induction techniques that increase dreamer
awareness without regard to ideals or intentions, Dream Reliving joins
early morning meditation as a method that weds a specific ideal or
intention with the goal of becoming lucid. While early morning
meditation prepares the dreamer to prepares the dreamer to respect the
imagery and the relationship with it, Dream Reliving focuses on
altering the dreamer’s response to a chronic upsetting dream scenario
in preparation for doing it differently in subsequent dreams. So, if
early morning meditation brings spiritual and integrative intention to
the relationship with the dream, Dream Reliving supplements it with a
corrective or therapeutic response to problematic dream scenarios.
Let’s see how this works. I’m the guinea pig here, so be kind in your
psychodynamic assessments of me as I bare a bit of my soul.
I have a history of having plane crash dreams during times in my life
where I’ve taken on too much, or I’m under a lot stress, and my ability
to keep it all in the air so to speak is seriously in question. Of
course, such overcommitment calls for some pruning of obligations, but
I also suffer from a fatalistic attitude that can bring it all down
when it could have conceivably remained aloft. Also, my wife and I are
currently in a dialogue about whether to leave south Texas, which is
putting some stress on me since it’s where I grew up, teach, guide fly
fishers, and have my therapy practice. Keeping all of my work
commitments in the air and contemplating a move away from my comfort
zone can be a bit overwhelming, but I don’t want to dig in my heels and
create a problem with my wife, or suppress the opportunities for my
further growth and creative expression. See the picture? Sound like
real life, right? So I recently decided to use the occasion of giving
this particular presentation as a good reason to put these induction
strategies into renewed practice, not only to provide some proof of
their efficacy, but to find a creative way through my personal dilemmas.
So imagine it’s around 4:30 am, and I’m grabbing my robe and blanket
and tiptoeing around our three sleeping dogs, and heading down the
hallway to my therapy office where I will sit down on the sofa and
meditate for a while before going to sleep on the sofa for the next
hour or so. Before going to sleep, I imagine that I am in a dream,
seeing a plane that may be in trouble approaching the runway. Instead
of watching it crash and burn, I imagine myself becoming lucid and then
feeling hope and confidence in its pilot, affirming that it will land
safely. Of course, it lands without incident in my presleep fantasy,
and then I fall asleep.
During the day, I supplement my early morning regimen with periodic
“state checks”––a method pioneered by Tholey––to make sure that I am,
indeed, awake. I do all of this for several days, and the dreams begin
to reflect the influences of these practices. Within the first week, I
have my first of four lucid dreams, and begin to have nonlucid dreams,
as well, that reveal a dramatic change in the plane crash theme. Let me
share a couple of the dreams to give you the flavor of how these
practices recently impacted my dream life.
In the first lucid dream, I am leaving my childhood home in south
Texas, riding in the back seat with an unknown Asian woman who seems to
be my guide. I suddenly become lucid, and then she leans over and
kisses me. I become sexually aroused by her, and I know that she is
available in the dream, but since I am married, I feel that I need to
restrain that impulse in the dream. (What a good guy, huh?) I awaken
feeling aroused and stunned by the intensity of the dream. Around that
time, I have another dream––a nonlucid one––in which I am on the runway
of an airport. Trucks and vans are clearing the end of the runway of
old containers and various debris, and carrying their cargo back to the
airport, as if on an important mission.
In the second lucid dream, I am trying to find my way through a
nighttime setting to reach a place from which I will be able to get
public transportation home. People are everywhere, and I meander
through crowds, lost. Suddenly, an unknown younger woman takes my hand
and quietly leads me through the crowds of people, and says goodbye. I
walk on, and enter a setting like a medieval city with buildings
constructed of dark wood, and become lucid. I can see my destination on
the horizon, and know that I can get a bus home from there. Several
women approach, and ask me about my books. I sign one of my books for
one of the women, and the dream ends.
Meanwhile, at about the same time, I had a nonlucid dream in which I am
in a small plane and headed for the ground. I realize that a huge craft
is directly over me, and keeping me from pulling out of the dive. I
have enough control of the smaller craft to slow down and let the
larger craft pass over, allowing me to pull up into the open sky. I fly
upward, and then navigate easily around mountains and trees before
awakening.
The third lucid dream addressed my question of where I need to go, and
what work do I need to do. I am back at my old job in Virginia Beach
preparing resume my outwardly spiritual work, and my old vintage
electric typewriter is humming on the desk, waiting for me. But there
is a problem. There is a new section to the building, and a female
spirit is haunting that section. I know I have to pass through the area
to get to where I need to go, so I enter the area alone, and walk down
a long hallway, hoping to avoid an encounter with the woman. Of course
she appears at the end of the hall, wearing ropes or ribbons than drape
to the floor. She does not look happy. At first I turn away from her,
but then realize that I am dreaming. So I turn back to face her. And
then, I become even bolder, and walk up to her. She is obviously
surprised. I ask her with a smile, “Who paints your face?” And suddenly
the dream is over. I don’t know where those words came from, so don’t
ask me what I meant. It seemed to be a way of showing respect, however.
The fourth lucid dream took place about two weeks into my combined
regimen of early morning meditation and Dream Reliving. It is
interesting that this dream incorporates the themes of the previous
lucid dreams of trying to find my way, as well as the theme of flying.
In this one, there is no woman to help me, nor a plane that is in
danger of crashing. I have no memory of what led up to the lucid dream,
but I just remember becoming suddenly aware that I am dreaming.
Immediately, I jump up and fly through a wall, and come down in a
nighttime setting. I begin to look for the light. I see white Christmas
lights strung on the trees and shrubs outside a building, so I move
toward the tiny lights, and focus on them in hopes that the light will
infuse me. But the lights dim as I concentrate on each one, and so I
fly upward until I come to rest on the top of a tall building. I sit
cross-legged and prepare to meditate, and wonder why I was not able to
see the light when I tried. Then the thought comes to me, “The Light is
in the eye.” These words from The Secret of the Golden Flower make me
realize that the precious thing that I seek is already inside of me.
Then I awoke, realizing that by believing these words would not only
help me “keep the plane aloft” so to speak, but also have faith that
wherever I am, my true home is always with me.
While I am happy to know that the “Light is in my eye,” and not going
anywhere, those of you who seek to experience the infusion of Light as
I do may find that early morning meditation offers you the very best
chances of encountering and communing with the holy light, or whatever
term you wish to give it. Words do fail us in describing this ecstatic
experience, but Gillespie does it beautifully by referring to it so
simply as the fullness of light.
I could relate several of light experiences following early morning
mediation, but I think it’s more important to emphasize that it’s not
so much the quality of the meditation that seems to precipitate such
momentous experiences as one’s sheer willingness to show up. During my
second 28-day vigil, for instance, I was getting sleepier and sleepier
each night. I had companions who were allegedly meditating with me in
their respective homes, but after the first 15 days or so, it became
increasingly difficult to wake up sufficiently to put in my time at 2
am. So I would nod off, and gradually slide into a semi-reclining
posture, hoping to receive credit somewhere for putting in the effort.
It was only the 17th day or so when I found myself leaning over, half
asleep, feeling like a fraud in my fleeting moments of near wakefulness
when suddenly I felt his breath. I say “his” because it seemed to be a
man, and it seemed to be “the master.” I did wake up rather quickly.
After all, feeling someone’s breath on your face in the middle of the
night has a way of ruining the best of slumber. I kept my eyes closed,
because I didn’t want to lose the connection. His breath became
increasingly intense waves of energy, and I just received this blessing
as best I could. Then I heard a voice. “What were you in Rome,” he
asked? I struggled, but somehow knew the answer. “I was two things,” I
said, even though I had no idea what I meant. With that admission of
hypocrisy, his breath became the light, and it cascaded through me as
if it was his response to my answer, his gift in view of my honesty.
Perhaps all of this is a bit confusing. But I wanted you to have a real
life taste of how early morning meditation and Dream Reliving can
effectively induce lucidity within the framework of spiritual and
therapeutic intentions, and how such discipline can also increase the
chances that you will experience the light. It is a simple, natural
approach that gives rise to lucidity, almost without trying. Which
brings to mind another Eastern story of the disciple who learned to
levitate across the river. Excitedly, he went to tell his master about
his prodigious achievement. The master replied, “For two pennies, you
could have taken the ferry.” It may not seem cheap to get up in the
middle of the night to meditate, but in essence, meditation is the
simple solution that can ferry you across the river.
I assure you that early morning meditation, paired with Dream Reliving
when appropriate, will have a positive influence on your life, as it
has mine. If done with diligence and faith, it will easily increase the
frequency of lucidity in your dreams, and may also open the door to
experiences of light and ecstasy.
The hard part is just getting out of bed and doing it.
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