Lucid Dreaming Goggles and Webcast

According to Wikipedia, "Lucid dreaming is consciously perceiving and recognizing that one is in a dream while one is sleeping, and having control over the "dreamscape", the faux-reality dream world within a dream. "

The Lucidity Institute is a fascinating group down at Stanford that is attempting understand how to induce lucid dreaming.



They have created something called the Nova Dreamer, which I've actually owned for a few years:

"The NovaDreamer detects when you’re in REM sleep, then gives you a cue (flashing lights or sounds) to remind you to recognize you are dreaming. Cues enter your dream, becoming incorporated just like an alarm or radio will sometimes work its way into a dream. For example, NovaDreamer users have reported: 'I see a beautiful pattern of gold and yellow diamonds that fills my field of vision...,' and 'Im surrounded by the popping of flash bulbs with afterimages of orange circles...,' and 'I see a flash of light and press the button. No flash. I think, 'This is great; I must be dreaming!'"

There is currently a free webcast from Wisconsin Public Radio featuring many of the leaders in the field of lucid dreaming, including Stephen LaBerge, the creator of the Nova Dreamer and the Lucidity Institute. An overview of the audio program:

SEGMENT 1:

Journalist Andrea Rock is the author of "The Mind at Night: The New Science of How and Why We Dream." She tells Steve Paulson we still don't know very much about what the mind's up to when it's dreaming although we've always had theories. Now the military wants to develop soldiers that never sleep. Also, Steve Venwright runs a record label called Torpor Vigil Industries. They've put out a CD called "The Further Somniloquies of Dion McGregor." McGregor talks in his sleep like you've never heard before. We hear some samples, and Steve Venwright tells Jim Fleming how he came to have his recordings.

SEGMENT 2:

Stephen LaBerge pioneered the field of lucid dreaming research at Stanford University. He tells Steve Paulson that anyone can learn how to become aware while dreaming and use lucid dreaming as a therapeutic tool. LaBerge is the author of "Lucid Dreaming: A Concise Guide to Awakening in Your Dreams and in Your Life." Also, Novelist Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is the author of "Queen of Dreams." She tells Jim Fleming about her traditional Indian childhood and the Bengali dream-tellers she met while researching her book.

SEGMENT 3:

Paul Martin is the author of "Counting Sheep." He tells Steve Paulson that people don't get enough sleep these days and that our culture is wrong to diminish the importance and the pleasure of sleep.


Comments

Lucas Gonze said…
Y'know, I had a lucid dream last night. The way it happened was that something woke me up just a little right as I was starting to dream.

It wasn't exactly like 'being able to influence a dream'. I wouldn't describe it like that because a dream moves itself forward. It was more like being able to convert thoughts into the kind of visualization you have in a dream.