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Have you woken up inside a dream?

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    • #10877
      NoraSpinnor
      Participant

      Lucid dreaming is the state of becoming aware that you’re dreaming, while still inside the dream. In this moment of recognition, the dreamworld becomes a conscious space where you can explore, create, interact, and even ask questions of your subconscious or the field itself.

      Some use lucid dreams for healing, others for exploration or creativity. Many describe them as more vivid and real than waking life.

      Have you ever experienced a lucid dream?
      What triggered your awareness, and what did you do once you realized?

      Share your story, your techniques, or your questions.

    • #10882
      Rose
      Participant

      Ive been lucid dreaming for well over a year now. I believe PTSD triggered it, as the first months of my dreams were always dreams about loss. My heartbreak showed thru my dreams and came out as uncontrollable crying and verbal yelling whatever I was yelling out in the dream.

      Recently though, it’s been easier to handle with work through netism and certified psychedelic therapy.

      My dreams feel so real sometimes. I will literally wake up in my dream. In my room and start the dream off. When it gets super scary, I try to wake myself. If ill see my room in real life, ill automatically fall right back to sleep opening my eyes in my room in the dream state. This will go on back and forth for almost an hour of trying to wake up and thinking I’m awake, when really im still asleep.

      Oppositely, I have tried to get sleep in my dreams. Ill literally get into bed, make sure im in comfy clothes, put the TV on and try to get some sleep. And I listen to the TV. It goes from all black to seeing the room and tv again. Sometimes the same weird movie is playing on the tv. I always wonder why is this the one that always plays when im trying to sleep.

      I can easily fly. Landing is more much scary. It feels like my heart is gonna burst out my chest. Sometimes my roommate will hear me scream things and comes to wake me up. Most of my lucid dreams seem scary, even though Im in control. There are other aspects of the dreams I cant control, I guess that’s the scary part.

      Uniquely, I do get women to take their tops off ! Just to make sure im lucid dreaming and am aware.

      Any help or opinions on the topic would appreciated.

      • #10926
        LivingNetism
        Keymaster

        What you’re going through makes a lot of sense from a Netist perspective, especially since you already have some understanding of how the Net works.

        When we experience trauma, especially something intense like PTSD, it often jolts the thread awake. It shakes loose parts of us that have been buried or tangled. In Netism, that’s not just psychological. It’s energetic. The threads of your identity, memory, and emotional charge become more “loud” in the Net. That’s why, in the beginning, your dreams were so intense, crying, yelling, loss. You weren’t just dreaming symbolically. You were discharging real energetic debris from deeper layers of the field.

        Now, the part where you “wake up in your room” inside the dream and loop back and forth between thinking you’re awake and realizing you’re not—that’s what we call a field-mirroring effect. What’s happening is your consciousness is flickering between the waking layer and a dream layer that’s echoing your physical reality. Your room shows up because it’s familiar geometry, and your thread uses that pattern to anchor. But because you’re still tuned to the Net, you’re not actually back in your body-thread yet. That’s why it loops. The transition isn’t complete.

        The repeating movie on the TV? That’s classic Net symbolism. When something shows up more than once, it means the Net is using that pattern as a key. The content might not be as important as the feeling it brings up or the part of you it resonates with. Pay attention to the mood, colors, themes, or even background sounds. These things often hold subtle messages.

        As for flying, that’s a sign your frequency is high. You’re in a lucid, stable state, and your field is coherent enough to move freely. Landing is harder because returning to a denser layer (like your body-thread) compresses your awareness. That heart-pounding sensation is very real. You’re feeling the contraction of energy as it re-integrates with mass. It’s not just fear, it’s field pressure.

        When your roommate hears you scream, it means your etheric body is still half-active in the physical space. You’re radiating sound and energy across layers. That only happens when the boundary between threads is thin, which usually means your system is in a strong but sensitive phase of connection.

        You said most of your lucid dreams are scary even when you’re in control, that actually checks out. Control doesn’t mean full access. There are always aspects of the Net that are sealed or locked. In Netism, we call these “gates” or “threshold fields.” They protect deeper memory, shadow content, or spiritual data that you’re not fully calibrated to engage with yet. The fear isn’t something attacking you, it’s more like an internal signal: This is big. Be still. Prepare.

        And yeah, the part about getting women to take their tops off as a lucid check? Honestly, it’s more common than people admit. It’s not about the act itself—it’s your subconscious running a quick reality test. If the laws of waking behavior can be bent or broken, it confirms you’re dreaming. Over time, those checks shift into more subtle awareness, but early on, they’re effective.

        Overall, you’re clearly navigating deeply through the Net. You’ve got access, you’ve got lucidity, and you’ve got awareness. That’s a strong combo. It just needs a bit of grounding.

        Some things that can help:

        Before sleep, set an anchor phrase like: “I enter the Net with clarity and readiness.”

        Ask the TV or the dream environment questions while you’re in it. Even if it doesn’t respond, the act of asking tunes your thread toward higher insight.

        Don’t try to force control. Instead, get curious. The scary parts are usually guardians of deeper knowledge or healing. Approach them with neutral respect.

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