Improving Dream Recall
The main barrier to recall and to lucid dreaming (realizing during a dream
that one is dreaming) is that waking and dreaming memory aren't connected nearly
as well as they could be with greater intention, practice and focus. Making a
consistent effort to remember and record your dreams will help your
waking mind to ally itself more closely with your dream experience. It's also an
excellent way to increase imagination and intuitive capabilities which are both
intimately connected with dreams. This alone should provide strong incentive.
- YOU'VE GOT TO WANT IT. First and foremost, you must feel that it
will be useful to you, if not extremely valuable. Without this, motivation
will soon disappear. More importantly, the desire acts as a magnet which
draws your dreams into memory.
- IT'S A MATTER OF FOCUS AND ATTENTION. Understand that dream recall
is an inherent, natural human trait. That is why young children are usually
in touch with dreams, as are some native cultures who share their dreams
with each other daily. Dream recall is a bit like a mental muscle, the more
you use it, the stronger it becomes. Without exercise it may shrink, but it
is there if you decide to work it out again. So if your recall is poor,
trust that it will come in time, and the trust alone will actually help.
- BEDTIME PRACTICE: Before sleep, reread your dreams from the
previous (or more) night(s). This allows you to begin to connect with your
dream memory, and is also an opportunity to interpret your dreams and spot
connections to the day's events. Then, as you go to bed, clearly ask (rather
than command) yourself to remember your dreams when you awaken in the
morning or during the night, and remind yourself that it's a simple, natural
process. Also, suggest to yourself that you will spontaneously awaken when
you need to without using an alarm clock, since it can inhibit
recall. This method works well with practice, but you may initially wish to
set your alarm for 15 minutes after your suggested wake-up time, just to be
safe. Any time you awaken, keep your eyes closed (or shut them if already
open) and remain as motionless as possible. If you moved since waking,
return to your earlier body position. Gather as many images, feelings or
impressions as you can, then rise and immediately record them in a journal
(which you keep bedside) or say them into a tape recorder, no matter how
brief or vague they may at first seem. You'll be surprised at how much
more you can remember as you write (or speak).
- BE PLAYFUL, PATIENT, and PERSISTENT. Although most people
start having success the first week or two, dream recall is a mental muscle
which may require some time to get back into shape. Try to maintain a
relaxed and playful attitude of looking forward to your dreams while being
willing to let them come all in good time. Trying too hard or being too
serious can be limiting factors. Dream recall and motivation tend to come
and go naturally in cycles, and also depend upon what else is going on in
your life. Once you start on a cycle of focusing on recall, stick with it
for at least a few days, because consecutive nights can have an
additive effect.
- A WEEKLY STUDY GROUP with a shared interest in dreams is
unmatchable for sustained motivation and inspiration.
© Copyright 1993-1996 The
D.R.E.A.M.S. Foundation