Control Your Dreams and Transform Your Life!
Link to Explore: Learn Lucid Dreaming with the Lucid Dreaming Kit
According to Lucid Dreaming expert Bradley Thompson:
Right now, you are wasting EIGHT HOURS of EVERY SINGLE DAY.That’s ONE-THIRD OF YOUR LIFE!
It’s true! The eight hours you spend sleeping every single day are going to WASTE. You’re dreaming… but you’re not doing anything WITH your dreams. And I’m writing to let you know that you could be achieving SO MUCH MORE.
What if you discovered the ability to become AWARE when you’re dreaming… to wake up “inside” your dream… and then begin to CONTROL that dream… ?
It’s a skill called Lucid Dreaming…
And it allows you to enjoy AMAZING EXPERIENCES every single night, tapping into the other 90% of your brain for encounters that will simply blow you away.
When you master this skill, you will automatically reclaim those lost eight hours EVERY night. You’ll discover a secret world where you control everything… a world MORE REAL than real-life itself. An exciting world where you can make ANYTHING happen… where things just flow… where you enjoy experiences that leave you thrilled and exhilarated for WEEKS afterward.
Lucid Dreams may sound like JUST an exciting experience but there actually are useful in your ordinary life as well.
Here are some of the benifits of Lucid Dreaming as listed in the Lucidty Institute FAQ:
- Adventure and Fantasy: Often, the first thing that attracts people to lucid dreaming is the potential for wild adventure and fantasy fulfillment. Flying is a favorite lucid dream delight, as is sex. Many people have said that their first lucid dream was the most wonderful experience of their lives. A large part of the extraordinary pleasure of lucid dreaming comes from the exhilarating feeling of utter freedom that accompanies the realization that you are in a dream and there will be no social or physical consequences of your actions. One might think that this is a rather intellectual concept, but an ecstatic “rush” frequently arises with the first realization that one is dreaming.
- Overcoming Nightmares: Unfortunately for many people, instead of providing an outlet for unlimited fantasy and delight, dreams can be dreaded episodes of limitless terror. As is discussed in the books Lucid Dreaming (LaBerge, 1985) and Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming (EWLD) (LaBerge & Rheingold, 1990), lucid dreaming may well be the basis of the most effective therapy for nightmares. If you know you are dreaming, it is a simple logical step to realizing that nothing in your current experience, however unpleasant, can cause you physical harm. There is no need to run from or fight with dream monsters. In fact, it is often pointless to try, because the horror pursuing you was conceived in your own mind, and as long as you continue to fear it, it can pursue you wherever you dream yourself to be. The only way to really “escape” is to end your fear.
- Rehearsal: Lucid dreaming is an extraordinarily vivid form of mental imagery, so realistic that the trick is to realize it is a mental construct. It is no surprise, therefore, that many people use lucid dreaming to rehearse for success in waking life. Examples of such applications include public speaking, difficult confrontations, artistic performance and athletic prowess. Because the activity of the brain during a dreamed activity is the same as during the real event, neuronal patterns of activation required for a skill (like a ski jump or pirouette) can be established in the dream state in preparation for performance in the waking world.
- Creativity and Problem Solving: The creative potential of dreams is legendary. The brain is highly active in REM sleep and unconstrained by sensory input, which together may contribute to the novel combinations of events and objects we experience as dream bizarreness. This same novelty allows thought to take on forms that are rare in waking life, manifesting as enhanced creativity, or defective thinking depending on one’s point of view (As Roland Fisher put it, “One man’s creativity is another’s brain damage.”). The claim of enhanced creativity of the dream state is supported by research.
- Healing: The effects of visual imagery on the body are well-established. Just as skill practice in a dream can enhance waking performance, healing dream imagery may improve physical health. Medical patients have often used soothing and positive imagery to alleviate pain, and the dream world offers the most vivid form of imagery. Thus, some people have use lucid dreams in overcoming phobias, working with grief, decreasing social and sexual anxieties, achieving greater self-confidence and by directing the body image in the dream to facilitate physical healing.
- Transcendence: The experience of being in a lucid dream clearly demonstrates the astonishing fact that the world we see is a construct of our minds. This concept, so elusive when sought in waking life, is the cornerstone of spiritual teachings. It forces us to look beyond everyday experience and ask, “If this is not real, what is?” Lucid dreaming, by so baldly baring a truth that many spend lives seeking, often triggers spiritual questioning in people who try it for far more mundane purposes. Not only does lucid dreaming lead to questioning the nature of reality, but for many it also has been a source of transcendent experience. Exalted and ecstatic states are common in lucid dreams. (Read the Rest of the FAQ at the Lucidity Institute)


