No.3046
>>3045i know how you feel. dreaming is one of the reasons i wouldn't give up sleeping even if i were presented with a magic choice not to. i get a lot of creative ideas from them
they say an easy way to remember your dreams is to keep a dedicated dream journal and write em down as soon as you wake up. personally i just use my phone and groggily write what i just experienced.
No.3051
>>3046yeah, I've had some success with dream journaling, but I guess I got lazy and stopped doing it, and so my dream recall vanished. I never got to the point of consistent lucidity, which was one of my main goals
No.3537
When I tried dream journaling it was only nightmares so I stopped doing that. You don't need to be asleep to fantasise though.
No.3538
I used to use an amulet to keep the night terrors away but I lost it and now I can't sleep ;_; I've been looking for it everywhere.
No.3539
i remember my dreams always, but only share them with close friends (using them as diaries)
it's cool to go back yourself and remember the experience from your writings after years.
some ibs/forums have dedicated dream threads and imo they arent very interesting for others compared to yourself.
unless the poster was a good descriptive writer, maybe. but it's hard to convey dream details because they're vague, but also make perfect sense to you.
drawings or comics inspired by dreams are easier to understand as someone who didn't experience the dream like the op did.
maybe people can craft the same physically impossible disorientating dream scenarios with ai video in the future.