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  • Let's learn to control our dreams! And other people's minds. But we'll start with dreams.

  • Anthony here for DNews and you guys have been asking a LOT about Lucid Dreaming lately.

  • I've been able to do it fairly consistently since I was about 13, so I thought sure- I

  • can talk about that.

  • A lucid dream is one where you know you're dreaming. You can also potentially control

  • it- you can turn a nightmare into a good dream, fly, go places you've never been, do some

  • sexy things- a lot of my teenage ones were about sexy things.

  • So how does it work and how can you do it?

  • The how of it is complicated. We're not even entirely sure why we dream, which is what

  • makes lucid dreaming so valuable to scientists.

  • Studying the brain of someone who can dream about exactly what they're told to can help

  • create a sort of control group so researchers can see just what's happening in different

  • brains during similar dreams, and maybe finally figure out just why it happens.

  • We do know this - dreaming is sort of a whole brain activity. The pons system of your brain

  • stem initiates it, your limbic system adds emotions, and your prefrontal cortex puts

  • it all together. But the parts of your brain associated with self-awareness are are turned

  • off.

  • In a study run by the Max Planck Institutes of Psychiatry, they found that people who

  • can have lucid dreams can switch those parts of their brain on- be self-aware AND dreaming

  • at the same time.

  • So, if you want to make yourself a flying robot sex god in your dreams, how do you do

  • it? Step one: keep a dream journal.

  • Whenever you wake up, write down as much about your dreams as you remember- you'll start

  • to recognize certain patterns in them. That'll make you more likely to notice them when you're

  • dreaming.

  • You should also start reality testing. Throughout the day, stop and ask yourself: "Am I dreaming?"

  • Then test things around you to make sure you aren't. Flip a lightswitch. Look at your watch

  • a couple times. If you're dreaming, the switch won't do anything and your watch will be keeping

  • really, really strange time.

  • Once you're lucid, it's hard to stay lucid and sleeping. Your body either wants to wake

  • up or keep dreaming as usual. People who are new to it tend to wake up right after they

  • notice they're dreaming. If you feel like you're waking up, you're supposed to look

  • at the ground and spin around in your dream. The technique was discovered by Stephen LaBerge,

  • a psychiatrist who studies lucid dreams- his theory is that familiar motion like that engages

  • your senses and makes your brain focus on the dream.

  • So there you go. Go forth, you dream explorers, and report your results back to me. Unless

  • it's sexy stuff. That sort of dream is just for you, okay? If there's anything else that

  • you want us to make a video about, definitely leave it down below. And remember to subscribe

  • for more DNews.

Let's learn to control our dreams! And other people's minds. But we'll start with dreams.

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