How To Maintain Lucid Dream Journalling Discipline

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Dream journalling is an essential skill for lucid dreaming. It’s fundament to good lucid dreaming ability: it improves dream recall so you don’t forget those awesome lucid dreams. It enables you to easily track dreamsigns, which will improve your lucidity rate if you apply the right techniques. Better still, even if you don’t track your dreamsigns, dream journalling promotes a bigger focus on dreams in your everyday life, which can lead to an increase of lucid dreams as well!

Reasons enough to journal dilligently, then. Yet, most of us don’t do it much. We just can’t be bothered, don’t have the time, have better things to do, etc. I’m here to tell you one thing: whatever your excuse may be, it’s not an excuse. There are no excuses. Dream journalling is an important part of lucid dream training and if you want to improve, you’ll have to do it.

Discipline
Now, you may think you don’t have the required discipline to maintain a dream journal consistently. I strongly disagree. I don’t think you fully understand what discipline is. The image of most people have of a disciplined person (let’s call him John) is probably as follows:

John had gotten a bit fat during the holidays, so he thought it would be a good idea to hit the gym to burn it all off and get in better shape. Not being someone who gets paralysis by analysis (Google it), he set out the next day to the gym. Full of motivation, John worked as hard as he possibly could and then went home afterwards, feeling satisfied at having done so much exercise. Two days later he went again. And again, and again. But after three weeks, something started to happen. John didn’t like it anymore. He lost his motivation. He didn’t like putting his body under that much stress. But John didn’t quit. He strongly disliked it, but he kept going because that’s what disciplined people do, right?

Do you realize how ridiculous that sounds? Nobody in their right minds keeps doing something they don’t like, just because they “have to”. People like John don’t exist. “Disciplined people” are people with habit and a method of constant motivation. I strongly suggest you look up “intrinsic and extrinsic motivation”. It will help you understand why the program goes as it goes.

The 5-step program

Without further ado, www.yorux.com presents to you: the 5-step program to effective dream journalling.

Step 1 – Start small

You have to make the barrier to doing the thing you want to make a habit/keep doing as small as possible. Try to recall as many dreams as possible and take notes, then only journal your favorite one. Just one. Journalling a single dream can’t really take more than fifteen minutes, and who can’t find fifteen minutes, right? If time really is short, I highly doubt you can’t find 5 minutes three times a day consistently. Just journal in parts, 5 small minutes, 3 times a day. Make your investment minimal and as the Nike slogan goes: ‘just do it’. Doing this, just fifteen minutes each day will bring your amount of dreams journalled per week to 7.

Step 2 – Build up slowly

There will probably come a point in time where you feel it’s really easy to keep up your current pattern of journalling just one dream, fifteen minutes a day. So you add another dream every other day, making your journal dreams per week 10. I think you can find an extra fifteen minutes somewhere every other day. Besides, you’re getting pretty good at journalling already, so only the really long dreams will take fifteen minutes. You’re down to around 5-10 minutes per dream.

After you’ve established two dreams every other day as a habit, you move on to journalling two dreams every day (14 dreams/week). Since you’re already spending some extra time on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, you can also spend a little extra time on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. Next up, 3 dreams every other day (18 dreams/week). 3 dreams every day (21 dreams). You get the idea.

Take note that a limiting factor here is the number of dreams you can actually recall. Dream recall improves with practice, but the rate may not be the same as your buildup.

Step 3 – Set Goals and Keep Track

Note that ‘getting better at journalling’ is not a goal. It’s a vague idea of what you want. A real goal is S.M.A.R.T.:

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