
However upon waking I discovered that I held down the button 3 times for a very long time. Once from 3:04am to 3:45am, after that there was some small movement and then another click just long enough to trigger it again. Next one was from 5:53am to 6:34 (featured), another flurry of movement. And the last one was from 7:09 to 7:25, just before I woke up, the movement was delayed by 30+ seconds this time.
If any of those were from me dreaming, I didn’t experience/remember any of them. It’s quite likely that I was just laying on my hand or something. I also woke with my headset unplugged so the delay in movement on the third “dream” could have been from that. Though just a note, if these were dreams, it would mean that the songs were triggered just after they ended, so it might be a good idea to have a version where the song is triggered after oh 10-20 minutes of holding down the mouse.
I woke up feeling very refreshed for only having had 5 hours of sleep, so I’ll definitely be doing this again, hoping for better results though.
Download entry as Lucid Scribe Data (LSD) or Comma Separated Values (CSV).
Version 1.0.6 had a 10 minute delay. You would have to manually uninstall the current version before installing it. I removed it because I felt that it worked better as a WILD tool during a WBTB exercise. But I will see if I can add the delay back in one day and make it configurable.
When you do that could you also make it watch mouse2,3,4,&5?
I have a 5 button mouse and I was looking over some of linkzelda41’s logs, and noticed the time where he clicked 20-some times, and I thought “If he was in a dream and his fingers started twitching, my mouse could track ALL of my fingers… I could even use it for morse code!”
Though, I’m going to need to start experiencing any dreams I have or it’ll all be for naught.
Sure, I will add that to the to-do list. Two or even just one finger would suffice for Morse Code…
You might experience more dreams if you think through your day backwards in fast-rewind mode within a few minutes before going to sleep. Studies have found that visualization increases dream frequency and memory exercises improve dream recall.
Will definitely try that, I think also I’ll hold off on posting until I do actually dream. Graphs of me rolling onto my mouse aren’t all that interesting…
Edit: Does listening to music all night (when I’m not doing a FIELD test) affect dreams at all?
I have found that music bleeds into the dream world very easily. I have been lucky enough to listen to quite a few of my favorite tracks in a dream. I like to listen to the Digitally Imported vocal trance and chill-out channels during sleep.