Shared Dreaming, Anyone?

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Shared Dreaming, Anyone?

Postby makidas » May 12th, 2005, 1:56 am

I just thought i'd start a thread for anyone who would like to share any experience they have with shared dreaming. I've never experienced this phenomenon but I'm very interested in hearing from anyone who has. Ty :)
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Postby Agriff » May 12th, 2005, 2:05 pm

I havent but one time when I was at my grandparents house with my aunt and my uncle (and my parents) and they all woke up at the same time and had a similar dream.

I think it would kick ass to have a shared dream, but it would also be kinda freaky. Then again, isnt hypnotism in itself freaky? :wink:
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Postby Tangy » January 4th, 2012, 10:46 am

Agriff wrote:I havent but one time when I was at my grandparents house with my aunt and my uncle (and my parents) and they all woke up at the same time and had a similar dream.

I think it would kick ass to have a shared dream, but it would also be kinda freaky. Then again, isnt hypnotism in itself freaky? :wink:


I like to know more about shard Dreaming
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Postby Tangy » January 17th, 2012, 4:49 am

tanyaslave wrote:Once, and only once. It happened the night my grandfather died, between my cousin and I. We were around 30 miles apart, and I didn't even know that there was a colloquial term for what we had experienced until now. I always just chalked it up to some familiar connection we shared, or at least I had as a child; or just coincidence as an adult.



Lets do an experiment A shared dreaming adventure, anyone who would like to be part of an shared dreaming experiment lets us know we set a date create a file for that date we all go to sleep at the same time and see if we have the same Dream.
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Postby KIY » January 17th, 2012, 5:46 am

I've never had a shared dream, as far as I know. I've had one or two which might have been precognitive (or maybe more). With those it would depend upon how close the dream would have to have been to what did happen-- and whether or not it was my mind making an intuitive leap, or if I read something and forgot about it, etc.

Put me down as a "maybe" for an experiment. I need to think about it, plus it would depend upon what time zones folks are in, whether or not I want to mess with the stuff on my music player, etc.
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Postby Tangy » January 17th, 2012, 3:10 pm

KIY wrote:I've never had a shared dream, as far as I know. I've had one or two which might have been precognitive (or maybe more). With those it would depend upon how close the dream would have to have been to what did happen-- and whether or not it was my mind making an intuitive leap, or if I read something and forgot about it, etc.

Put me down as a "maybe" for an experiment. I need to think about it, plus it would depend upon what time zones folks are in, whether or not I want to mess with the stuff on my music player, etc.


lets get formerly with this first

While we tend to think of dreams as private and personal, dreaming is actually a highly social activity. Many of us, indeed, are far more gregarious in our dreams than in our ordinary daily lives.
As we share dreams with friends and family on a regular basis, we may notice that sometimes our dreams overlap rather closely. We may have been dreaming on the same theme, or visiting the same dream scape, on the same night. Sometimes we have shared adventures, though (more often than not) only one of the dreamers remembers exactly what was going on.

We are drawn together in dreams in the same ways that we are drawn to each other in waking life: by family ties, by shared interest, by common concerns, by love and sexual attraction, by the need for healing or the desire for fun and adventure
As we become Active Dreamers, we can develop the practice of embarking on conscious interactive dream journeys with focused intention. We can do this up close or at any distance. We can learn to enter shared dreaming with an intimate partner who shares our bed, with a group of friends in a living room, or with a network of dreamers in other parts of the world.

Moving Forward
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Re: Shared Dreaming, Anyone?

Postby Tangy » June 7th, 2012, 7:51 pm

makidas wrote:I just thought i'd start a thread for anyone who would like to share any experience they have with shared dreaming. I've never experienced this phenomenon but I'm very interested in hearing from anyone who has. Ty :)



Warp my Mind is like a shared Dream :idea: :idea:
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I have, but there are a few oddities.

Postby Sociological » June 9th, 2012, 12:05 pm

I have encountered "shared dreaming" many times. The thing that throws people, and makes it difficult to recognize and verify, is that our minds tend to auto-correct anything it doesn't think should be there. Hence the Rorschach tests. In dreams it is usually not so much what it is as how you think of it. Two people dreaming the same thing will see things differently and it is still shared, only viewed differently like two people looking at one coin that see it as different. It has more than one side. This is the less common one in my opinion and is more subjective.

Other cases are where three or more people sort of "mesh" their dreams. In this case one perspective/mind tends to become the predominant one, and the others involved in it are usually very much aware of what is happening. This is the most common form that I've encountered. Some think of this as "dream walking" though I think that term is more spiritual than mental. Most of the time people who encounter this are awoken as it starts. Those who have long histories of meditative practices, or those who have practiced altering or adjusting their own mental patterns usually may choose to stay.

The overall result (if your not the predominant one) is a bit uneasing. You are forcing your mind while in a subconscious state, to choose something with active awareness; in order to remain in that dream. I can't think of a way to describe the askew feeling that shared dreaming in this way causes.

It seems to be like inverted hypnosis. entrancing to bring the subconscious acceptance of a conscious event, or to consciously change a subconscious response. Choosing a dream is making your subconscious mind accept your conscious reasoning. Similar to using hypnosis to make your conscious mind to take different subconscious reasoning. If hypnotized in a dream do you change your conscious self, just like hypnotizing your self awake lets you change your subconscious self; type of theory. I'm afraid that I lack the ability to be more clear on that unless you have "woken up" in a dream and stayed in it. That is the easiest way to start that sort of activity, and once you do it a few times most of the things posted here will make much more sense.

It's about as common as having your feelings follow your rationale or as successful as having your reasoning follow your heart. Honestly, how often does someone take their own advice and mean it after all?
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