The Dr. Hyman Show - Lucid Dreaming: How to Learn, Grow, and Heal While You Are Asleep with Charlie Morley
Episode Date: July 24, 2019I often talk about the importance of high-quality restful sleep and getting the right amount when it comes to creating great health. But what about the role of dreaming? You might be surprised to lear...n that the way we dream can have a multitude of benefits on our waking life—specifically through lucid dreaming, or the act of knowing we are dreaming while we are, in fact, completely asleep. To dig into this intriguing topic further, I sat down with expert lucid-dreamer Charlie Morley on this week’s episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy. Charlie is a bestselling author and teacher of lucid dreaming and shadow integration. He was authorized to teach within the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism by Lama Yeshe Rinpoche in 2008 and has since developed a holistic approach to dreamwork called Mindfulness of Dream & Sleep, and has written three books which have been translated into 13 languages. In 2018 he was awarded a Churchill Fellowship grant to research mindfulness-based PTSD treatment and continues to teach on retreats for armed forces veterans. In this lively conversation, Charlie and I get into why lucid dreaming is such a powerful technique.Â
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Coming up on this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
This is the cool thing about lucid dreaming. It maximizes the third of our life that we
spend asleep. By doing that, we optimize the two-thirds that we spend awake.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and that's pharmacy with an F,
F-A-R-M-A-C-Y, a place for conversations that matter. And today's conversation is something
that's a little unusual, but I think will matter to many of you because it's about becoming
healthier in a realm that we often don't talk about, which is our spiritual life.
And the guest today we have is an extraordinary young man who is one of the leading teachers of
something called lucid dreaming, which we'll get into in depth.
But essentially, it's being awake while you're dreaming
as a way to explore your consciousness and heal and resolve issues in your life
and be more awake and have a bigger brain and all kinds of cool stuff that happens
as a result of this amazing
technique or method that isn't really new and we'll talk about that.
He actually derived a lot of this through his own experience, not knowing actually what
he was doing and just kind of figured it out as a little kid, 12 years old.
But he then realized that this was an ancient practice of
what's called dream yoga in Tibetan Buddhism. That's been a very secret practice for thousands
of years that now is being taught to Westerners. And he actually was authorized to teach dream yoga
within the Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism by Lama Yeshe Rinpoche in 2008.
And he's developed this holistic approach to dream work called Mindfulness of Dream and Sleep.
He's written three books about it, which have been translated into 13 languages.
He's spoken at major universities like Cambridge University.
He's spoken about Buddhism and youth culture at the House of Parliament.
He's a regular expert panelist for The Guardian.
He's been named the next generation of meditation teachers.
Not likely the kind of guy you think when you meet him,
but he actually is pretty cool.
And I get why.
He was awarded in 2018 the Churchill Fellowship Grant
to research mindfulness-based PTSD treatment.
A lot of veterans have trauma
and they suffer desperately
from nightmares and from PTSD. And this method is a way of helping them heal from the trauma.
He's run retreats all over the world for the last 10 years, workshops in 20 countries and
teaches internationally. He's lived for seven years in London at the Kagyu Sammetsong Buddhist
Center and now lives down the road with his wife Jade Shaw and when he's not teaching he enjoys practicing martial arts. He's a black belt in
kickboxing so I'm going to be very nice to him during this podcast. He likes going to the movies
and dancing. That sounds good. Kickboxing, movies and dancing. All right welcome Charlie. Cool man
thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. Okay you know, this is an interesting moment in history. On this podcast, we've had Michael Pollan talking about psychedelic experience and other
researchers in the space talking about the way in which we can become more awake, have
a more connected experience to our daily life, deal with anxiety, fear, the fear of death
using drugs people are exploring ayahuasca
and iboga and mdma as various kinds of access points into consciousness that are healing
and not just for party drugs and yet there's been this method that's been around for a heck of a long time that allows us to do a
lot of the same things without the drugs without the vomiting without with without having to sit
in meditation for 10 000 hours um and it's it's sort of like a shortcut but we have all the
technology hardwired in us we just didn't know how to use it it's like you know dorothy and ruby red slippers you know she knew how to get home all she'd do is click her heels three times
get home we have all of it hardwired into us and yet it's we sort of lost it from our culture
and sort of this lucid dreaming or conscious dreaming whatever people want to call it dream
yoga is this methodology that has allowed people to go into explorations
of themselves of consciousness uh that is not just about having a party in your dreams like flying
which is fun but about actually living a life that's more connected that's more awake that's
more conscious that allows you to fulfill the purpose you have here on earth and
it's a really interesting thing and my wife mia she got into this stuff um because she was scared
of death because i almost died and uh she she was freaking out about it and she started to explore
this whole world and it's really really helped her to sort of sort through that.
And I've been kind of been in the passenger seat as she's gone through all this and
listened to all of her dreams and all of her stories. And it's just fascinating. And I really
want to get into it, but I've been writing a book. So as soon as I'm done, I promise I'm
going to get into it. So welcome, Charlie. Thanks, man. It's great to be here.
Okay. So you basically shared a story that uh was fascinating
to me which was in you were 12 you were reading some magazine and you saw this ad for this
gizmo yeah that was way too expensive that your dad didn't want to buy you to help induce lucid
dreaming and uh but then you sort of happened upon it yourself so how did that spontaneous
experience happen okay so yeah the bit i share in the book i think is that it started at 12
what i don't share is actually was a little bit more scatological it was when i was like six or
seven i used to still wet the bed and um like not in the daytime but at nighttime i was like
wearing nappy that's urological. Oh, urological.
Okay, not scatological.
Scatological is the other part.
Oh yeah, it wasn't quite that.
It was urological then.
And I was like wearing, you know, still nappies, diapers in bed
till I was like five, six years old.
And I remember I would have these dreams.
I would really need to pee.
And needing to pee would kind of wake me up in the dream.
And I'd go, oh, I'm in a dream.
I should wake up and go to the toilet. And then I'd'd be like oh no but if i wake up the sharks under the bed
that was my kind of fear will bite my heels so no i'll just pee in the dream and of course as
anyone knows peeing in the dream it's a trap don't do it so i'd wet the bed and wake up but so i
remember there having these short periods of lucidity like real young so then when i was 12
and i was reading that it was like i've had those dreams by the way i remember i remember like being having to really go pee bad and dream and in the dream you think
i gotta go pee i gotta go pee and then you wake up exactly yeah so there's that bit of lucidity um
and that gadget magazine was claiming that if you wore this sleep mask it would give you more of
those dreams and that's how i referenced that dad those dreams i used to have uh where you know that
you're dreaming this can give you more so a reference point yeah i had a reference point
but then i don't, then it goes blurry.
I just go back to being a kid.
And then, yeah, like 15, 16, I get interested in consciousness and psychedelics.
And kind of Buddhism sounded cool because of the Shaolin monks and stuff,
but it seemed like too much hard work.
You think all the Buddhists were Kung Fu masters?
Yeah, I basically thought all Buddhists were Kung Fu masters.
That was super cool.
It turns out like, you know, it's a very small sect of Buddhism that do that.
And then, yeah, I bought some books. And because I'd been really into
dreaming from young and I'd had these lucid dreams at like, you know, when I was wetting the bed and
stuff. When I started to practice the things in the lucid dreaming books, I picked it up quite
quickly and then started having these lucid dreams, which we should look at the definition.
It's a dream where you know that you're dreaming as the dream is happening so it's a phenomenon rem dreaming sleep we know this is real we got
all the science on it uh you're not half awake half asleep it's not just having a really vivid
dream it's specifically where you're in the dream sound asleep and you go whoa this is all a dream
yeah because it kind of sounds like woo woo you know like and and oh this is just this weird thing
that a bunch of monks figured out but it's it's not. But there's actually a tremendous amount of science behind it.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it was a proven phenomenon of REM dreaming sleep back in 1975 at Hull University in the UK.
And a few years later, the famous Stephen LaBerge did similar tests and his stuff was all peer reviewed and stuff.
So, really, back in the 80s, we knew it was for real.
But then you had this resurgence around like 2010, 2011.
They did the first fMRI scans on lucid dreamers.
So they could see like actually what was the brain doing when you became lucid.
And once they saw that and they saw specifically that there was activity in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, you could see, oh, wow, they're literally conscious while they're dreaming.
So back up a little bit.
So normally when you're dreaming, the front of your brain, which is your executive function, your ego and all that, is kind of shut off.
Yeah, very little activity.
But this is a different kind of dreaming where that part lights up and you're conscious while you're dreaming.
Yeah.
So usually when we- And it's a different physiologic state.
Yeah, yeah.
They call it a hybrid state of consciousness in which the prefrontal cortex is activated
at the same time as the dreaming parts of the brain.
And people were actually in the machines or hooked up to EEGs and they were able to communicate
when they were dreaming because of their eye movements.
Oh, that was the first study back in the 70s.
Yeah.
Now I interviewed the dude for my second book named Keith Hearn.
He's still working as a hypnotherapist and lucid dreaming teacher and stuff.
And he knew that the only way to prove to the skeptical scientific community that lucid dreaming was for real and not what they thought it was, which is either people were lying or the only other option was-
Faking.
Yeah, straight up, they're faking it.
Or they were having what's called micro awakenings, which is where you have a very brief awakening from a really vivid dream.
And then you drop back into it, leading to the illusion that you will awaken the dream.
So he knew he needed to disprove that.
This is a whole different level of consciousness.
It's like a doorway that we never go through.
Totally.
They just thought it's impossible. They said it was a paradoxical impossibility to be both conscious and dreaming at the same time.
That was like mainstream science's view up till 1975.
And actually for years afterwards, because even though he got the studies and they were like, oh, you know, it took a while for the scientific establishment to admit it.
Anyway, he needed to somehow show that the person was asleep, but were conscious while they were asleep and were acknowledging the outside world.
So he thought, well, how the hell do you send a signal from the dream you're in muscular paralysis and rem dreaming sleep
the only things that aren't paralyzed the respiratory system and the eyes right so first
of all he tried to address that's what rem is is rapid eye movement yeah exactly that's what it
stands for so he tried to do it with a breath he was like look we'll hook you up to egs eye
scanners all this kind of stuff when you are lucid do a certain uh like breathing uh rhythm and we'll hook you up to EEGs, eye scanners, all this kind of stuff. When you are lucid,
do a certain like breathing rhythm and we'll see if we can pick that up in the lab. And it kind of worked, but not very well. Then he tried, he made these little sensors to go on your pinky,
that when you're lucid, like move your pinky, because maybe that wouldn't be so paralyzed,
that didn't work. And then he was thinking, okay, well, look, we've seen how when people
are in the lucid dream state, if they're like watching a tennis match, you see their eyes go left, right, left, right, as they watch the ball go over the net.
Because in a lucid dream, the eyes will physically correspond to what you're seeing in the lucid dream.
Okay, cool.
Well, rapid eye movement.
What I want you to do is we'll hook you up to the EEG.
We'll hook you up to, you know, eye monitors and all this kind of stuff. And when you're lucid, engage a kind of a Morse code of eye movements, like two to the left, two to the right, one up, one down, something like
that, which will then pick up on the eye movement records. We've got the EEG to prove you're still
asleep. And there we'll have the communication that you were fully lucid in the dream.
And the first time they did it, he missed it. They had been recording like the whole night,
this old school EEG where it comes out ink on paper.
And I think it's something like he'd stopped recording at eight o'clock in the morning.
He's packing up the stuff.
And then downstairs where Alan Walsley was the name of the dreamer, Keith Hearn was the scientist.
And Alan like yells up at like 20 past eight.
Did you get it?
Did you get it?
I was lucid.
And he stopped the recording.
So first one, they missed it.
A couple of weeks later, they did the same thing and they got it.
And I said to him, the recording machine that they use is in the Science Museum in London.
So I met him at the Science Museum.
I thought, what a cool place to interview him for the book, right?
And he's telling me this whole story.
And I said, well, dude, like, so you're sitting there watching these eye movements coming through and they're super scattered.
And then suddenly you see it go, pause.
And it's like, that's the dude doing the eye movement.
How did it feel?
And he said, you know, in those sci-fi movies where everyone at the NASA headquarters are there and they receive, you know, a communication from the other world.
He's like, it was like that, but it was from the inner world.
And then he said something quite sweet.
He said, but you know, in those movies, everyone give each other high fives.
And he went, there was no one to high five.
And I was quite moved by this, right?
And I lean over to him and I give him this awkward high five.
And he goes, oh, 40 years too late.
But thanks for that.
So then the fMRI actually shows.
Yeah.
So.
I mean, there's a big stuff in between that.
There's lots of studies on lucid dreaming and athletics and stuff like that. But then the big breakthrough came with those studies at Heidelberg and the Max Planck Institute where they were doing fMRI.
Because then it was like, you can see it.
So functional MRI, you can see the dynamic action of the brain, what it's doing, which parts are lighting up, which parts aren't lighting up.
And you can see that it's different than normal sleep or dream pattern.
And the EEG could do that too.
But the cool thing about the fMRI was that you saw it live and you can see the kind of video of it and you got
the front part of the brain hardly in any activity and suddenly it blows up red and it's like the
dude just became lucid and the guy is sound asleep yeah yeah isn't that cool it's amazing so
it in in studies it also seems to mirror the kinds of brain changes that happen with meditation, right?
So can you speak to that?
And what happens that's similar in meditation?
Okay.
Well, first of all, the brain mirrors what happens in the waking state once you're lucid.
Once you're lucid, the brain doesn't think you're having a lucid dream.
It thinks you're awake, which is how the whole neuroplasticity through lucid dreaming things works.
It's not that-
We'll come back to that.
Yeah. Okay. So, so back to the meditation thing.
They've found that some people, when they become lucid,
the brain seems to go into gamma,
which is a brainwave that they once associated
with kind of high level meditators,
more than like 10,000 hours meditation stuff.
The Olympic level meditation.
Yeah. And they're like,
isn't it interesting that when these people get lucid,
they go into gamma and the Buddhists are going,
yeah, of course they go into gamma.
It's a state of meditation. If we define one aspect of
mindfulness meditation as knowing what's happening as it's happening, present state awareness,
lucid dreaming is knowing that you're dreaming as you're dreaming, aware of the present state
moment of being dreaming. So no wonder it shows up as a meditation mind state. And no wonder this
is why most people's first few lucid dreams last about five seconds because we go i'm dreaming i'm dreaming it's so cool then you wake
up just like our first meditation session might be okay and breathe what am i having for lunch you
know we go on the tire we step on but with practice just like meditation we can stay in that state of
mindful awareness for longer and longer and with practice you can have a lucid dream as long as a
rem period which is an hour imagine spending an hour inside a huge three-dimensional virtual reality simulation of your own psychology.
Like Inception.
It's like Inception, and it's super psychedelic.
You know, in the intro when you talked about psychedelics, like, I mean, I did a lot of psychedelics when I was younger.
Then I took too much, and that led me to Buddhism, because how do I fix my mind?
So I know the psychedelic experience reasonably well.
And all I can say is the experiences I've had through lucid dreaming make a lot of the psychedelic experiences seem like kindergarten.
It's like in the lucid dream, you know you're asleep in bed.
There's no hangover.
There's no hangover.
There's no dodgy people to meet on the street.
You don't have to go to Peru to do it.
You're in the dream and you're like, okay, I know my body's asleep in bed right now.
And you can even think like, oh, it's probably about four o'clock in the morning because I woke up to pee at 3.30.
Then I dropped back to sleep doing my lucid dreaming techniques.
Now I'm in the dream.
Now full waking state access.
But you know it's all a hallucination.
So you can walk around like tapping on table. And this is, this sounds so frivolous, but just in the lucid dreams, I go up to a table and go.
And you're like, oh, it made the sound of the knock.
And you can feel the grain on the wood. You're like oh my it made the sound of the knock and you can feel
the grain on the wood you're like how does my brain put in the exact feeling it's like the
ultimate virtual reality machine and you know people listening listening to this thinking it
sounds like the matrix it should like yeah i mean this is like the bit where the baddie in the
matrix is eating the steak and he says to the other baddie i know this steak is is a neurological program but wow it
tastes good that's the same as a lucid dream you can eat and it tastes of stuff of like it doesn't
in the waking state so so what's fascinating to me that i listen to this it connects the dots
because you know talking to michael pollan about the effect of hallucinages on the brain and brain imaging. It increases the same pathways and the same state of the brain
as people who have been meditating for thousands of hours,
like gamma waves, right?
And in lucid dreaming, I wonder if the same thing is happening
because there's this part of the brain called the default mode network,
which is where the ego lies,
which gets in our way of becoming
literally awake from a consciousness point of view right it's our ego that thinks we're separate and
not connected and the drugs do that they shut off this default mode network meditation does that
and i bet you lucid dreaming does the same thing because if it's inducing the same brain pattern as meditation and it's it allows you then to access a learning that you
can't access when you're awake in your normal state that sounds about right i mean i haven't
seen any research with lucid dreaming specifically mentioned that default network but yeah putting
the dots together it sounds like it you know the, the Buddhists would have a very easy answer
to this question.
They say that once you have lucidity in a dream,
you have seven times the power of consciousness.
So your conscience is boosted seven times.
I'm in trouble because my wife's been doing this for a while
and I'm like, you know.
And your wife's super good at it, dude.
Seriously, Mia is one of the most talented lucid dreamers
I've ever worked with.
Like, I can't believe she hasn't been doing it for like 10 years.
That's like, she's kind of an overachiever in pretty much everything she does.
Yeah.
But she's, she's got really good at lucid dreaming, super quick.
Like, yeah, she'll be running workshops on this within the year, I'm sure.
I know.
I don't get to like snug with her in the morning anymore.
She's like, I'm dreaming.
That's even my wife.
My wife's a way better lucid dreamer than me, which is super embarrassing.
Right. And she'll, she's a sport. She's a better lucid dreamer than me, which is super embarrassing, right?
And she's a natural lucid dreamer.
So I'm not.
If I don't do the techniques, I don't have lucid dreams.
But I may be quite a good teacher because I know about drought.
I know when it's not cooking.
I know what techniques work, what don't.
Whereas Jade, she'll have like two or three lucid dreams a week doing nothing.
In fact, she's the only person who seems to be able to have lucid dreams,
even if she's had some wine the night before.
You know, she's a only person who seems to be able to have lucid dreams, even if she's had some wine the night before, you know, she's great lucid dreamer.
And it's also, you know, it's also sort of a place of exploration. There's a scientist
that I have good friends with, Rudy Tanzi, who's one of the leading Alzheimer's research
in the world. He discovered the presenilin genes, which are the Alzheimer's genes. And
one night we were at a medical conference and it was late at night, we're in the bar
having a
tequila and i'm so so rudy like how the heck do you figure this stuff out like you know you're like
heading for a nobel prize like how do you think about this stuff he's like you want to know and
i'm like yeah i said you said uh well lucid dreaming no way i do lucid dreaming regularly
i've been doing it for 30 years and it's how I work through figuring out my scientific
discoveries.
I can ask questions and I can, it's just fascinating.
And so.
What's his name?
Rudy Tanzi.
Dude, I would love to know that dude.
He's at Harvard.
He's amazing.
So obviously the Tibetans didn't work on developing dream yoga as a party trick, right?
What, what's the purpose of dream yoga
within the Tibetan tradition?
Okay, so this gets pretty Harry Potter style pretty quick,
but you asked the question, so let's go there.
The primary goal of dream yoga,
by the way, dream yoga isn't just Tibetan Buddhist
lucid dreaming.
Dream yoga or Milam Naljor is the term given
to a series of practices found within Tibetan Buddhism
that have lucidity training as their foundation.
These include lucid dreaming,
but as well as what in the West we call astral projection
or out-of-body experience work, and conscious sleeping.
But as far as the lucid dreaming stuff, the primary-
Conscious sleeping is different than lucid dreaming.
Yeah, so lucid dreaming is consciousness
within REM dreaming sleep.
You could also be conscious within the hypnagogic state,
which is kind of like yoga nidra, people have done that. But also you can be lucid in light
sleep stage two, where you're asleep, you're not dreaming, but you're conscious of that.
And you can even be lucid in deep sleep. Now science, that one's, they're out on that. They
say there's no way you can be lucid within delta wave, man. The brain's like got such low activity.
How could you be conscious within it?dhists would say that's the highest
achievement is actually lucid dreaming is even a stepping stone to that and it's called the clear
light of sleep and it's consciousness within deep delta wave sleep um which is awareness beyond
projection so that's had to be the highest thing but anyway for lucid dreaming the uh main reason
for its preparation for death and dying so straight off the bat this goes way
deeper than like working with your nightmares and i mean working with this is a brilliant way to use
lucid dreaming but straight off the bat it goes way deeper than that because they believe that
when you die sorry when you fall asleep at night you get a trial run for death and dying and the
same dissolution of the elements that happen when you fall asleep at night and the same way that the mind goes from external data gathering flips inwardly and creates an internal world based on your experience of waking state, which we call dream, right?
The same thing happens at death, but at a much larger plane.
So the mind stream separates from what they'd refer to as the gross corporeal form, separates just like in a classic NDE experience.
The mind then flips inwardly
and experiences the totality of its own projection.
This experience can last up to 49 days.
It's called the kind of 49-day Bardo journey,
which is what the Tibetan Book of the Dead
or the liberation upon hearing in the Bardo is called.
And it's said to be,
or a large chunk of that Bardo experience
is said to be dreamlike and hallucinatory. So basically here's the kicker. They say, if by the time you die, you have trained the mind to regularly recognize your dreams as go, aha, I'm dreaming, you'll go, aha, I'm dead. And I know it sounds scary,
right? But they would say to be able to go, aha, I'm dead, as in, I am conscious of the fact I am
dying now. I'm conscious of the fact I am dead is one of the highest spiritual achievements.
Because...
I'll wait a while for that. I'm good.
Yeah. I mean, I have no idea whether it works.
I'm good for now. Like maybe...
It works. I come back as a little kid and be like, dude, it worked. Keep doing it. Wow. But it's great for death anxiety. I mean, I have no idea whether it works. I'm good for now. Like maybe 50 years. If it works, I'll come back as a little kid and be like, dude, it worked. Keep doing it.
Wow.
But it's great for death anxiety.
Yeah.
I mean, if someone comes in here, puts a gun to my head, okay, yeah, 80% of me is going,
no, don't kill me.
But honestly, I could say a good 20% of me would be going, okay, well, does 20 years
of lucid dreaming work?
Showtime.
Go.
So maybe it helps us die with a little less anxiety, a little bit more sense of adventure.
Well, that's what the psychedelics are being used for very effectively.
And they seem to have the same.
So there's many doorways into this state of consciousness.
But lucid dreaming seems to be one of the best
because it's something that is relatively easy to learn.
It's something that's accessible to everybody.
It's free.
There's no side effects.
And it has so many benefits so and and
crucially you can't get more unconscious than asleep so imagine these other modalities such as
a hypnosis shamanic journeying um psychedelics meditation there you know you're taking a strand
of the conscious mind and bring it down into the into the unconscious in lucid dreaming you're
taking a strand of the consciousness and dropping it right to the bottom of the conscious mind and bring it down into the unconscious. In lucid dreaming, you're taking a strand of the consciousness and dropping it right to the bottom of the iceberg, simply because you
can't get more unconscious than asleep. So I'm not saying that lucid dreaming is better than any
of those aforementioned modalities. What I am saying is the depth into the unconscious to which
you can go is unparalleled in lucid dreaming. However, here's the kicker. We could be doing
hypnosis, psychedelics, meditation, all this the kicker we could be doing hypnosis psychedelics
meditation all this stuff and we could work that every single day could i get lucid every single
night no so it's less accessible than those others but seems to go very very deep in comparison
it seems yeah it seems interesting and it's also you know, if you're not interested in enlightenment or making friends with death,
there's other benefits, right? I mean, if I want to improve my tennis serve,
it seems like a really cool technique without a lot of sweat or
throwing up my shoulder. Right.
And you mentioned some studies that talk about the neuroplasticity,
which is the,
the connections
between brain cells that allow you to learn new things and develop new skills so can you talk
about the science of the neuroplasticity and how it connects to sports performance absolutely so
these sports studies go back right back to the 80s when the first thing since they proved lucid
dreaming was like okay well if this is true then maybe we can use it to practice sport and stuff. Essentially, once the prefrontal cortex switches on again with lucidity, like I
said before, the brain doesn't think you're having a lucid dream. The brain thinks you're awake.
So it will lay down neural pathways in exactly the same way as when you're awake.
So if you go into the lucid dream and start practicing squats or start practicing martial
arts, or in your case, your tennis serve, your brain thinks you're actually practicing your
tennis serve. But in the lucid dream you're beyond the uh confines of gravity
you're within the confines of speed so you could do like 100 tennis serves in like 30 seconds
but the brain doesn't know that it thinks you've actually done 100 tennis serves so when you wake
up those neural pathways towards the act of serving a tennis set so the act of doing a tennis
serve have been kind of can i get it in every time every time? I don't know. It's your dream. Yeah. And in fact, the last one of those studies I was part of,
it came out in 2000, they released it 2019, beginning of this year. I think, but not big,
like 25 to 30 martial artists involved. They needed martial artists who were good at lucid
dreams. Okay, I'll do that. And we had to go into the lucid dream state and practice a kick sequence.
And then in the waking state, they test whether you get better or worse 80.3 percent of the martial artists in that
study got better at martial arts through lucid dream that's incredible i was embarrassing when
the 20 that did not get better and one of the other studies that came out was that it actually
makes you have a bigger brain so structurally how does it affect your brain i don't actually
that studies on my website so if you've got it, because I can't actually remember
what part of the brain it changes,
but they've shown that kind of people
who have regular lucid dreams,
there's a certain networking in the brain
that actually gets more dense.
It gets thicker.
So basically you're making a certain part of the brain big.
I think it's the part of the brain
to do with self-reflective awareness.
Yeah.
Is that right?
Right.
So it helps you be more self-aware.
Yeah, because it makes sense.
If you're spending all night where, you know, usually when we go to sleep we start hallucinating and we believe
those hallucinations to be real that's what dreaming is like every night we we hallucinate
such realistic experiences we think we're awake that's the thing most of our dreams we don't know
we're dreaming we think it's reality yes then we wake up in the morning prefrontal cortex switches on and we go oh i'm charlie that was a dream i was having about
being back at school maybe this is a dream yeah man let's reality check to be sure so apparently
if you have enough of those experiences waking life is actually the dream well that's the buddhist
view i mean that's the other thing apart from death and dying it's practicing for lucid living
it said that every time you have a lucid dream you get a tiny taste of enlightenment because once you become lucid in the dream you see that what you thought was externally existing is
an internal projection what you thought was had dualistic objective reality is a non-dual part
of the mind and the people who you thought were separate to you are in fact non-separate aspects
of your own psychology so they say every time you have like a lucid dream, you get a teeny, teeny, teeny taste
of full spiritual awakening.
And that if you have enough lucid dreams in this life,
you might get that experience of lucidity
while you're awake.
And that full lucidity in the waking state
would be Buddhahood.
And that is really, you know, a powerful thing.
I think it makes you more self-reflective,
which then tends to make people happier
if it's true, not just narcissistic or,
you know, obsessive about your own ego and self, but from a real deep consciousness point of view,
it helps you become a better human being, right? I think so. And here's the cool thing about lucid
dreaming. There's nothing to believe. Like if anyone's listening to this podcast and thinking,
I don't believe that about the tennis serve. I don't believe that about martial arts. I don't
believe that about the nightmares. Try it. There believe that about martial arts. I don't believe that about the nightmares.
Try it.
Yeah.
There's no guru to worship here unless you want to.
There's no cult to be part of.
There's no religion you have to be part of.
Yeah.
It's like, try this stuff.
And when people say, how will I know if the lucid dream healing works?
How will I know if the nightmares have been integrated?
Because you'll stop having the nightmares or because your tennis serve will improve.
Like you'll be able to see it.
Your PTSD will go away.
Yeah.
It's like you won't need to see it will go away yeah it's
like you you won't need to ask this is the cool thing about lucid dreaming it maximizes the third
of our life that we spend asleep but it actually opts by doing that we optimize the two-thirds that
we spend awake yeah when you think about it people often you know feel like sleep is a waste of time
and you know why sleep so much just you can't live
with life as much but what you're saying in a way is if you learn how to use your sleep and not be
a passive sleeper be an active sleeper you can actually achieve a lot of things yeah which is
happiness and better tennis serve and tennis bigger bigger brain bigger brain why not let's
go for it and that's and that's the cool thing about
lucid dreaming again it's happening in rem which is not restful so people are listening to oh but
it'll make me less rested in the morning it's like it's happening in rem and we know that when you
look at someone's brain in rem i mean you burn calories in rem the brain's using so much kind of
so much blood flow and there's so much neural activity so you're not resting in dreams anyway
so you might as well wait make use of that non-rest sleep state to to get lucid and even if you get lucid
every night of your life based on five dream periods a night still 95 of your dream experience
will be non-lucid so another thing people worry about if i have too many lucid dreams my unconscious
won't have space to do its thing it's like even if you get lucid every night of your life firstly
come and teach me because i can't do it and secondly secondly, still 95% will be non-lucid. So let's say you get to the
stage where you're having one lucid dream a week, about 98% of your dream experience is non-lucid.
So don't worry about, you know, impacting your unconscious process or that the dreamer won't
like you being in there. It's like, you're a guest like once a week or something.
And there was also an interesting study that was published in a journal, medical journal called Dreaming, believe it or not, entitled Spontaneous Lucid Dreaming Frequency and Waking Insight.
And they found that people who did lucid dreaming had more problem solving abilities when they're awake and they had more insight about life.
Yeah, they became less field dependent,
which apparently it means like
you think outside the box more.
And that's super cool.
And they used to think that it was the creative people
who thought outside the box more had more lucid dreams.
But then this study proved
actually it works the other way too.
Once you start having loads of lucid dreams,
they can then test to show
that you're actually becoming more insightful.
You're becoming more creative, which is super cool.
Again, a waking state benefit to this.
This isn't woo-woo.
You can do this and see if it works.
This is hardcore science in medical journals that's actually studying the effects of lucid
dreaming on so many different things.
But that's not why most people are probably interested in it.
It's cool and it's great.
But for me, it's an interesting exploration because especially as I get older, I'm thinking,
okay, well, what's on the other side?
Yeah.
And how do I meditate twice a day?
I try to do the things I can to be conscious.
I journal.
I'm self-reflective.
I do yoga.
I try to do the things that I think are going to help me be more present
conscious and in a way uh lucid but uh it feels like i'm missing the boat and i feel that there's
this opportunity that we all have that nobody's talking about i mean except for you and your book
dreams of awakening which i encourage everybody to get a copy of, which is a great title because, you know, we have dreams of dreams, but we don't
have necessarily dreams that help us be awake. So it's like a very paradoxical idea, which is
you dream to become awake. Isn't it weird? Yeah. So dude, for one, it sounds like you're doing
loads already during your meditation, your yoga, all that stuff. So brilliant. And here's an interesting fact for you guys who might be watching is that Mark actually
did his meditation before the podcast. Now I lived in a Buddhist center for almost eight years,
right? So I know a lot of people talk about meditation, including myself. This dude actually
does. He was like, before the podcast, I'm going to need to sit. And went and did like 20 minutes
meditation. So he's for real guys. You could like, you could trust his stuff. But yeah, if you were
to add lucid dreaming, it's your already, you know, great luc So he's for real, guys. You could like, you could trust his stuff. But yeah, if you were to add lucid dreaming
into your already, you know,
great lucidity practice in the day, man,
yeah, for a lot of people,
that can be the missing piece of the puzzle.
It can really, really start things cooking even more.
Yeah, it's pretty interesting.
And I think the benefits around trauma are fascinating.
So tell us about your work with the veterans
and PTSD and the science here,
because a lot of these veterans,
I have a friend who was in Africa
and he was in war zones and civil war
and bombs going off and highly threatening situations.
And he's just an extraordinary guy, very sensitive guy,
but he just suffers every night with nightmares and PTSD and trauma.
And how would this help somebody like that?
Okay, so I'm not saying it can help everybody, but for some people, lucid dreaming and the mindfulness of dream and sleep stuff seems to help people and veterans who have PTSD and the nightmares that come with it. So this started for me about six or seven years ago when a veteran of the parachute
regiment called Keith McKenzie came to one of my lucid dreaming retreats.
So he turns up in this retreat.
He's got some serious nightmares, not only from his time as a para, but actually from
his 20 years in the fire service.
He made a very good point to me.
He said, wow, actually it's the blue light services, man.
He's like, yeah, the army, of course, very intense and very traumatic things happen.
But he said, actually 20 years of being a fireman
where every day you're seeing death,
you're saving life.
He's like, that's what really gave me the PTSD nightmares.
Anyway, so he came on retreat,
really bad PTSD nightmares.
By the end of the four day retreat,
his nightmares had stopped.
So I thought, okay, well,
he's the first veteran I've ever met.
Apart from family members, it seemed to work for him. And a couple of years later, he rings me, he emails me and says,
I've now become a mindfulness teacher. I've done my teacher training and I'm running mindfulness
retreats for veterans, you know, taught by veterans to veterans. Do you want to come and
do some of the lucid dreaming stuff? And initially I was like, ah, dude, I know it worked really well
for you, but I have no experience with this. You know, this is, I don't even know whether it's,
it will work. I don't know whether veterans experience with this. You know, this is, I don't even know whether it's, it, it will work.
I don't know whether veterans will like me.
Like I just felt really unsure.
He said, come along and do it.
So I came along and just did, I think a day on the five day retreat, first of all.
And that night we had like one guy, he hadn't slept for more than four hours since a night,
since he could remember.
And he slept all the way through the night.
Wow.
And we did the dream circle, the sharing the next morning,
and this guy's in tears going,
I did it, I fricking did it, I did it.
And he's crying.
And I was like, I didn't quite get what he meant.
I thought he meant he'd had a lucid dream or something,
but actually it was simply he'd slept through the night.
And I was like, wow, man, that's it. it's not actually about lucid dreaming and having these
big things back can I help these people sleep so then for the next couple of years I developed
this thing that I now refer to as mindfulness of dream and sleep yeah we're just going to ask you
about this yeah so the holistic approach that takes people through that process of how do you
do it tell us about what are the three practices of mindfulness dream and sleep so mindfulness of dream and sleep it does have like it does have lucid dreaming in it so we just did
a veterans retreat two weeks ago so this is now three years into the process and on the last day
we have a module of lucid dreaming but on the first day we have normalization so you basically
do a big class on how sleep works what happens in each stage and how trauma affects each stage of
sleep so we say okay this is the hypnagogic
state. When you're in this state, trauma may appear in this way and this way and this way.
Then we move into light sleep. Light sleep happens at this time of night. The traumatized brain might
affect it in this way, this way, this way. So we do a long session just normalizing it,
talking about how the role of nightmares, how they're here, that the mind trying to heal itself, you know, nightmares are a sign that there's an active healing process occurring. So destigmatization
of nightmares, normalization of the sleep process, being okay with nighttime wakefulness. So if they
wake up saying, okay, that's cool. Get out of bed. I want you to do something. What? I thought I just
had to wait there till I fell asleep. No, don't associate your bed with failure. You wake up,
get up, read a book, go back later. And that night, I mean, this is just a couple of weeks ago.
So this one's fresh.
There were four guys on the retreat out of 20 who had really serious kind of sleep issues.
Three of them slept through the night, seven or eight hours, two nights in a row.
One of them slept so long that he missed breakfast.
And when you're in a trauma sensitive retreat, someone doesn't turn up for breakfast, there was some concern.
Let's put it like that.
And Keith, the guy who runs the retreat, Keith McKenzie, he's the boss guy.
He said, you know, have you seen this guy?
I said, no.
And he went, oh, well, you know, let's check his room.
He went in there and he had slept all the way through.
He came out taking an earplug out and goes, what time is it?
And he goes, dude, it's like 10 o'clock in the morning.
You've missed the meditation.
You missed breakfast. You went, breakfast, eggs and then he's all he can say
about his eggs and go and get his eggs but he hadn't slept he's one of the guys hadn't slept
more than five hours in like years he slept for i don't know like 10 or 11 hours practices you
taught it wasn't because they necessarily got lucid at that moment no by that day that was the
first night all we've done is normalization and we've done the breath work practice so then i
teach also something called coherent breathing or i offer something called coherent breathing i'm still i'm yet to do the
teacher training uh brilliant organization body breath mind run by patricia gerbarg and richard
brown they are a couple new york-based psychiatrists and they do brilliant work with veterans
and i've done some training with them i want to do a lot more and their coherent breath work,
we offered that to the veterans.
So a certain breathing system
they can do before bed.
Things like creating a safe space
around the bed,
yoga nidra that they can do
in the daytime,
nap practices they can do,
breathing practices they can do,
especially for if you wake up
in the second half of the night,
this breathing is perfect.
When you first go to sleep at night,
this breath works perfect.
So we give a lot of tools.
And then the final day, we look at lucid dreaming.
But actually the mindfulness of dream and sleep stuff is not about giving people lucid dreams and out-of-body experiences
and all this kind of sexy stuff.
It's really ground level stuff saying,
can I help people to sleep,
to not be terrified of that third of our life we spend asleep?
And that makes me feel really good.
That's pretty awesome.
Two weeks ago, I was actually thinking to myself, why do I do anything?
I know this is a weird thing to say, but I don't really believe it.
But I was asking myself, why am I doing anything else?
Yeah.
Because in that retreat with the veterans, I helped.
I was of more benefit as a person in those five days
than i was in the last like five months of teaching kind of the civilian population did
make me think like yeah if we're here on this earth to serve then lucid dream is great and
that the book's about it and i like teaching people it but when i work with the veterans
like that makes me that makes me sleep well i'm like people really yeah they really need you know there's so much trauma oh so much trauma i mean you know one in four americans probably
around the world who knows what the number is but have suffered sexual abuse wow and you know
adverse childhood experiences are so predictive of later problems in life whether it's relationship
problems health problems financial problems so
you know if there's a methodology for working with that it's so powerful because people get
stuck in that it's such a it's such a gift right yeah so the the the the lucid dreaming seems to
have powerful biological effects effects on your brain, learning, insight, memory, problem solving.
All sounds great. But how the heck do you do it? Right? Like what are the steps? Because
it's not some airy fairy weird thing that you just kind of have to hope happens in the middle
of the night. The Tibetans have had this secret practice for thousands of years and it's been
broken down into methodology that you can follow that I see my wife do and that works. So tell me
about what is the process of learning lucid dreaming? What are the steps and what do you do?
I always think it's interesting when you find a set of practices that several ancient traditions
do lead and lead to the same
result. I'm like, okay, well, they can't all be crazy, right? So the thing about lucid dreaming
is you find it's got at least 1,000 years of tradition in Tibetan Buddhism. It's got at least
1,000 years also in the Toltec Mexica tradition, where the Mexica were a group of spiritual
practitioners in the place that is now called Mexico. So Mexica means people of the navel of
the moon. And they were these shamanic practitioners from Mexico. And they had a whole set of lucid
dreaming practices using breath work, using a lot of the same techniques that we use today and
techniques similar to the Tibetans to do the same thing. Yeah. I mean, you know, a lot of people grew
up in the seventies, probably heard of Carlos Castaneda. Exactly. Yeah. The teachings of Don
Juan and he wrote books about dream.
Exactly.
So we've got the Mexicans rocking it.
We've got the Tibetans rocking it.
And we've got the Sufis rocking it.
There's a whole lucid dream tradition in Sufi Islam.
Okay, well, these three big traditions, there's probably something to it, right?
And if you look at the techniques, they all are based on the same kind of functionality.
I mean, different names and different aspects, but the same thing.
So there are things you can do while you're falling asleep.
So as you're falling asleep
and you pass through that hypnagogic state,
which is that natural state.
What is that?
What is that hypnagogic state?
So this is a natural, it's like stage one of sleep.
So your eyes are closed, you're super drowsy.
You might have that feeling of heaviness in your body.
You might get the jerks.
You ever get, as you're falling asleep,
they're called myocloptic jerks,
which are super fun.
Myoclonic jerks.
Myoclonic jerks, oh sorry, I'm here with a doctor.
Please check any of my terrible medical knowledge.
Yeah.
So we've got the hypnagogic state.
You look at the brainwaves like deep alpha and theta,
which is like exactly the same brainwaves
as a hypnotherapist would put you in.
So essentially you're getting this natural state
of hypnosis when you fall asleep. So the first aspect is kind of essentially self-hypnotic
induction. So as you're passing through the hypnagogic, as you're falling asleep, you'll be
reciting things like, next time I'm dreaming, I know that I'm dreaming. Next time I'm dreaming,
I know that I'm dreaming. Well, the Mexican one's super cool. It's like, I am a warrior of the dream
state. I stay lucid and conscious while dreaming. I'm a warrior of the dream state i stay lucid and conscious while dreaming i'm a warrior of
the dream state i stay lucid and conscious while dreaming now that's super cool so you respond is
that the way i do because i'm into like martial arts and like warriors my wife's like ah the
warrior one nah that doesn't do it for me i'm going with my sword you know yeah exactly so
if there's a there's a technique for everyone but i'd say um the kind of self-hypnotic techniques
that's kind of one aspect you find all the traditions the others are daytime practices essentially we dream about what
we do in the daytime often so if we spend our whole day in this kind of blinkered um view of
reality where we're on autopilot the whole time we're not kind of fully experiencing we're definitely
not lucid in our daytime we're going to dream the same way so a lot of the practices are so if we're asleep and we're awake we're going to be asleep and we're asleep basically
exactly exactly that yeah so a lot of practices you do in the daytime like waking state meditation
mindfulness practice reality checking so through the day asking yourself could this be a dream now
and the classic castanadian hand check thing where you ask yourself if you're dreaming you look at
your hand you flip your hand you check how many fingers you've got. Then eventually you start dreaming about that. But in
the dream, often your hands do weird things. You might have an extra finger or something like that.
Now, the Tibetans have exactly the same technique, but they don't use the hand. They would be every
time you experience the dreamlike nature of phenomena while you're awake. Do not ignore it.
Stop, pause, and ask oneself, am I truly awake? So you find the same things.
And there's another one in the Mexican tradition, same thing.
So then you have waking state practices, mindfulness, meditation, energy work, chugong, stuff to boost your awareness in the waking state.
So you're more likely to have boost awareness at night.
And then sort of like training wheels during the day.
Exactly.
You know, and then there's working with the actual sleep cycle itself. So like the Mexicans have got
this great thing where before bed, they would, the Mexica, sorry, before bed, they'd drink some
fig wine, which is like a diuretic, make some pee, right? So they'd take, I think they'd take a shot
and they'd throw one to the moon, one to the earth, and then you were allowed two shots yourself,
three, and it was disrespectful, but you could have two. And they knew that they would make you
need to pee about four hours later
And they were aware as we now know from medical science that after the first three sleep cycles roughly 90 minutes per cycle
So about four and a half hours into sleep
We move from long periods of Delta
Deep sleep into with little bits of dreaming to long periods of dreaming with much less Delta
So they knew it they knew that we had more dreams in the second half of the night
So it's true. i've got an aura ring oh and i can see you know i go into deep sleep early on i want to get one of those almost all the rem you can see happens really
before you wake up you know in the two or three hours of dreaming exactly yeah those last two
hours are like the golden hour for rem so So the third main group of techniques is working
with the sleep cycle. So as lucid dreamers, like when I run the lucid dreaming intensive retreats,
during the day, you're learning lucid dreaming and meditation, all this kind of stuff. But then
at night, the real kind of thing that people come for, some of them, is let's say you bed down at
1030, 1030 to 330, you sleep in your room, get a good five hours of deep delta wave sleep under
your belt, don't mess with it. But then if you want, and about two thirds of the group will
choose to do this, like a group of 50, like maybe 30 of them will do it. They will set their alarm
for 3.30 in the morning. They will wake up. They will move into the shrine room where they'll have
bed number two set up. So they'll have like a camping bed thing. And then I will then guide
them into sleep for another hour and a half and then
wake them up 90 minutes later with the tibetan bowls everyone's sitting up writing down their
dreams i give them another lucid dreaming technique they drop in 90 minutes later wake them right down
your dreams drop in so you have like four wake-ups a night now you know it's like you're going to be
exhausted after that because you're going to be up the whole night it's sometimes the first like
the first session 3 30 to 5 i never sleep i'm like mother hen i'm like are they okay
oh he's snoring what do i do what do i do um but then yeah i soon chill out we remove the snorers
we make sure everyone's comfortable remove the snorers yeah we got we got strict rules loving
strict rules on snorers and essentially that's about the pillow over their head yeah just do
that that's that's if you fall asleep once and wake up once in the morning you got one chance
one chance to remember your dreams one chance to have a lucid dream or to, you know, perhaps
to have a lucid dream.
Whereas if some crazy guy wakes you four times a night, you've just quadrupled your chances
of success.
So I'm not saying you do this every night, but maybe once a week, you can have these
lucid dreaming date nights where you intentionally do multiple wake-ups to allow yourself multiple
chances for lucidity.
And I wake up in the middle of the night, my wife's gone, I'm like, where'd you go? Oh yeah, because she does all of those, man.
What's going on here?
Yeah. Amir's pretty badass about doing wake-ups.
We didn't have a fight, why is she out of bed?
So the point is, this is a learnable skill. Whether it's self-hypnosis, induction techniques,
meditation techniques, working with your sleep cycle,
you can learn how to lucid dream. People listening to this can learn.
Yeah, I've learned to buy osmosis from my wife because she does all the reality
check stuff with her hands and you know i i was dreaming the other night and i dreamt that my
father who had just died was sitting in front of me in a lecture hall and i went up to him and i
said dad what's going on i thought you died and did you come back and did you learn anything and of course he said he didn't really learn anything which was sort of disappointing
oh interesting but um that was just who he was all right and then i i saw my sister-in-law i'm like
what is going on this is so weird dad's alive like and i'm like oh crap am i dreaming and then i did
the hand check in my dream and then my hands got all distorted and
weird and my fingers misshapen that's it man and i'm like oh my god i'm dreaming yes and then i
had a little fun and jumped on the side of a car and while i was driving just flew along with it
and you know it was so amazing and i was like wow this is like dude that's it you know that is a
textbook lucid dream right so you went and you spotted a dream sign which would be any aspect of the dream that can
reliably indicate your dreaming as in dead relatives like my dad yeah your brain then
when your mind then went into confabulation where we start to explain away the dream we try and make
sense of it right but because of your lucid dream training in the day checking your hands doing
those reality boosting your awareness you remember to do that in the dream and you became well i didn't do any lucid dream training my wife was doing it but i was just
well getting it rubbed off on me from her you got it man and i remember one time i was um
was after my sister died as well like which was about seven years ago i i um it was very traumatic
she had cancer and it was very difficult death and and she was really resisting death because she was
relatively young and she had two kids and she didn't want to leave them and she was a single
parent it was just a really tough situation and after i took a trip with my daughter to bhutan
which we planned a long time ago and it just timing worked out and literally she died you know
on the 9th and the 19th we were in bhutanutan. And we went trekking every day at 14,000 feet.
There's no EMFs.
There's no cell phones.
There's nothing.
And you're sleeping in a tent.
And every night, I would have these incredibly lucid dreams
of her coming back, saying that she wanted
to have one more chance.
Wow.
And it was a repetitive dream.
And it was different each time.
But they were so close. I mean, I remember them to this day
because they were so lucid.
And I knew I was dreaming and I knew she was dead
and I knew this was all strange.
And I then went to the, after to Bhutan,
I went into India to a Tibetan monastery
with this man who was the abbot of the Bun, which is the pre-Buddhist religion of Tibet.
So it's like ancient.
The Dalai Lama is like the 14th Dalai Lama.
This is like the 33rd abbot.
And this dude was a shaman.
He was incredibly skilled.
He was the Dalai Lama's meditation teacher and I mentioned
this story to him he's like oh when did she die and he calculated the dates he's like oh she's in
this state of transition and she's stuck and we can help her so they got nine reincarnated lamas
and him and they did this three or four hour ritual and I was there the whole time and uh you time. And he was flipping his robe over his head and talking to her.
It was strange.
I mean, as a Western trained doctor scientist, it was strange.
But it was so powerful.
And then after that, all the dreams stopped.
And I felt like she was free.
And then I started having dreams of her being grateful and happy and thanking me for helping
her kids.
And it was just this wild set.
And those were all lucid dreams.
And it was all in this state of really deep, like emotional, you know, raw state that I
was in because of my sister died.
You know, so it's really fascinating.
And I think, you know, we.
Yeah, man.
I mean, that's, yeah, that's like a.
Yeah.
I get told a lot of stories about lucid dreaming.
That's a big one, man. Yeah. That's a a soup. Yeah. I get told a lot of stories about lucid dreaming. That's a big one, man.
Yeah.
That's a big one.
Yeah, and it was very healing for me then to go through that.
Yeah.
But I was like, wow, there's a whole other universe out there that we are just not exploring.
And what's so beautiful about what you're teaching, what's so beautiful about this practice is that it's not just a fun thing to do because you can go flying or have sex in your dream,
but it actually is a way to sort of build a relationship with your unconscious,
which is very hard for us to access.
And it's very hard for us to be awake.
And the whole purpose of wakefulness in the sense of being literally awake to your experience
is to be happy.
You know, like happiness is sort of the, you know,
it's not only Thomas Jefferson who was talking about happiness,
it was Buddhists and the Dalai Lama.
It's how do you be in a state of love, of compassion, of kindness,
of unreactivity, of understanding that you're not your ego,
that you're not your identity that you kind of have as a sort of daily living being but that
you have this other state of consciousness that you can play with and explore and ask questions
of and get answers to so that's that whole room we haven't even talked about but like
what it what is what is the way that you interact with your dreams if you're exploring your mind
because that's a whole nother realm we haven't talked about. We talked about, you know, PTSD.
We talked about nightmares.
We talked about, you know, improving your tennis serve.
It all sounds great.
We talked about, you know, actually experiencing more wakefulness
in the sense when you're awake or mindfulness.
But there's a whole nother level here that isn't really something
we talk about much.
So what is that?
Okay.
So I think, first of all a unique
aspect of lucid dreaming is the fact that psychological concepts become personified
in the lucid dream simply because everything's your psychology in the lucid dream or 99 of
everything in in the lucid dreams your psychology so in the lucid dream you can meet fear you can
meet you can you can become loose and call out fear come to me
and some sort of representation or personification of fear will appear it might be a cloud of red
smoke it might be the bully from school it might be you know i've harold robbins it's so interesting
from third grade i can see him now there you go so you see so psychological psychological concepts
become personified you can meet with them,
you can interact with them. And because everything's symbolic, because everything's
representative, you can engage a type of healing within the lucid dream through, I would say,
the most obvious kind of representation of unity, which is the hug. So I'd say if someone gets
lucid tonight, right? And they're like, oh, what do I do in my lucid dream? If you forget everything else, run around and hug everything.
Because if you acknowledge that everything in the lucid dream is you,
it's all a kind of three-dimensional representation of your own psyche,
then show love to your own psyche.
And you are going to wake up feeling really freaking good.
So hug everything.
So if you see a zombie, hug the zombie.
Oh, hug the zombies.
Because what's a zombie a symbol of?
A part of your mind.
Well, what is a zombie?
This is cool. Zombies, right? Zombies are things that used to be alive, are now dead, but are still animated. That sounds like an old habit to me.
Yeah. childhood that's dead but still animated by our lack of self-worth whatever it is and is walking through our dreams so definitely hug zombies hug scary things and call out to meet it i mean i had
this kickboxing uh competition a couple of months ago i had quite a lot of fear around it and yeah
me too i'd be scared to death to go into a kickboxing well i love it but there was still
there was still some fear around it because of the the because of who i was fighting i knew he's a
very good martial artist blah blah, blah, blah.
So I thought, okay, I've done a lot of work of kind of meeting fear,
meeting the shadow, meeting sexuality in the lucid dream.
But I wanted to see, could you be so specific that you could meet an actual aspect of fear
linked to part of your everyday life?
So I became lucid and I call out in the lucid dream, fear of the kickboxing fight.
Very specific, fear of the kickboxing fight very specific fear of the
kickboxing fight and this dude appears he's this big japanese guy like which is not what my partner
looked like he's big japanese guy i guess represent a i didn't i couldn't tell he was in kind of long
clothes he was big right and scary and suddenly he appears on a sofa and i'm like oh are you it
are you the fear of the fight and he just scowls at me. And I was like, okay, I'll take that as a yes.
And I think, okay, what do I do?
I hug him.
He's a representation of my fear.
He's split off as all things that we fear are.
I need to bring him into unity through love and compassion.
So I go over and I hug him and he's big, man.
And my arm is around him and he's tense.
And I'm like, I love you, man.
I love you, man.
I love you, man.
And then he releases.
And I go back and he's smiling.
And I'm like, this is so cool.
The lucid dreaming is a biofeedback mechanism.
I'm seeing that I've just integrated an aspect of that fear.
And then I hadn't really thought what to do next.
And I thought, oh, the martial arts training study thing that I failed in.
So I'll try that again.
So I'm like, dude, so if you're my representation of the fear, can we train together?
And he goes, yes.
And then he stands up and he's massive.
And I go, okay, let's stretch.
So he gets my foot and he puts it on his shoulder then i go wait it's a dream you can go higher and
he goes and stretches my leg right up into splits and of course i'm thinking the neural pathways i'm
going to be able to do splits in the waking state no that didn't work but anyway and then we start
training together we're doing shadow boxing together and then i wake up the main thing wasn't
what happened in the dream it was the fact that even after 20 years of
doing this i found this other level i was like whoa you can literally meet specific fears real
life fears and integrate them and when i went to that kitbotsing fight i mean there was anxiety of
course but the fear no it was much much less and i'm almost certain it was to do with that dream
i can't tell you my changing my neural pathways, all that, I have no idea.
Did you win the fight?
Um, okay.
I was kind of hoping you would ask that.
The fight ended up being a no contest
because I broke my nose and had to stop.
Oh no.
So final round.
You broke your own nose or he broke your nose?
Basically he ducks, he comes up,
an accidental head butt breaks my nose.
I then go over to the the ref
then uh stops it i go over to the um uh medical person comes in and she looks and goes you've
broken your nose and he goes and she crunches it and i hear and it was like kind of a like wet wood
and i was oh god and so you would think you just give up at that point but in the state of mind i
was in which is not very mindful obviously i then turned to the ref and go, how long left?
And he goes, 30 seconds.
And I looked to my corner,
I was about to say, I'll carry on.
And then luckily my brother was in the corner with my coach
and he just went, he did the sign of like, kill it.
And I was like, okay, no, we're gonna stop.
So it ended up being a no contest,
but it was a friend who I, an acquaintance I was fighting,
he was very sorry and it was whatever.
But yeah.
It's interesting, you talk about you know these dark forces that we have in our consciousness that can show up um fears and
yeah yeah fears and traumas and um and i was speaking to somebody who does lucid dreaming
and he said that you know you have to be careful that it's not um necessarily okay always to
interact with some of the dark forces in your dreams can you explain that because it's not necessarily okay always to interact with some of the dark forces in your dreams.
Can you explain that?
Because it's a little different than what you're saying, which is go up and hug the zombie.
Well, the thing is, every time you have a lucid dream,
you're having a lucid dream because the unconscious has let you in.
It's like to think that our itsy bitsy egoic sense of self can in any way control
that awesome power of the unconscious is like a
sailor thinking they can control the sea. It's like an arrogant sailor who thinks they can
control the sea. What the sailor can do is get to know the ocean so well, get to know the tides,
the currents, where the sea monsters lie, that they can sail as if they were in control.
So first of all, when we get lucid, to think that we could call up a trauma that didn't want to be
called up is to underestimate the intelligence we're working with.
You know, Carl Jung talked about there being an inherent safety mechanism within the psychic apparatus that strives for a balance between dark and light.
And that quotes from his work on the shadow.
He was basically saying the shadow will only give you what you're ready for.
Now, I've got some great examples of this in play.
For example, a woman, she had a dream plan. She wanted to meet her seven-year-old self.
I asked her why. And she said, when I was seven, there was some kind of abuse that happened.
And I thought, like you say, you can meet representations. I could meet the representation
of the little girl and hug her and say, it's not her fault and to show her love.
So my initial reaction, oh, okay, that's a
brilliant dream plan. How long have you been lucid dreaming for? She went, I've never had a lucid
dream before. Whoa. So your first lucid dream, you want to do this? And she's like, yeah, you said,
you know, anything's possible in the lucid dream. So I'm on like closed retreat with this woman and
several other people in Wales. And I want to ring my teacher to go like, this is beyond my pay grade.
You know, what would my teacher say? So I went back to these quotes and I have two teachers,
Lama Yeshe Rinpoche, the Tibetan Buddhist Lama, and a guy called Rob Nen, who's a Jungian
psychologist and actually a criminologist at Cape Town University for many decades,
who specializes in work with the shadow and Buddhist teaching too. And I remember that quote.
And I remember also in my experience, once I got lucid and tried to visit Buddhist heaven,
the kind of Dewa Chen, this heavenly realm.
And I got lucid and I called out,
Dewa Chen, take me to Dewa Chen.
You know, it kind of take me to Nirvana.
Yeah, right.
Nothing happened.
Well, the second time, nothing happened.
Third time, I call it out,
a woman with a clipboard walks into the dream,
walks up to me and goes-
You're not on the list.
Yeah, she literally looked down and went,
she went, Dewa Chen, you're not ready for that.
And I wake up.
I was like, whoa, that's so cool.
So I was pretty sure that if she wasn't ready to meet the seven-year-old self,
number one, she wouldn't get lucid.
It's her first night anyway.
Who gets lucid on their first night?
And number two, if she did, the dream would know what to offer her.
You know, the intelligence of the lucid dream is higher than waking state intelligence,
not less.
We're dealing with more of the intelligence of the mind. So that night she did become lucid dream is higher than waking state intelligence not less we're dealing with more of the uh more of
the intelligence of the mind so that night she did become lucid she called out for a seven-year-old
self and the dream blocked it she called out three times on the third one she called that seven-year-old
self come for me dream blocks it again but in front of her in the lucid dream a door appears
and on the door is a sign that says caution i mean how cool is that the symbolism and she was so sweet she said i was in the lucid dream i thought you know what do i do it is a sign that says caution. I mean, how cool is that? The symbolism.
And she was so sweet.
She said, I was in the lucid dream.
I thought, you know, what do I do?
It's a door that says caution.
Don't go there.
No, she thought if it's locked,
I'll take that as a symbol. If it's open, I will proceed with caution.
So she pushed the door and opened.
And as soon as she stepped through the door,
this three-story building appeared.
And on each floor of the building
was a different symbolic
representation of the abuse and one of the rooms it was full of vomit there's something to do with
she was forced to eat till she's sick i think well i know actually sorry and she walked into
this room full of vomit and again she's so sweet so you know how do i hug a room full of vomit you
know but she walked into it i set you free you know i said she kind of hugged it with her mind
and through affirmations and she had a big healing release.
And I had to speak to her about a year or so ago because I wanted to include that in my new book, Dreaming Through Darkness, because the case study of hers in the book.
And she said, yeah, yeah, include it in the case study.
But please know that that lucid dream didn't heal me.
It began my healing. She said after that lucid dream, the possibility of entering into therapy and talking about what happened opened up.
The possibility of talking to family members who were involved opened up she was like the lucid dream wasn't the silver bullet crack the door open yeah it cracked oh wow like the dream
that's so cool yes it cracked the door open so so emotional healing psychological healing
nightmares trauma abuse what about physical healing is that possible in a dream can you heal others can you
heal yourself now we're way out of kind of science fact here uh but we have anecdotal reports that it
seems that lucid dreaming can lead to some sort of uh physical healing for for minor ailments um
you know i've never heard of anyone kind of using lucid dream to cure cancer anything like that but
there are a lot of anecdotal reports that people have used lucid dreaming
to engage healing on minor ailments. Now, whether that's working as the placebo effect,
or whether it's some kind of powerful type of visualized healing, like the Simiton method,
you know, where you kind of visualize colored lights surrounding the point of inflammation.
And if you've got really strong visualization, the waking state, some people that really helps.
It makes them feel more relaxed, stuff like that.
The lucid dream is a 100% visualization.
You can't get more of a visual space in that way.
No, it's true.
So it sounds like if you do visualize healing
within the lucid dream and add to that,
that huge placebo effect of the mind within the mind,
you know, if it's the mind effect in the body,
and if the lucid dream is a three-dimensional representation
of the mind, okay, that seemed like it could work very powerfully i mean
the story i'll share is a good one because it's it shows both sides my friend bruno uh he had uh
kidney problems heard about potential of lucid dream healing became lucid in the lucid dream he
puts his dream hands on his dream kidneys i think he called that an affirmation something like
immune system boost um but the main thing was he felt electricity coming out of his hands on his dream kidneys i think he called that an affirmation something like immune system boost um but the main thing was he felt electricity coming out of his hands into his kidneys that's
so much so he fell on the floor it's a very short lucid dream uh he said that after that dream his
creatine levels which you tell me as a doctor about something to do oh is that it something
to do with the kidneys creatinine levels stabilized for like six months after the lucid dream now six
months later the disease returned and he had to
have a kidney removed now i found out about that like a year later after the book was published
and stuff and i was like dude why didn't you tell me and he said well because i it failed it didn't
work dude for six months those levels stabilized after lucid dream yeah lucid dreaming it isn't
like a silver bullet you gotta do it again boost them you might need another dose yeah well you
know this i don't think it's a silver bullet, but I think it can help.
I mean, from the scientific point of view,
the greatest pharmacy in the world is between your ears.
Ah, cool.
And there's people who know how to access that in ways that are really crazy,
but have been scientifically proven.
One of them is by a guy named Wim Hof,
who uses breath techniques, Tibetan techniques,
to regulate his autonomic nervous system, his automatic nervous system, to regulate
his immune system.
He's had toxic bacteria injected into his blood that would normally cause a severe septic
infection that would kill people.
And he literally can switch on his immune system to fight that infection and have no reaction
he can go out and climb mount everest in his shorts and bare feet simply using these techniques
to control his biology so i imagine with lucid dreaming that's also possible that's nice and he
can teach it to others when i read that i found the most amazing thing was it wasn't only him in
the research he had five people with him who had taught thanks you they couldn't do it quite as well as him but they also had immune response yeah
i mean if that's in the waking state through breath then okay lucid dream you know if i wasn't
talking to dr nath is kind of a buddhist podcast i'd go into the whole buddhist thing seven times
the power of mind we have the healing potential in us i'm just being i'd rather be super okay
you can say that i mean i worked on my eyes like my eyesight's actually got worse now um in about a year ago
it started to go for now a short sight uh whatever it's things close to me but maybe that's old age
but for a good six years um i didn't have to wear glasses um i used to wear glass you check my early
youtube videos i'm in glasses and i was talking at a music festival once about how I worked with an ear infection through lucid dream healing. And all
this earwax started pouring out. I actually woke up with the earwax pouring out. So a physical
response to a lucid dream healing. And I kind of got like heckled basically. This dude on stage
said, like this festival, oh, why don't you heal your eyes then? And I was so embarrassed. I went
bright red and I was, oh, well, you know, some things are unhealed. I didn't know what I was saying. And then I thought,
well, what's the likelihood of this dude turning up at this talk and challenging me? I should try
it. So I tried it and I took about two or three lucid dreams. I try and do hands-on healing in
lucid dream, calling out these Buddhist mantras and stuff. And then I think the third or fourth
one, I was about to do the hands-on healing, harness the placebo effect, really go for it. And then
a voice, my voice over an intercom in the lucid dream went, Charlie, there is a conflict in your
eyes. The reason you can't see long distances is there's a conflict in your eyes. And I almost
turned around to see like who said it. And I was like's a conflict wow yeah i guess most illness or disease
is based on a conflict of some sort so in the lucid dream i yell out my eyes are free of conflict
my eyes are free of conflict and the dream starts shaking like a like an earthquake and even in the
dream i was like oh i think this is actually doing something and i woke up and i didn't wear my
glasses again that's unbelievable now where it is
unbelievable and whether it is just i mean my brother may not believe it but it's unbelievable
i know you mean yeah my brother made a good point he said oh but just because you believe in lucid
dreaming so much it's just a massive dose of the placebo effect it's just this no the placebo
effect is actually real it's not nothing it's the power of the pharmacy in your head please keep
going yes exactly what it is so i was like yeah just the placebo just my
belief in lucid dreaming but dude i can see long distances again what the f is that about so this
sounds like an extraordinary practice you teach workshops on it you have an online course people
want to learn more so tell us about the the courses and the retreats and the and and how
people can learn more about yeah so i just taught in the u.s uh omega i'll be back in the u.s next year twice at joshua tree retreat center in the west coast and
at omega probably again uh on the east coast but online courses i've got this course with a wake
academy awakeacademy.org it's like a six hour lucid dreaming course um it's really well made
uh the guys who made it were at they're actually documentary filmmakers who made an online course
not tech geeks trying to make an online course.
And there's a big difference there.
So they were shooting.
It's like really HD quality.
And you're in it.
Oh, yeah.
It's me talking to camera for like six hours, like teaching you to lucid dream.
That's my summer vacation homework.
I'm going to take that course.
And then I've got a YouTube channel with loads of videos.
Sure.
Free.
And then there's my books and workshops.
I guess I teach primarily around Europe, but I'm often in the States, Mexico next year
too, I think.
And I'm all over Facebook and Instagram and stuff.
Charlie Morley, lucid dreaming.
You'll find me.
I mean, you hearing about ayahuasca, you're hearing about psychedelics, you're hearing
about meditation all the time.
It seems just like a whole next level to me. And it's something that people aren't aware of. And I super encourage people
to check it out because one, it's a way for you to get to know yourself. And two, it's a way for
you to work on things that you can't work on necessarily when your ego is in the way. And if you're interested in actually being awake,
awake as opposed to just dream awake,
I would go to the website awakeacademy.org
and check out Charlie's stuff
because this is profound and he's the real deal
and this is not some goofy thing.
It's for real.
So check out Dreams of Awakening.
Check out awakeacademy.org.
And charlimorley.com.
And charlimorley.com. Yes, please. And it's been so great having you, Charlie. Thank you.
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Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only.
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