New LD technique called WMBTB discovred by Alex Curtis

First off, I discovered this completely by accident.
For a little tip, I am a very impatient and lazy person… Ha
Becoming lucid was a big goal for me every night, but
I didn’t want to keep a dream journal, nor get up around three
Every morning, and stay up for an hour losing sleep.
So when I discovered this technique, I was blown away.
To start, simply set an alarm for how ever long (I usually have about
4 and a half hours of sleep before attempting) then, get out a sheet
Of paper, and write down math equations, not a lot, just 5-6
Don’t try to memorize these, and don’t write the answers.
After this, go to sleep like you would normally.
When your alarm goes off, turn it off, and with some to little light
Do the math equations (harder the better, I use things like x5 = 36)
Turn off the light (preferably never getting out of bed if you can)
And start using the WILD technique, simply keep the math equations
In your head, you’ll find your body will almost like magic, instantly
Going into sleep paralysis, and you into lucidity. I call this WMBTB. (Wake math back to bed) discovered by Alex Curtis. The reason it works so well, is because math is done in the right brain, lucidity is gained through the left, when all your brain power is focused toward just math, your body will shut down, but you will stay conscious
This is using WBTB and WILD. Thanks for reading

Moved from Lucid Lab. :dragon:

hmm, sounds interesting. so you don’t stay up almost at all, right? just do the math in like five minutes, and then lie down and try WILD while thinking of the equations? like trying to solve them again or something?

Yeah, that’s it, pretty simple, and almost reliable

hm, i’ll see about that. but i actually have a problem about calculating (dividing, multiplying) by heart (without a calculator xD), so it might wake me up a little too much… we’ll see. maybe i’ll try, if autosuggestion works :smile: (can’t use alarms)

Simply doing math is the point, add and subtract if you need too

right. thanks, i’ll try :smile:

This sounds very promising! I will definitely try this tonight :happy:

Did you discover this by accident… or…?

Hmm i don’t like maths but I’ll give it a try sometime.

Neither do I, but maybe if we find some other things that can stimulate right side of the brain we should gain same results! IMO!

Interesting idea!

I’ve trouble keeping my mind to a consistent thought during WILD attempts. I’ll give math a shot.
If you’ve to do math for school, this could come even more handy :tongue:

True, but I do enough math in school, so no extra math for me! :tongue:

Sounds like a good method, I would really try it if i was good at maths tho haha xD

It was first discovered when I was using the app, ProAlarm, it wakes you up, then has you do math problems to turn the alarm off, worked great, I varied it from there

so… the alarm doesn’t stop untill the math equations are solved? :bored:

…that would get me really stressed out and I’d probably smash the alarm clock unto the floor…

This all works fine and well if you don’t keep a dream journal, but I do. Now I’d still like to try and see if I could use it, but If I wake up after four hours of sleep, I usually remember a couple of dreams a night so once I woke up I’d undoubtedly have to write down my dream as well, extending the amount of time that I spend awake before going back to sleep. Would this still work, or do you HAVE to do the math really quickly and go back to sleep?

Thanks!! I’ll try it!

Yeeeeeah, not for me. I hate math. :content:

See what works for you…

well, i tried it, but it didn’t work. but it probably didn’t work cause i simply suck at WILD. woke up at 3, did 5 math things, and then WILD wasn’t any different than in the evening… same as hard, nothing happened, and also i had a really hard time falling asleep when i decided to give up with WILD :sad:

It’s reliable for YOU. But maybe not someone else. I like the make WILD your own thread, much more helpful. Still, interesting topic. Stimulating that part of your brain might be a useful tip.