You have to hand it to humans. As a species, we are seriously and committedly wrong-headed about so very many things. And we have a high level of confidence about our beliefs and convictions regardless of how much or how little that confidence is warranted.
For example, we think we’re aware (we understand what’s going on) while we’re awake, so it isn’t that much of a leap for some of us to want to be aware of our dreams while we’re dreaming. A Google search for “lucid dreaming” brought up about 673,000 hits, whereas a similar search for “lucid waking” brought up about 10,200. I’m surprised there were that many.
Reportedly, the person who coined the term lucid dreaming—Frederik van Eeden—considered lucid to be synonymous with mental clarity. And therein lies one of the problems. Mental clarity is sorely lacking in the waking lives of most people. This is a fact, not an indictment. We spend most of our days operating on autopilot, at the effect of biases, triggers and cues, and mental processes we have no conscious knowledge of. Most of what’s going on around us is happening outside our awareness. However, we don’t let that diminish our sense of certainty.
We’re very good at coming up with plausible sounding explanations for behavior and events. But just because we can come up with explanations doesn’t mean they’re accurate. Our stories and explanations are developed after the fact to create a cause-and-effect stream that feels like real life. We don’t do it intentionally—at least not usually. It happens automatically, with no effort on our part. It’s how we make sense of the world. Our stories and explanations provide us with a false sense of complacency, comfort, and security. They give us the illusion of mental clarity but not much of the real thing.
And it’s from this vantage point that we set out to develop mental clarity—or the illusion of mental clarity—about our dreams.
My thought is that we might want to redirect our efforts toward lucid waking. If, as a species, we developed greater mental clarity about how we operate while we’re awake, we might be able to take a stab at solving some of the serious problems we face. That seems like a more practical and worthwhile focus for our attention.
poetdonald says
I never realized how lacking I was in mental clarity until I began meditation a few years ago, Joycelyn. While clarity is still a come and go occurrence, at least I have moments of clarity and am aware of the times when clarity is no where to be found.
Your suggestion of lucid walking is a great one. i’d like to add writing haiku during your walk for even more lucidity :).
Joycelyn Campbell says
Yes, clarity is a comes-and-goes kind of thing for me, too. But it’s great to be able to recognize it when it’s there, isn’t it?
Hmm, haiku while walking…I’ll have to give that a try and report back. Thanks for the suggestion.
Rob Spiegel says
Nice post. thanks much.
Joycelyn Campbell says
Thank you, Rob.