• Lucid Dreaming, Plain and Simple

  • Tips and Techniques for Insight, Creativity, and Personal Growth
  • By: Robert Waggoner, Caroline McCready
  • Narrated by: Mel Foster
  • Length: 7 hrs and 20 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (203 ratings)

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Lucid Dreaming, Plain and Simple  By  cover art

Lucid Dreaming, Plain and Simple

By: Robert Waggoner,Caroline McCready
Narrated by: Mel Foster
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Publisher's summary

Aimed at beginners, Lucid Dreaming, Plain and Simple shows the listener how to enter and fully experience the lucid dreaming. Among the amazing things Waggoner and McCready teach listeners are how to:

  • consciously decide what actions to perform
  • explore dream space (or the contents of your subconscious)
  • interact with dream figures
  • conduct personal and scientific experiments
  • be free of waking state limitations (e.g., flying, walking through walls, and discovering creative solutions to waking issues)

This audiobook approaches lucid dreaming from a more cognitive psychology stance, and focuses more on how to lucid dream and how to use lucid dream techniques for personal growth, insight, and transformation. Whether a listener is completely new to lucid dreaming or someone who has experienced that incredible moment of realizing "This is a dream!", listeners will learn valuable tips and techniques gleaned from scientific research and decades of experience to explore this unique state of awareness more deeply.

©2015 Robert Waggoner and Caroline McCready (P)2014 Brilliance Audio, all rights reserved.

What listeners say about Lucid Dreaming, Plain and Simple

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  • KC
  • 01-18-17

Spirituality is not so analytical

once the author began to try to make dreaming quantitative by listing point values for dream scenarios I realized this wasn't what I was looking for.... Spirituality is felt and isn't quantifiable in my opinion.

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9 people found this helpful

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Get a new narrator who cares about the material

Great book ruined by a narrator without heart who reads it like a math textbook. He is not connected to the material. Where is the feeling? I could have bought it on Kindle and have Siri do text to speech and get the same results.

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7 people found this helpful

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Great book

Clear information, motivational goals to keep going even when the LDs doesnt always keep coming on an regular basis!

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7 people found this helpful

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Living lucidly...

Not sure if one will walk away from the book experiencing lucid dreams, but it is a wealth of information - some even inspiring. Addressed many aspects of lucid dreaming and I especially enjoyed how it was used to problem-solve.

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5 people found this helpful

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Wow

LOVE IT


Great book learned a lot from the different techniques. very successful in lucid dreaming

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4 people found this helpful

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For Achievers

These authors see Lucid Dreaming as more than just a chance to have some fun. Actually, that's always been a driving need for me, and has motivated me to keep seeking information on Lucid Dreaming. I'd just as soon fly around and attend parties as try to have God answer questions on who he or she is. So, for the second kind of person, this is your sort of book. It's not that hedonistic needs aren't discussed, they're just not seen as significant as spirituality. And, this is the sort of opposition you might get from your unconscious when you are trying techniques to become lucid. Maybe there's a collective unconscious need to submit in the DNA, and to just have dreams that want to behavior modify you. Hang in there, and take the suggestion on meditating, follow your breath, eventually you may have a lucid dream. I read somewhere that meditators are 100 times more likely to have a lucid dream. I still have a few now and then after 27 years.

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Oh Lord, Get Me Out of Here

Yeah, I did not make it all the way through. That is a perfectly good three hours that I will never get back. Well okay, it was not a complete waste. I was gardening while I listened. I suspect that there is something to lucid dreaming, which, of course, is why I bought the book. The first clue that this may be less than reliable science was the citing of Carlos Castenada as a source. Pleeeease!!! Lest you think that I am a materialist tied religiously to cause and effect let me say that this reading was motivated by research on the subjectivity of psychedelic drugs. There is meaning in the subconscious and lucid dreaming may be an avenue to access that, but this pseudoscience is not a likely path. In addition to conjuring fiction as science, these authors also float endlessly through repetitive dream states that provide little clarity.

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3 people found this helpful

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Power of Intent

May favorite part of this book is how he shows the power of intent and belief on the dreaming world, and then takes it a step further to imply its power in the waking reality (aka, placebo affect, or law of attraction). It definitely inspires me to practice these positive thought processes he describes in the book, both to induce stable lucid dreams, and to co-create my reality. :)

Although there is some overlap with other basic lucid dreaming books (and his other book), this one is solid. It will surely inspire you with lucid dreaming ideas (like healing yourself in dreams).

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this is a must read

this is a must read for anyone who wants to lucid dream. I highly recommend it.

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This will energize your lucid dream practice

This book is exactly the thing I needed to reignite my lucid dream practice. It's not so much a book about how to have them. The steps needed to have lucid dreams are covered in depth in other books. what makes this book great is showing you the amazing potential of lucid dreams. everything from learning a new skill, healing your body, having amazing adventures....all the way through exploring the nature of consciousness and the nature of reality.

There is something in this book that will fire you up for whatever brings you to this topic. For me, the ideas that the authors allude to: that dreamscapes are potentially shared areas of consciousness. It's possible not all people you meet in dreams are made up by your mind.

Being excited about this subject is critical for success. I would say that is a universal truism: Being excited about anything is critical for success. That is why this book is important.

I want to say one thing about a review I read about another book by Robert Waggoner that was just way off base. The reviewer said that she didn't like the cover art and already decided the book was bogus. Then she read how Robert's first lucid dreams were initiated by techniques he read in a Carlos Castenada book. She goes on to say that Castenada was proved to be a fraud, and any technique based on his material was also somehow fraudulent. Ridiculous!. The reviewer fails to see that the power of belief is what allowed Robert to see his hands in the dream. It wasn't the technique it so much as it was the agreement that he made with his subconscious that mattered. The genius of Waggoner is not exposition of the techniques to get you there, but what you should and can do once you are there.

To prove my point, go ask ChatGPT how to have a lucid dream. It gives really good advice. Practice state checks, keep a dream journal, set intentions, exercise, eat a healthy diet, and practice good sleep hygiene. Those are pretty standard practices. The WILD, MILD, wake back to bed, etc...those are all covered by other books and lots of them. For a good review of techniques, including Tebetan Dream Yoga, check out Andrew Holocek's work.

But if you want to turn your lucid dreams into the ultimate laboratory for the study of human consciousness, read or listen to this book.

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