Answers
Original Source ↗How, Sergey, do you propose to map the world of Dreaming when everything in it is constantly changing? Not to mention that it can change even if you haven't moved anywhere. You just turn around, and everything is already different. <:-) I am already writing material about this. I cannot answer in the leaflet because the explanation must be not only understandable but also appealing to you (so that you move from discussions about Lucid Dreams to practice – a real, sometimes tedious quest for truth. :))) I assure you that if someone were to offer a path through all seven gates of dreaming now, you wouldn't believe him. Words are just words. Achievement requires effort – your effort. If you want to evaluate my method, try it on yourself.
Ifo's Commentary
Ifo: The other day, I read and browsed two books by Vereschagin, "The Technique of Animating Objects. Direction: Working with Entities and Beings." Among other things, they describe the creation of a Guide to worlds. Vereschagin knows his craft. But all techniques for breaking into the unknown imply hacker methods – be it launching a satellite to the Moon, creating a dreaming body, or a guide to other worlds. We must "stick a finger" into the unknown world, wiggle it, and make sure it remains whole. Then a hand, a head, and so on. The advantage of a "dreaming body" over a "guide" is the same as that of legs over crutches; however, hackers will tell you – all this, guys, is program cracking, penetration into an unfamiliar and protected environment (or maybe it's Thursday? :)))
Reply to Ray
Taking this opportunity, I will answer Ray. You are right, there is a boundary between Dreaming and reality – an illusory membrane, because any dream is a Perception Bubble existing in our everyday reality. A bubble is a bubble. K., in a beautiful dream, paddled from the lake to her home, looks, and her real estate is no longer there. Different views are before her. What happened? She reached the membrane, and a spatial warp occurred. But this is, of course, a model. And imagine what would happen if we replaced thousands of "bubbles" accumulated over a lifetime with one spatial model – a map of dreaming. And there, K. would have lakes and, say, a fragment of a certain zone where terrain changes occur. Of course, both the lake and this zone represent some components of our energetic human band. But to avoid going crazy, we can temporarily speak of a map of dreaming, and then, having gained a general insight, move on to more abstract and capacious concepts.