• 主题:Ssild...How Does It Work
  • Hi.  I am a redditor who has been on reddit for some time, I just don't comment a lot.  I recently encountered SSILD, and it seems simple.  My question is, though, how does it work?  I know what the procedure is and all, and I did a google search but nothing came up as to the neurological processes that allow SSILD to function.  Can somebody help me out?  I would really appreciate it.    
    Can someone explain the SSILD procces to me, I have never heard of it.  
    Basically, it's increase your awareness so you don't miss dream sign, and sometimes you might accidentaly WILD using it, so you might enter a dream knowing it.  
    The neurotransmitter Acetylcholine (ACh) plays a vital role in lucid dreaming. It enhances sensory perceptions and sustains attention. If there is a sudden increase of ACh in the brain while dreaming, LDs and OBEs are likely to occur. SSILD cycles apply repeated stimulation to the various senses and thus create a demand for ACh, and possibly other neurotransmitters. Unlike WILD techniques, SSILD does not want you to stay awake for very long so after a few cycles you just fall asleep, while ACh level continues to build up. The totally relaxed nature of the technique and embracement of mind drift are all geared toward bringing you closer to falling asleep too.

    What I said above of course is only a hypothesis. However, if you experiment with supplements such as galantamine you will notice the aftereffects are very similar to SSILD. In fact, SSILD works especially well with supplements, much more so than traditional WILD techniques. This is because supplements take some time to cross the blood-brain barrier. Before they cross they have no effect, but once they do they will make it difficult to fall asleep!  
    Premed neurosci student here... ACh increase where in the brain? just curious  
    I read up on the technique but it just seems like any other method out there. You go to bed, lay down and relax your mind and body. You listen to your body, you feel your own weight, you see color and light in the blackness of your own eyelids, and you basically meditate until you fall asleep.

    It seems like with all the different acronyms for techniques, all we've accomplished is confusion. Don't think of this new acronym as something actually new. The same procedure has been listed under many different acronyms in the past. MILD DILD and WILD seem to be the most important acronyms and should yield better results when you google search them.  
    What technique do you see that also cycles throgh the senses instead of focusing on one for prolonged period? What technique do you see that does not require you to stay still? What technique do you see that does not require you to spend lots of time on relaxation? And what technique do you see that does not need you to perform delicate mental exercises and instead just ask you to act out the steps in the most fool proof fashion?  
    I don't know what you read, but some misconceptions are clarified in the official tutorial

    http://cosmiciron.blogspot.com/2013/01/senses-initiated-lucid-dream-ssild_16.html  
    I wonder if that's the same cosmiciron as /u/cosmiciron.  
    If you think you can just act out the steps of this tutorial and have better success universally than other techniques then you're a fool. I don't think you believe that though, I'm sure it's a misunderstanding.

    People are going to fail to lucid dream with this method. Just like they fail when following any other tutorial for a given method.

    it's probably a good method, you seem to understand the neurology behind it too, and that's great. The end result is what matters though, not the specific list of steps it took to get there.

    My point is just that the focus on procedure will help some because it will work for them. However, if we focus on neurology, psychology, and the similarities between the variety of methods we can better understand the induction of lucid dreams.

    Making new methods is great, and I never want that to stop, what needs to stop however is compartmentalizing these methods into different acronyms and claiming it's new, different, or a break through. It's distracting, and fragments the various aspects of the hobby.

    Remember too... I'm not trying to take a shot at your method, I'm just saying it doesn't deserve an acronym of its own.  
    Can you suggest a better way of referring to it (SSILD)?  
    There are hundreds of unique cases of success with this technique recorded on Dreamviews alone, and number of LDs induced are in thousands. In fact, a few people started experimenting with SSILD as the primary technique and posted their results in a thread called "The SSILD Test - 30 days" (http://www.dreamviews.com/research/139465-ssild-test-30-days.html). And in that small thread alone we have hundreds of successful LDs induced by just a handful users, many are novices. User "Matt1", in 18 attempts (8 partial attempts) induced 8 LDs, 15 FAs, and 1 HI. User "Venryx", in 18 attempts induced 12 LDs, 1 OBE, 30 FAs, and 2 HIs. Just to name a few. On the Chinese forum where SSILD was originated from you can find thousands of unique success stories and tens of thousands of successful LDs induced. As said in the tutorial, one user alone recorded more than 500 LDs in less than a year. There are also more than a dozen users on my small personal forum who each recorded a few hundreds of LDs within a year. If you do a google search you will find even more stories in other languages.

    You can call all these people "fools", but I think that only demonstrates ignorance and arrogance, not brilliance.  
    I'm not a neuroscientist so any answers I give might not be really educated. I suggest you read about it online, e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetylcholine. I also recommend the excellent book "Advanced Lucid Dreaming -- The Power of Supplements" by Thomas Yuschak.  
    You have no reason to defend your technique from me. Defend the acronym, how is this method not just a twist on WILD after WBTB? Also why are there two S characters? The cycling just seems like any other relaxation technique.  
    LOL why should I even defend anything? I suspect by replying I'm just feeding the trolls. If you are curious then just go figure it out yourself and brush up on your LD related knowledge before making more accusations.  
    Yup. He posted the tutorial for 2.0 under the same name.  
    Well... the name is senses induced lucid dream so I would start by dropping an s. Then I would just call it what it is; modified WILD. it's very clever though I tried last night and it actually worked well. It was harder to fall asleep but the results were the same as when I normally fall asleep attempting WILD. I still can't get myself to enter a dream seamlessly but I had a very typical experience with his method.  
    The original name of the technique was indeed SILD, but it turned out it was taken by "Song Initiated Lucid Dream". Adding an extra S makes it more unique and easier to google, since Sild is actually some kind of fish.

    If you prefer to refer to the technique with its full name then feel free. Even better, you might want to refer to it via its very original Chinese name - Tai Xuan Gong, if you can pronounce it, LOL.

    Calling it a modified WILD is wrong. First off, WILD refers to the type of lucid dreams that are entered from a waked state, versus DILD which is initiated from within a dream. Thus, these are broad terms that define the "type of dreams", and not the "technique." Since you sound like you prefer to be rather precise with things, then the correct way to refer to the techniques should be "WILD Techniques" instead of just "WILD".

    As for "WILD Techniques", there isn't one that exists as the official or De Facto one. Many are similar indeed, such as requiring deep relaxation, some breath works, or visualizations, yet they each have subtle differences that set them apart. While differences may be subtle, their outcome may not be so subtle. WILDing is such a delicate task that very subtle things can have huge impact on the result.

    Saying SSILD is a modified WILD "technique" is without ground. In the tutorial users are clearly warned that it should not be used as a WILD technique because it will cause them to perform the technique incorrectly. The idea of SSILD is to quickly perform a few simple steps without requiring any delicate handling, then drop everything and go to sleep. It does not want you to stay awake afterwards. In fact, the experience you reported (having difficult to fall asleep) is exactly what would happen if you treat the technique as a WILD technique, which is wrong. Using SSILD it is possible to generate WILDs, but that should not be the goal. Majority of SSILD-generated dreams are DILDs, FAs, and OBEs.

    As I said, the big differences are in fact subtle, and you need to be educated well enough to be able to really appreciate them. To name a few:

    1. SSILD does not require relaxation.
    2. SSILD does not require ANY mental exercises such as autosuggestion, mantra, visualization, and so on.
    3. SSILD does not require you to stay completely still.

    If you have done a lot of WILDs then you will truly appreciate the above 3 points. They are time consuming, difficult to perform (effectively), and can cause a lot of discomfort.

    4. The cycling concept, while not entirely unique (Michael Raduga's Indirect Technique also employs that), is rarely used by other techniques, yet it solved big problems. (I won't get into the details since that's the subject of a full article).

    5. SSILD does not require lengthy WBTB session. It in fact can be used completely without WBTB.

    6. SSILD, when performed correctly, is itself a good relaxation technique and can help people sleep better, more quickly.

    7. SSILD is known to create LOTs of FAs!

    There are many differences between SSILD and the other traditional methods so I won't list them all here. I never said the technique is revolutionary or anything close to that. However, calling it a poser with a fancy acronym, even worse, one doesn't even "deserve" an acronym... that, I say is pure prejudice.  
    OK you've got your point across nicely. I always thought of WILD the same way you explain, that there is no de facto tutorial and it's an umbrella term. And the reason I feel like your technique aligned with that category was because you are initiating the dream while you're awake by priming your brain via the sense cycling.

    One point of my initial comment on this thread was that you won't be able to find anything on ssild because it's just another tutorial, and researching why ssild works won't garner any results. You're the only expert on the matter and apparently the sole creator so you're the singular source of information on the subject in English.

    Another point was that I feel like certain steps for techniques won't work the same for everyone, therefore there's no need for strict adherence steps. So for the sake of research, analysis of the steps taken should be looked into rather than the procedure.

    Might I recommend changing the name to sense cycling initiated lucid dream? SCILD.

    I'm not sure I agree that this method is fool proof or doesn't require what you claim yet though. That's just a matter of time and practice for some. It may not seem like it needs relaxation concentration or visualization but that's from the perspective of experienced dreamers isn't it?  
    I'm glad we agreed on the subject of WILD. Let me try to address your other points:

    First, about being the sole creator -- MILD, being one of the most predominate techniques, had a sole creator, but that doesn't make it any less useful, does it? That said, SSILD is actually one of the few techniques that AREN'T entirely created by one person! As I wrote in the tutorial, it was essentially a collaborated effort of hundreds of people on our forum. And I don't mean hundreds of people "practicing" it. They were "developing" it! It was almost like an open source project!   In two years the technique (not the tutorial) already went through several revisions, all based on participants' feedbacks and suggestions. Thus, our confidence in the technique is not based on blind faith. I'd say this aspect alone makes SSILD a more unique technique on the market.

    Am I the only expert on the matter? Or the singular source of information on the subject "in English"? I suggest you visit DreamViews and LD4all and see for yourself. Or, you could use Google Translate and visit our forum and should give you the information "in English". LOL.

    As for strict adherence of the steps -- how would you know if it works or not if you don't adhere to the steps at least once? Besides, you are always free to come up with customized routines that work best for you. Neither the technique nor I are forcing strict adherence.

    SSILD is not fool proof, that's for sure. But it is never advertised to be so. As for not needing relaxation or visualization, it is simply a fact, not "from the perspective of experienced dreamers". There is absolutely no relaxation or visualization involved in the outlined step, and anyone should be able to see that. The number of completely inexperienced dreamers who succeeded with SSILD is a large one -- a simple Google search can confirm that. In fact, I encourage you to do such search and see for yourself. Being skeptical is fine, but let's not ignore the obvious facts out there just for the sake of being skeptical.  
    I'm not skeptical of your technique at all, I tried it and it worked just like you described. I'm not saying it doesn't need an acronym because it's not good, I said that because it's confusing to search for something that only links to your copied and pasted tutorial. The first five results from a google search are from you personally and they're only a few days old, so you see where I'm coming from there?

    This technique is something I do naturally when attempting WILD. Usually I'll give up an go to sleep, or fall asleep normally on accident. When this happens to me I get false awakening dreams. So that's my misunderstanding. Now when I say I do it naturally my way I don't cycle with periods on purpose, it's something I do to help keep my body still, and my muscles relaxed. I focus on the blackness behind my eyelids until I see cloudy movement. I feel my body relaxing muscle by muscle under my control, and I listen to the fan in my room and the cars driving by. The only difference is I've never tried singling them out one at a time. Knowing that about my technique do you understand why I feel the way I do about your technique? If I do this after 4 hours of sleep I'll usually have a successful WILD. If I do this the first time I try to sleep, I get false awakenings after falling asleep normally just like you would expect with your tutorial.

    So I've got misconceptions about what WILD is, or at least what most of the techniques are. When I read a tutorial(SSILD) that I thought was basically a WILD technique, and coincidentally had the same experience using that technique as what I thought was WILD, I shrugged it off as being no different. What I didn't realize was how different from a normal WILD tutorial your technique was.