KeyboardHost July 31 Share July 31 (edited) Drifting is like lucid dreaming but your brain stays awake while your body sleeps. You imagine a world and enter it, it helps to have a premade world like your wonder land or one from a book. You imagine characters and how they look along with yourself. The best way I (account owner, 🪷) can describe it is healthy maladaptive daydreaming. It’s very realistic, and you can feel things as if it’s real, and sometimes even feel pain. Edited September 15 by KeyboardHost Hi! I’m the host of the Keyboard System! 🦜 or green text= Kat, tulpa. 🪷 or normal text= Host/Main owner of this account. We also have Lia and Cosm/Cosmo, but they don’t want to practice possession or switching for a while, so you won’t see much of them. My friend Olive may also post through this account, their tulpas are Opal and Prince. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JAG August 19 Share August 19 Sounds like hypnagogic sleep. Last night I went into this state after getting a bit too comfy. I appeared to be in a restaurant, at a table. Once I relized what was going I popped right out of it.  Here is a thread about it on the research forum. https://community.tulpa.info/topic/17353-exploiting-hypnagogic-sleep-onset-for-tulpamancy/ The cool breeze flowed through our hair like a ethereal stream as we sat among the shore, looking into the dream.  Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
looknightfaint056 September 14 Share September 14 This sounds similar to the sleep paralysis method I used to achieve an astral projection before. Â Care to share some experience? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
harvestmoon September 16 Share September 16 (edited) I'm not sure what you mean by this. Do you have more information or a longer explanation somewhere? It sounds like you could be talking about WILD (wake-induced lucid dreaming), immersive daydreaming, or NREM1 (the first stage of sleep that feels more like wakefulness than other stages of sleep but more like sleep than true wakefulness). Or some sort of mix of those things. Â Something that we sometimes experience is like this, in that it is like dreaming while awake. But our body doesn't have to be asleep or like it's asleep, and the realism varies. We call it "running thoughts" or "the currolands" because of the dream-like detachment and lack of focus. This state often happens when falling asleep or waking up but can also happen during calm and quiet moments, like when we're on a walk. Edited September 16 by harvestmoon Meaningful words, I'm here! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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