MOSCOW, RUSSIA, October 14, 2020 /24-7PressRelease/ -- 151 volunteers were instructed to enter a lucid dream, and there to picture themselves experiencing pain in their arms, following which they were required to wake up immediately. Of the participants, 74% achieved pain during lucid dreaming and 21% felt pain even after awakening. The study was conducted at Project Elijah, a Phase Research Center branch devoted to the investigation of lucid dreams, sleep paralysis, out-of-body experiences, etc. It was published in the peer-reviewed journal Dreaming, 30(3), 246–256. Authors: M.Raduga, Z.Zhunusova, A.Shashkov, & N.Sevcenko.
Lucid dreams are a form of REM sleep, during which a person becomes aware of their actions and can control the events unfolding in the dream. Millions of people experience it spontaneously every night, which is why there are many movies and books related to the topic.
As the study's lead author Michael Raduga explained, "The fact that a dreamer could induce pain consciously, without the presence of a physical cause, and then transfer it into a real, physical sensation indicates that the source of pain is the human brain itself and it can therefore be controlled through our consciousness. Furthermore, the psycho-physiological connection found between dreams and wakefulness could lead to new treatments for pain relief. Our study provides hope for people living with chronic pain, because the results may lead to the development of new, revolutionary types of pain management, totally free of pharmaceuticals."
The experiment was headed by Michael Raduga, founder of the Phase Research Center and the author of numerous books, the best-known of which is The Phase: Shattering the Illusion of Reality. In 2011, the Phase Research Center conducted a series of much talked about experiments, which had participants reproducing alien abductions and biblical miracles, among other things, using lucid dreaming techniques.
Full report: https://doi.org/10.1037/drm0000150
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