Welcome to ConsciousFlow
Why this publication exists
I started working with dreams years ago—first out of curiosity, then out of necessity. Sporadic dream notes gradually became a disciplined practice: daily journaling, reality checks, lucid experiments, and long stretches of reflection.
Over time, something shifted. Dreams stopped being isolated nocturnal events and began to feel like continuations of waking life. Patterns, emotional themes, and recurring inner figures emerged—not as symbols to decode, but as relationships to navigate.
This publication is an attempt to articulate that process. Here, I’ll write about:
Dream recall and lucid dreaming as trainable skills
Detailed dream narratives and what they reveal over time
The psychology of attention, intention, and awareness
Integration: how dream work feeds back into daily life
Occasionally, I’ll reference cognitive science, psychology, and consciousness studies. More often, I’ll stay close to experience itself—because that is where transformation actually happens.
How to read this work
No prior experience in lucid dreaming is required.
Think of dreams as a laboratory: a space where the mind exposes habits, defenses, creativity, and blind spots.
Some posts will be practical, others narrative or reflective. All aim to slow down perception and make room for insight.
If you’re curious about consciousness—not as an abstract concept, but as something lived, layered, and trainable—you’re in the right place.
Welcome.
