Dreams have been a source of fascination and inspiration to humanity for centuries. They inspire, astonish, and reveal new dimensions of reality and of ourselves. Many great scholars and inventors drew their most brilliant ideas directly from the dream world – breakthroughs that reshaped science and culture.
Mendeleev reportedly saw the periodic table of elements in a dream before committing it to paper. Nobel laureate Niels Bohr discovered the structure of the atom with the help of a dream. Elias Howe invented the sewing machine after a dream provided the key insight he’d been missing. The German chemist who discovered the ring structure of benzene told his colleagues at a scientific conference, while presenting his findings: “Gentlemen, learn to dream!” And Thomas Edison – holder of over 1,000 patents – actively drew on his dreams throughout his life, even developing his own personal method for capturing them before they faded.
And yet for most people, this extraordinary resource remains entirely out of reach. The experiences of sleep – however vivid, however meaningful – were beyond the conscious control of the dreamer. The magical world of dreams, for those who didn’t know its secrets, remained largely unexplored and unused.
What Are Lucid Dreams?
A Lucid Dream is a dream in which you are aware that you are dreaming – fully, consciously, in real time. You know you’re asleep. You know the world around you is a dream. And from that awareness, you gain the ability to participate in it intentionally, rather than simply being carried along by whatever appears.
No one knows exactly how old the art of Lucid Dreaming is. It has probably been with us since the very beginning of human civilization – because it is a natural capacity, one that sometimes arises spontaneously. Many children have Lucid Dreams and take them entirely for granted, treating them as ordinary and obvious without telling anyone. As people grow older, these spontaneous experiences tend to fade and eventually disappear in most individuals.
But here is the crucial point: regardless of whether or not Lucid Dreaming arises naturally for you, it is a skill that anyone can develop. It can be learned, trained, and deepened through practice.
What Becomes Possible When You Know You’re Dreaming
When you realize – while still inside it – that you are in a dream, that world transforms. It becomes a kind of fairy tale: a place where literally everything is possible. You can fly. You can materialize objects or people with a thought. You can travel to any place, any time. You can change the entire landscape of the dream with pure intention. The dream world is the world of your own mind – and in your own mind, there are no limits.
No more being at the mercy of random dreams, whether stressful or simply dull. Learning Lucid Dreaming allows you to choose the content of your dreams to a remarkable degree – to make them what you actually want them to be. Flight, adventure, creativity, healing, inspiration, meeting people you love – all of this becomes accessible in a conscious, intentional way.
Beyond the sheer wonder of it, Lucid Dreaming is also a powerful tool for self-development, creative work, and inner healing. The same mind that produced Mendeleev’s periodic table and Edison’s inventions in ordinary sleep becomes a collaborator you can work with directly – consciously, deliberately, night after night.
Jakub Qba Niegowski – Extrasensory Awareness Development Specialist
To take this further, discover the Superconscious Shift program.





