What's your usual recall method?
Hi Luminous
It's a waking habit now.
When I wake, I usually have no immediate sense of having dreamed. And the more I think about dreams, the more frustrated I get.
What I have found is that I need to completely switch off the thinking mind and connect with the present. So I listen to the clock quietly ticking, the traffic outside, my wife breathing, indeed anything that is audible and (hopefully) not calling for my attention. Then, as if by magic, the dream memories flow back of their own accord. Again, I have to make sure I don't lock on to any particular dream image as the frustration of trying to remember just kills the recall. This is counter-intuitive but nevertheless it opens the door to more images flowing back.
Sometimes I'll quickly DJ the images before connecting with the present again. Either way, I carry on until RL needs me to do something or until the memories stop flowing. Sometimes even when I write the DJ they carry on flowing, but that's not so usual.
One problem with this method is when waking during the night. It's not unusual for me to drift back into a FA and dream that I'm writing my DJ. Fortunately, I can usually then recall the FA later for the DJ proper but this casts doubt as to whether the dream happened before the FA or whether the dream was part of the FA. This probably doesn't really matter, though, but it's interesting to speculate. Of course, some dreams just get forgotten as I drift back to sleep whist trying to recall. But I think that's a small price to pay.
Also fortunately, I find that recall from waking during the night is more forthcoming anyway and I don't need to divert my attention to ticking clocks and passing cars.
The method I use, I think, is especially useful for those like me whose ego is perhaps a little anxious and/or paranoid. Perhaps people who feel more secure wake with a more forthcoming memory of dreams whereas I start thinking about what I'm supposed to be worrying about when I wake!
A long answer, Luminous, but I hope it's useful.