DISCLAIMER
This is a romantic adult erotic story with fictional characters and plot, targeted at fingernail fetish readers. If extremely long fingernails and/or toenails gross you out, then you're in the wrong place.
'Dream chasers - The First Lesson'
by V. Tarransky
Dec 2021
...And then: The First Lesson
At six I messaged my boss and the team I worked with that I was clocking off. Then I reclined my office chair, leaned back and closed my eyes, breathing slowly in and out, paying attention as I was doing it. I tried to meditate and let my mind loose. It didn't take long before the recollection of the encounter with Helen kicked in and I imagined her posing her nails for me. "I know what you'd like right now," she was saying. I kept looking at her while she was showing me her hands. "Touch them" she lured me, slowly extending her left hand towards me. I couldn't refuse. I was hypnotized. My reasoning faded. I took her hand and felt her nails. I gently traced them top and bottom. "Will you grow them longer? Please?" I asked with guilt. I was already hard and almost bursting by now.
"Of cooourssse..." I heard her whispered reply and saw her right hand come up and caress my own hands still touching her left hand nails. Then she raised it slowly for me to look at it and started to subtly wiggle her fingers. Her nails started to slowly grow in front of my eyes. My heart was pounding, this was so... 'satisfying' and impossible not to watch, I was breathing heavily and groaning on the exhales. Their subtle curves and twists were becoming more and more pronounced as they grew and got to the point where they started to tremble and shiver with each wiggle, because of their weight along the length. "Oh my God!... Oh my God!..." I cried in torment breathing heavily. "Theo?..." I heard her ask somehow... worriedly. "Theo!... Are you OK?" I heard her call out to me. I jerked awake still laying back in my chair.
"Huh?..." I looked up. She was standing in front of my desk with a worried look on her face, holding a paper bag bearing the brand of the shop downstairs.
I looked at the clock displayed by the screensaver on the pc monitor. 19:07. Then at her. Then again at my watch. Consistent.
"Uh... please forgive me," I said rubbing my eyes "...I must've..." (yaaaawn) "...dozed off".
"God, you scared me. I knocked on the door quite a few times. And then I heard something like... someone being tortured. Only then I came in. But you shouldn't leave your door unlocked like that."
"Sorry, I... uh..."
Awkward. I didn't know what to say.
"Are you having nightmares? That must've been a pretty horrible dream."
"Erm... I... uh... would... say that it was... real torture" I looked for something ambigous to say. I couldn't just... tell her what the dream was actually about.
"D'you want to talk about it?"
"NO!" I snapped instantly. "...Erm... no," I rearranged it to a less defensive style. "Sorry, it's been an exhausting day, it was... unfair to snap at you like that."
"It's ok, don't worry about it... I'd have thought you don't have nightmares... with being able to know that you're dreaming and all that."
"I'm not...
that
good. Erm... grab a seat, I'll be with you in a minute. I need to splash some water on my face."
I went to the bathroom to freshen up. I did every single check I knew to make sure that I'm not dreaming and then got back.
The living room had two distinct areas, one for work, by the window, where the work desk and office chair were positioned, and on the opposite side, a relaxation area, where a corner sofa and two chairs surrounded a coffee table.
When I got back she was already seated on the sofa, the paper bag with fresh pastry was on the coffee table. I brought from the kitchen two plates, two glasses and a jug of water, arranged them on the coffee table and then I sat opposite to her, stealing glances at her nails, trying not to be obvious.
"So. First things first" I started. "I'm not an expert at this, and what I will...
tell
you, because I can't say that I will
teach
you, is from my personal experience with lucid dreaming so far. It's a pretty steep learning curve and with not so much satisfaction, even in the long run, because your goals with this will change as you get better. Remember that analogy I gave you with martial arts? You'll never be perfect at this and you'll always feel that there's still so much left to... achieve. Clear so far?"
"Clear."
"Second. I do not have a method or a curriculum to which I will stick you to. It's basically your...
will
and the amount of time and effort that you put into it. You try, you practice and we talk about it. You tell me about your failures or boast about your success. And I will try to help you understand why you fail. Or pat you on the back when you succeed. Or maybe even the other way around, I'm open to the idea that I might actually learn
from you
a thing or two. Or more. If you're not okay with this then you may want to reconsider how you spend this time. Still with me?"
"Yes."
"Third. How's your sleep? Any problems there?"
"Umm... I don't think so... How would I know?"
"Do you have consistent bedtime? Do you get enough sleep?"
"I... think I do, I didn't have much of a night life before. Now even less. Five or six hours at least I think?...Every night?"
"That's not so bad, but try to do better. Seven or eight. Without enough sleep there are no dreams. Let alone lucid ones."
"Ok. I have a question" she said, raising a long nailed hand like a class student does to get the teacher's attention. My eyes jumped to her hand and the undersides of her nails.
"Go ahead."
"When did you start, why, and how long did it take you to... succeed."
"That's three questions."
"Does it matter?"
"The point I'm making is that I'm paying attention. In my... philosophy, so to speak, everything
is
attention. The level of attention you put in any endeavor is the main variable that determines its outcome. Now to your questions."
I was trying to keep looking at her but my eyes were helplessly stealing glances at her hands and nails.
"I started about four years ago. My first lucid dream came two months after I started dream journaling consistently, which I did after about half a year of reading and listening to podcasts about it. So I'd say... about eight months. But honestly, I think the key factor was dream journaling. If you ask me, that's the most important thing you can do when chasing a lucid dream. This and reality checks."
"...Aaand?"
"And what?"
"There
were
three questions. You answered only two."
I was hoping she wouldn't notice, but I
did
make a point about paying attention.
"You
did
pay attention," I remarked smiling. "Good."
"Well...?" she held me to it.
I kept her gaze for a few moments.
"I started doing it looking for...
insight
. Just like you, everyone has things in their lives that seem to be... not necessarily
wrong
, but...
enhanceable
. I'm looking for...
explanations
. Just like you."
She was looking incredulously and questioningly at me. After the encounter in the park and probably finishing LaBerge's book she was aware of the...
escapism
potential of these practices. "Fine!...the other thing, too."
The smile on her face said to me "
now... we're even
".