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Yeah I know what you mean about sleep paralysis Spad. I've had it maybe 4-5 times in my life, every time it's as I'm waking up though, not when I'm falling asleep. Just the paralysis by itself is scary enough, but once I remember waking up with sleep paralysis like that, where I was lying on my back with my head tilted to the side so that my nose and mouth were partly buried into the pillow. I just remember waking up (well kinda - it's this really wierd semi-conscious state), realising that I couldn't move and then thinking "oh shit, I can't breathe". I don't know how long I was paralysed for but it may have been about 10-15 seconds, and eventually I willed myself to wake up fully and I shot up in bed and just started gasping. Looking back I'm not so sure that I was in any real danger (i.e. I doubt I would have suffocated) but it was still pretty damn scary. I'm just glad that I've only ever had it in daylight, cos I'd seriously freak if I was paralysed in the middle of the night and had one of those hallucinations or something.....
| quote: | | as for the part about where u suddenly wake up with a "jerk", as if u were violently shaken...well...ur soul is returning to ur body. literally. |
Nah sorry mate, I can't swallow any of this sort of stuff. The phenomenon you're talking about here is kinda the opposite of sleep paralysis. It's where instead of your mind being awake and your body still asleep, in this case it's where your mind falls asleep but your body remains awake. Where your mind falls asleep before your body. This is why it almost always occurs (with me anyway) within the first hour or so of falling asleep, and it usually happens when you're really worn down. So, for instance, this usually happens to me when I go to bed feeling tired and fall asleep almost instantly (not a common occurance) and my mind falls asleep before the brain has a chance to shut the body down. So, if the brain enters REM stage sleep (more likely to happen quite quickly if you're feeling really worn down when you go to bed) and begins to dream before it is able to shut the body down, the body is likely to try and enact dreams as they occur (I'm not saying that you're going to jump out of bed and start jogging in time with your dream, but if the body hasn't been paralised by the brain, it is free to move as it pleases, and potentially wake the individual up).
Sleepwalkers have the above problem (where the mind is asleep but the body hasn't been "de-activated") but simply don't "wake up" when the body starts moving.
Hope you all found this informative. 
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