squamous: (monstrooper)
squamous ([personal profile] squamous) wrote2002-12-01 12:26 am

hmmm

Interesting little bit on sleep paralysis here. I had some relatively unsettling sleep paralysis experiences during my college days, but don't recall any major episode since around 1994. The last one was kind of intense actually, in a way I probably couldn't adequately convey to anyone else. Hmmm. One thing, I never actually saw anything while having one of these spells... I definitely heard and sensed things that weren't actually present, overlaid with what was truly in the environment, but I didn't see anything that wasn't really there. Anyway, it's a weird thing. Has anyone else had these experiences? How about with visual elements to them?

Speaking of sleep paralysis I think it's time to go to bed, since I have to get up relatively early tomorrow morning. Stupid agreeing to work on Sunday....

It used to happen to me, on occasion

[identity profile] paulcurtis.livejournal.com 2002-12-01 06:12 am (UTC)(link)
Fortunately in my case it was very mild, and (for no identifiable reason) I figured out exactly what was going on and didn't let it scare me. I can recall being in my single-digits...maybe 8 or 9...and hearing my mother carrying laundry upstairs. I wanted to call to her and ask her to make me some tea, but couldn't control my vocal cords, or move to make a noise, or even change the speed of my breathing. I figured I was awake but my body was still asleep, so I concentrated very hard on moving ONE finger, which eventually worked. Of course, then I was made aware of how little difference it makes if you can only move one finger...but I woke up entirely, soon after.

It happened more and more rarely, eventually surfacing only when I had dreams in which my jaw was locked open and I couldn't shut my mouth. Curiously, my reaction in every case I can recall, is irritation, rather than fear. I take it that it is common for people to react with uncontrolled terror, made all the worse by being unable to move, or make a sound. Unfortunately, I don't think rationalizing the problem (don't worry, my body's just asleep) does any good for people terrorized by the experience.

Curiously, my sweetie Doreen's youngest daughter (who's in college) has sleep paralysis occasionally. I think it has happened less and less since she outgrew her teens.

[identity profile] boonedog.livejournal.com 2002-12-01 09:22 am (UTC)(link)
I've had sleep paralysis twice in my life and it was really really scary.
When I was a kid once I had it where I "couldn't wake up and get back to my body" and I was standing in a dark place desperately trying to "wake up". Another time in my early 20's, I thought I'd opened my eyes, but everything looked surreal and I couldn't move and it felt like something big (other than my cat) was sitting on my chest. Both lasted only a minute or two at them most, but seemed like a really long time while it was happening.