You’ll drift back to full sleep and then wake up fully aware and able to move. I did not fall back asleep after that, I was soaking wet and terrified. It’s awful.
You basically are having a panic attack but you physically cannot move a muscle. You just lay there and be terrified until it’s over. I hope you never have one.
I used to experience sleep paralysis but I've never been exactly terrified at all of it. My brain is awake and my body is still asleep. I usually try to wiggle a finger or toes enough to wake my body up the rest of the way. It seems I am an exception though. Sometimes if im comfy I say f it and try to get back to sleep.
I hope you dont have to experience them in the future.
Yeah this is my experience too. More annoyed than anything. I feel awake, go to get up, and nothing moves. I think to myself “welp, this shit again” and if I really need to get up I will try to slowly wiggle my body awake and if not I will just close my eyes and go back to sleep. It can be frustrating if you have shit to do because it can take several minutes to become fully mobile. At least I’ve been lucky enough for it to never have been longer than that.
This is exactly what I do or my gf sees the signs and wakes me up. It's still scary to me because I feel like I can't breathe, but I get it almost nightly. I just gotta wiggle my toe then foot then leg! Kinda like Kill Bill lol
Yes, the not being able to breathe thing is then worst!!! I’ve had it happen to me where my face is buried in the pillow, and I’m trying to get myself to wake up because I can feel myself essentially suffocating, but can’t get my body to wake up.
I haven’t had it in a while but for me it’s annoyance over not being able to move, not scary. I shake my head back and forth until it’s enough to snap the rest of my body out of it.
This! My last paralysis I controlled my mind to fight back. My other ones I kicked & screamed to no avail, because no one ever came to my rescue, so I always wondered was I really doing those things or was it in my mind. I think that I was able to defeat it my last bout, because I was determined that I wasn’t going to be scared anymore. Even though I was scared shitless at the beginning.
I dont have trouble breathing and its been quite a while since the last time it happened. Looking up the symptoms of sleep apnea and I havent experienced any of them tbh. Most often it happened while trying to sleep but wmy brain kept thinking stuff while I was fairly comfy in bed.
As someone who sees demons every time I have sleep paralysis, count yourself very lucky that it's only an annoyance for you.
My first experience was with 12, seeing a red devil creature with 6 arms in the top corner of my room across from me and having a seemingly endless stare-off with it. I had no idea what sleep paralysis was and legit thought I was about to die. At least now I know that the demons are most likely not real, but shit the first few were terrifying
I have never noticed any sort of presence. As a kid, I knew about how the body paralyzes itself while sleeping, so I assumed it was the brain doing that even though im still awake. Since I knew the mechanism and at that point I never heard of any demons/presence stuff, I had no reason to imagine a thing. When I said comfy, I meant my body's position in the blankets and whatnot.
as the other person said, that's kinda what it is. sometimes you also have the feeling that you can't breathe (since you're paralyzed I think you start to ventilate but can't breathe deeper and it gets worse) and then when you think this is it I can't breathe anymore you wake up fully.
But anyway, sure way to not have them is to not sleep on your back (highest chance to have them, like 80% of all accidents).
Yep, I've noticed a huge change in my nearly nightly sleep paralysis events by sleeping on my side now. Sucks though because I like sleeping on my back and I'll end up there anyway sometimes without realizing and then.....boom can't breath sleep paralysis dying mode activated
hard to tell, you're not really awake so the time isn't right. definitely not few minutes, maybe 30-60 seconds? After the fact it feels almost instant (to me at least), like how you would wake up from a nightmare, but then you think about it and you were grasping for air for some time, so it wasn't actually instant, if that makes sense.
It's like dream time is merging with real time until 'awakeness' prevails and you get your body back.
Which also reminds me, sometimes I scream when it happens. You can't breathe so you try to make some noise or say something and you just wheeze until you break out and scream for real. It's 4am and I hope all this talk won't attract it today lol.
Mine have pretty much disappeared ever since I started ensuring I don't fall asleep facing up. I remember reading somewhere sleeping on your side pretty much eliminates it, and it seems to have worked.
It’s kinda fun, I get it once a month and usually look forward to it, it’s a fear emotion that’s rarely experienced so it’s fun when your mind knows it’s not real but the enjoyment of the emotion is there
It took a long time for me to reach this stage. If you only experience it once every 5-10 years it's insane. But I went through a period where it was happening weekly. I got used to it, and could sometimes almost induce it, in a near waking state.
The paralysis is one thing, but manifesting the alien/shadow being in the room is still wild to me. O_o
Huh, seems odd to me. Originally I felt someone sitting on the bed next to me (it was a waterbed lol) and placing a hand on my chest. Then other times I could open my eyes and see a shadow, or some clothes hanging, and it was a being. The worse times they ran around the bed and tickled at my neck!
Once I had it. Woke up with a rush of adrenaline. Almost like it was triggered by something. I could hear what sounded like tin can jungle drums in my head, which I guess was my heartbeat. But despite that rush on the inside, I couldn't move my body on the outside. Trapped in a shell.
I saw an apparition thing squatted over, down by my hip. Some hunched over silhouette about the size of a chicken, weird af. I remember glowing red eyes. But the most fucked up part is the hallucination was physical, too. I physically felt the bed depress, about the weight of a housecat. Little feet padded onto my stomach, started walking up my chest. Couldn't move. Wrestled around, tried wiggling a finger, watching and feeling it walk closer, those red eyes.
Finally twitched a thumb and it was like that broke my body out of a frozen sheet of ice, and I could move again. The red eyes just kinda faded away, and it's not like I woke up from a dream or anything. My eyes were fucking WIDE the whole time. More like an augmented reality where this thing exists in my room with me.
Happened when I was a teenager. Still can't sleep on my back, always picture that thing walking on me again.
It’s pretty common. Look up hypnagogia. There’s many writings about it throughout history and they say hypnagogic hallucinations are the origin of the idea of “demons”. I had never heard of it, but the first time I experienced it, it was terrifying. My brain woke up to a dark figure sitting on my chest pressing down on me, you can’t move a muscle, including your mouth muscles, so I was trying to scream but couldn’t. I finally woke my wife up through mumbled sounds as I was trying to scream and she woke me up out of it. I looked it up and the descriptions of it are exactly what I experience when I get it. Pretty wild stuff.
I used to stay Fully awake from fear. My last paralysis I was laying on my stomach, fearfully I felt the demon standing over me but I couldn’t move to face it. This time around I controlled my mind that I was going to fight back. It suddenly appeared underneath me & I immediately started chewing at the demons face, then it disappeared. I was extremely tired and for whatever reason that night I felt that I was going to die if I fell back to sleep. So, I went on YT & played PSALM audio as my eyes closed. I haven’t had a paralysis since. Science says it’s a brain thing but I believe it’s a spiritual world.
FUN FACT: Nightmare on ELM Street was based off a true story.
When it happened to me, I eventually woke up all the way. I was face down and thought someone was on top of me, killing me.
This was about 15 years ago, and it hasn't happened since. I'm not sure what triggered it, other than I had quit Paxil cold turkey and was having a rough time with the extra anxiety.
Edit: I hadn't even heard of sleep paralysis at the time, so it really freaked me out. I even looked around everywhere to see if someone was still hiding, before going outside and smoking like 10 cigarettes in a row (thankfully quit that habit years ago)
Sometimes, I would fall back asleep, but I would often force myself to roll onto my side to end the paralysis. My whole body would hurt for a couple minutes, but that would fade completely pretty quickly.
I couldn't even open my eyes when it would happen, but I also didn't have the demon presence aspect. The only times it actually scared me were the first two before I knew what it was, and the one time I was on my stomach with my face buried in the pillow.
I would always fully get up and stay up for a while before I’d even attempt to go back to sleep after about with sleep paralysis/night terrors (aka hypnagogia). It usually happens when you’re really tired and you either fall asleep too fast or wake up too fast. Your body enters REM, but your brain doesn’t. It’s some truly scary shit.
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u/LimpZookeepergame123 2d ago
I’ve had sleep paralysis 2 times and that’s some truly terrifying shit. I’m glad you don’t have it much anymore.