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Dr Steve
10-16-2008, 05:26 AM
Hello Dr Steve, Im having some sleep problems. Its seem that i am having Sleep paralysis. Some mornings i wake up and i am paralyzed except for my big toe. It feels as if death has me in his grasps and is trying to take me under. I freak out and try as hard as posible to move. I wiggle my big toe as much as i can then after what seems to be hours i can finally move. Some times it it seems as if i can move my arm very slowly and i try pushing myself out of my bed onto the floor. Trying as hard as i can it feels like i am on the edge and will fall down, at this time i regain movment and i discover that i have only moved about an inch.
This has been happening for about 3 years now. Recently it is getting more intense, also now when i do lose the battle to wake up i am having very lucid dreams/ Hallucinations.

What is the cause for this? Is there any treament for Sleep paralysis?

Thank you for taking time on my question.

What you are experiencing are "hypnopompic episodes", or sleep paralysis episodes. Basically the theory goes like this: when you sleep and dream, the motor part of your brain shuts down. This keeps you from jumping around, acting out your dreams all night. If this system breaks down, two things can happen:

1) you can continue to sleep, but the motor part of the brain switches back on. This is called somnambulism or sleep walking.

2) you can wake up, but the motor part of the brain stays switched off. This is called sleep paralysis.

Now, you'll note...sleepwalkers aren't really totally asleep (if you've ever encountered one, you know what I mean), and likewise sleep paralyzed people aren't really totally awake. The dream center is still functioning, so these people will hear things, see things, and feel things in a "waking dream" state.

There are people out there who have read books and done tons of exercizes just to experience once what you are experiencing all the time. Most of them don't understand how annoying (or even terrifying) it can be.

I believe that the vast majority (if not all) of people who experience "alien abduction" are suffering from hypnopompic episodes. People who have never experienced this cannot fathom how real the hallucinations are. Reading the accounts of alien abductions, very many of them start with "I woke up in my bed, and I couldn't move...", classic for sleep paralysis.

Sleep paralysis tends to occur in younger years, tapering off as you get older. However, when someone actually complains about sleep paralysis because it's happening more and more often, it may be a sign of a deeper sleep disorder.

I would recommend that you see your regular health care provider and have him/her send you to a sleep expert. The most common treatments for recurrent sleep paralysis episodes are some of the newer antidepressants, but I'd want to rule out some other malady by at least doing a sleep study first.

Most doctors have no training in this kind of thing...ask your doctor if he/she is comfortable treating this and if not, refer you to a sleep center.

Hope this helps!


your pal,


Steve


PS: we talked about this at length during the second "Weird Medicine" live show which can be heard at http://www.atomsmotion.com/weirdmedicine.htm . It's about half-way through, during the Earl Douglas segment.

RoseBlood
10-16-2008, 11:54 AM
Heyy!! I've experienced this quite often although I haven't in a few months, thankfully.
It is a very odd and surreal experience and I think I've only met one other person who understood what I was talking about.

My paralysis episodes were ususally short in duration but very frightening. I feel like I have no control over my body and my heart would race as if experiencing a panic attack.

I'd wake up but unable to open my eyes no matter how hard I tried and I couldn't move my body even though I'd try to "will" my mind into moving, but the more I'd try, the harder it was to move and "escape" and it would just make it worse.

Upon "waking-up", I'd always "see" a big dark shadowy-cloud at the foot of my bed. Obviously it was in my mind cause my eyes would be closed although I was conscious. The black cloud always seemed to get closer to me and want to attack me but I couldn't move and it always feels sooo real while it's happening. Eventually I would be able to move and open my eyes but it would take me a while to relax enough to go back to sleep as my heart races and I'm always afraid I'll experience it again when I go back to sleep.

Melrapuo
10-16-2008, 12:08 PM
I've experienced this about 5 times, all which were at my ex's apartment. Pretty much, I'd wake up and be able to stare at the ceiling, but only move my eyes (I'd assume I was still dreaming, but couldn't move). Tried to talk, or make any sound at all, and wouldn't be able to do a thing.

There was one night where I had it happen about 4-5 times in a row (kinda like dreaming within a dream within a dream...etc). It's a very terrifying feeling. After experiencing it so much though, you tend to recognize it kinda quickly and calm yourself down.

RoseBlood
10-16-2008, 12:14 PM
After experiencing it so much though, you tend to recognize it kinda quickly and calm yourself down.

Exactly.. I'm familiar with it when it happens and know that if I can just move, it'll be over.. even so, it's still scarey.

patsopinion
10-16-2008, 01:15 PM
.

http://fuzzmartin.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/eko_smoke.jpg

GreatAmericanZero
10-16-2008, 01:24 PM
i was having sleep paralysis every couple of weeks for awhile. its so fucked up


for some reason, i haven't had it in months. don't know why

DarkHippie
10-16-2008, 02:21 PM
This happens to me every couple of months. Once you know what is happening, it ceases to be terrorfying and is just annoying

Sleeves
10-16-2008, 02:31 PM
Wow. I never knew what this was.

I started experiencing these when I was 13 or so. To me it began with this huge vertiginous feeling of falling. And then I'd sort of half wake up, feel myself lying there in bed, but unable to move, while still have the falling sensation.

It would take this giant lurch in order to break free of this. It is terrifying because you can't tell if you'll regain movement again. It's like being pulled out to sea.

After a little while I learned to induce these...I'd imagine I was lying on this slowly tipping back bed...and then sort of linger in the feeling you get when you're on a swing and you tip your head back - that upside down rushing feeling.

And then I'd be locked down. Crazy. Even though it was really scary, it's also kind of cool.

Every once in a while when I can't sleep I try to induce one...but I think I'm too old...

Hello fellow paralytics!!

jetdog
10-16-2008, 02:41 PM
I used to have these episodes when I was living in my family's cottage on Cape Cod for the summer. I would be the only one there for weeks, I think this feeling of loneliness and adventure (I was an undergrad) brought them on. I would "wake up" in the middle of the night and feel that there was someone in the room, someone had broken into the house.

there is some amazing historical relevence to this phenomenon.

http://www.hiddenmeanings.com/Nightmare.jpg

patsopinion
10-16-2008, 03:45 PM
this came up in one of my class
the kid was getting it constantly

but he was seeing someone walking around in his room while it was happening
really traumatic

would happen a lot

the diagnosis was that it had something to do with a fear of people leaving him (parents had died and brother worked nights) and once the brother changed his work schedule they went away