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    1. #1
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      Recurrent sleep paralysis

      Over the past couple of weeks, I've experienced a very strange issue. I'm one of those people who, on occasion, has a nightmare. When I do, I end up waking up smack-bang into sleep paralysis, complete with my own black shadow man. If it isn't completely a nightmare, just a bad dream, I might get away with waking into sleep paralysis with only extreme tingly sensations, etc, but not the tactile sensations of any malevolent entity.

      Recently, though, I've simply been waking up into sleep paralysis WITHOUT nightmares or bad dreams. I haven't been trying lucid dreaming or anything, although the other morning I did manage a degree of lucidity (I believe I may have also slipped towards mind awake and body asleep, feeling some sleep paralysis, but then I went back into the dreaming world). Only one dream has actually been unpleasant, but nothing like the bad dreams, yet alone nightmares, that normally land me in sleep paralysis. In other words, I've simply been waking up into sleep paralysis for no real reason.

      It happened this morning, and I was lucky to escape any feelings of any presence in the room with me. The two other times I care to count had someone 'messing' me around, a bit like if my mother was trying to get me up and stroking my neck gently to wake me up. It was definitely unpleasant, even though I do feel it was supposed to be my mother. The sensations of touch on my neck...oooh. But that isn't the issue, I'm fully aware of the sensations, etc, that can accompany sleep paralysis. The issue is...I'm ending up in it without having bad dreams or nightmares. It's just too often. Usually it'd be once every few or so months, most likely much longer between instances of SP, and definitely only after a nightmare. I'm wondering what might be wrong (if anything is 'wrong'). It's unnerving to say the least.

      The only thing out of place this morning was having a bit of a blocked nose, so I was a bit disorientated (I usually end up like that, uncomfortable, if a nostril is blocked). I don't really think it has much to do with it, though, considering I suffer from dry eyes, so now and then wake up with very sore, watery eyes and a blocked nose WITHOUT any SP accompanying it.

      Psst, and no, I *NEVER* remember to relax and understand it's just SP, that it cannot hurt me. I always panic (or at least dislike it a lot) and want to get out of it.
      Last edited by Kaidonni; 02-24-2010 at 03:50 PM.

    2. #2
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      If you don't have any sleep disorders, then it's probably isolated sleep paralysis.

    3. #3
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      Look up narcolepsy; you might have a case of that.
      We all live in a kind of continuous dream. When we wake, it is because something,
      some event, some pinprick even, disturbs the edges of what we have taken as reality.

      Vandermeer

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      Have questions about lucid dreaming? DM me.

    4. #4
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      No, I'm not narcoleptic. These incidents happened during the course of my normal sleep cycle, mainly later than they normally would.
      Last edited by Kaidonni; 03-01-2010 at 08:08 PM.

    5. #5
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      I was terrified of SP for years.

      I used to think it was demons... yeah. ANYWAY.

      The best thing to do is to lie down and imagine yourself in SP. Tell yourself, "this is just sleep paralysis. I am fine." Then, just breathe deeply. Do this every night before you go to sleep for a month.
      ya gwan fok wid de Baron? ye gotta nodda ting comin. (Formerly known as Baking Nomad.)

    6. #6
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      Quote Originally Posted by Kaidonni View Post
      No, I'm not narcoleptic. These incidents happened during the course of my normal sleep cycle, mainly later than they normally would.
      Thats why I was saying it could be Isolated Sleep Paralysis. All that means is the person experiences frequent amounts SP with no other sleep disorder. And i'm not talking about the people who are actively out there trying to induce it. But the people who have it happen randomly for no apparent reason.

    7. #7
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      Hello Friends......

      Recurrent isolated sleep paralysis is a parasomnia. A parasomnia involves undesired events that come along with sleep. Sleep paralysis causes you to be unable to move your body at either of the two following times:

      1. When falling asleep (hypnagogic or predormital form)
      2. When waking up from sleep (hypnopompic or postdormital form)

      Thanks

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