REM atonia is experienced naturally during REM periods to prevent you from acting out your dreams. It does not occur when you go to sleep. It occurs during REM sleep, and you're usually already asleep.
Sleep paralysis is this paralysis outside of REM sleep.
And yes, SP is mainly hallucinations. The whole point is that your body is paralyzed. So no, you should not be moving around in your bed and anyone sleeping in the same bed won't really be aware of it unless you start trying to get out of it and jerking around or whatever. If your eyes are open they may notice that.
I should of phrased the question differently sorry.
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