• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




    View Poll Results: Do you have night terrors?

    Voters
    54. You may not vote on this poll
    • Yes, I've had one once or twice

      23 42.59%
    • Yes, I have them all the time

      5 9.26%
    • No...

      26 48.15%
    Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 1 2
    Results 26 to 30 of 30
    Like Tree3Likes

    Thread: Do you have night terrors?

    1. #26
      Seldom Seen Kid Achievements:
      1000 Hall Points Veteran First Class
      Rezzo's Avatar
      Join Date
      Jan 2010
      LD Count
      Ummm, a lot
      Gender
      Location
      London
      Posts
      156
      Likes
      7
      I've definitely woken up sweaty and with an increased heart rate, but I'm pretty sure that was because I forgot to switch the heating off.

    2. #27
      Member
      Join Date
      Jan 2010
      Posts
      24
      Likes
      0
      I first found out of these after my cousin(12) rose up sitting on his bed screaming.
      Then i was like 8< and yelled what crap is he doing.
      Then my cousin watched at me like he had seen a ghost and fell back to bed.
      Same thing happened two hours later but my cousin had ran out of the hotel already when i was able to get up.
      Though my father chased him down outside and brought him back

    3. #28
      The Morph Freemorph's Avatar
      Join Date
      Oct 2009
      Gender
      Location
      Central Florida
      Posts
      150
      Likes
      3
      I can't exactly explain if what happens to me is night terrors. But when I was 12 to like 14 I would wake up screaming, sweating, running out of the room and only being aware of where I am when I get into the hall thinking "how the $@%^ did I get here?" But also I get alot of Hypnopompic Hallucinations (think I spelt that first part wrong) Where I'll randomly wake up BUT not wake up with a beating heart, sweats, or anything.. Then I see images of random things, the most complex shapes and as soon as I see them BAM It scares the crap out of me and I really can't explain why, I know I'm definitely not afraid of a little shape. Idk what this is, maybe it's a mix. Lack of sleep + all this stuff. Scary!

    4. #29
      Banned
      Join Date
      Apr 2010
      Gender
      Posts
      18
      Likes
      3
      Hello friends

      Although night terrors can occur anytime in a persons life span, the most common is reported in children between the ages of three and five. (However more recent studies have turned up showing that many adults as well as children as young as six months experience night terrors on a weekly basis.) Night terrors usually occur fifteen minutes to one hour after going to sleep. I personally experience mine at just about the 45 minute mark. The longer the person is in NREM (the stages before REM) before the night terror strikes, the more petrified they will be when it occurs. Keep in mind though not everyone falls to sleep in the same amount of time as others. This makes a sleep study about the only way of determining what stage of sleep you are in when these events occur.
      Night terrors have been shown to appear in stage 4 of sleep. This is just one thing that separates them from nightmares which can occur anytime in sleep. It is possible to make a night terror occur in some people, simply by touching or awakening them during stage 4 of sleep. Why night terrors occur is still a mystery. The mind is supposed to be practically void during the deeper stages of sleep. Most sufferers will awake gasping, moaning, crying but more often screaming.

      Breathing rapidly they will sit up in bed with a wide eyed terror filled stare. This panic will often last anywhere from five to twenty minutes. I find the most amazing aspect of night terrors is that it generates a heart rate of 160 to 170 beats per minute. This is much faster than the normal heart rate that can be attained under most stressful circumstances.
      Some things that can help bring out a night terror are stress, medications that affect the brain, (It is hard to list exactly which ones) being over-tired or eating a heavy meal before going to bed. Combining all of the above I can usually guarantee an occurrence for myself. Many different medical ailments contribute to the frequency of Night Terrors. (Once again to many and to hard to list, Please do not e-mail me to have one added.) The listed items DO NOT cause night terrors, they just seem to put your body into the state where a night terror can manifest itself. People without night terrors will not have a night terror just by trying the above.

      Thanks for all friends
      Have a nice day

    5. #30
      Banned
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Posts
      4
      Likes
      0
      Lately I've been waking up in the night, sometimes a few times in one night, for no reason really. Does that affect what stage of sleep I'm in at certain times during the night? As far as these dreams go, I usally wake up from them in the early morning ...so it''s a few hours after I've fallen asleep.Night terrors/Nightmares are a part of Bi-Polar. I take Klonopin for sleeping purposes because Seroquel hits me like a mack truck. Plus my legs get all twitchy.

    Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 1 2

    Bookmarks

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •