My mother is cleaning the bathroom in her sleep! Right now! What do I do? Do I just let her keep cleaning? I've heard you're not supposed to wake sleepwalkers -- is this a myth? Should I try to get her back to bed? Ack!
Well, it seems to be over. She's gone back to bed. My sister and I just went into the bathroom; she put the laundry, plunger, and rug in the bathtub. It was pretty funny.
I wish I'd clean the bathroom in my sleep.
My mother is cleaning the bathroom in her sleep!
My mother would love it if this happened to her.She's swept the floor and emptied the garbage so far...
My mother is cleaning the bathroom in her sleep! Right now! What do I do? Do I just let her keep cleaning? I've heard you're not supposed to wake sleepwalkers -- is this a myth? Should I try to get her back to bed? Ack!
I wonder if Tyler Durden (of Fight Club fame) was actually a somnambulist and not an insomniac? It would certainly make the story somewhat more interesting... and perhaps funnier.It is a fascinating behaviour. For one thing, the actions being performed by sleepwalkers are not chosen by the person performing them are they? It's behaviour void of free will. So is there any more free will when we are awake, or do we just become lucid sleepwalkers?
My mother is cleaning the bathroom in her sleep! Right now! What do I do? Do I just let her keep cleaning? I've heard you're not supposed to wake sleepwalkers -- is this a myth? Should I try to get her back to bed? Ack!
This is really strange, but I've had the very same thing happen to me too. Usually it's triggered by extreme fatigue, and the first time it happened to me was following a return from a long haul flight from New Zealand back to the UK in early 2001. I got myself into an odd body position, and suddenly awoke completely paralysed - limbs, neck, eyelids, and most scarily of all my chest, meaning I couldn't breathe by myself. I was wide awake, and could hear everything including the radio by my bedside. After about a minute I actually thought I was going to die, and despite willing myself to open my eyelids and will my arms to flail about (they didn't) I gave up and succumbed to the darkness, waiting for death. Thirty seconds later, I woke up, panting, panicky, but grateful for being alive again.The reverse can happen too. I remember once when I woke up, this didn't happen, and I was completely paralyzed. Fully awake but I couldn't move a muscle. I just lay there feeling like I had turned to stone. The most I could manage was to open my eyelids, but even that was a real struggle.
You'd think something like that would be frightening, but it wasn't. So maybe as well as paralysis, there was a block on adrenaline production too? What else could I do except force my eyelids shut again and fall asleep. Then later on, I woke up normally.
Ah yes, sleep paralysis. I've had that quite a bit. It terrified me.
I think you're actually describing a medical condition called "locked-in syndrome" whereby a patient is awake and alive and cognitive, but due to a simple defect in the brainstem (e.g. a stroke) he is unable to move at all, save small voluntary movements. Arguably the most famous sufferer of this condition was Jean-Dominique Bauby, author of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.Ah yes, sleep paralysis. I've had that quite a bit. It terrified me.
It's been suggested recently that almost half of all people who are in comas or 'vegetative states' are actually fully awake individuals, but are physically paralyzed to the point of not being able to move or communicate. It could be terrifying if you think about it, considering that some persons are in that state for years.
Medically, a persistent vegetative state implies loss of cognitive function, but admittedly its diagnosis is controversial and requires plenty of testing with EEG, head scans and their responses to physical stimuli. It can be misdiagnosed in quite a few cases, though.I've thought for some time now that brain scans of supposedly vegetative persons, could reveal signs of cognition and wakefulness. Also could be used to indicate the brain wave patterns characterising terror and agony, or happiness and peacefulness.
I think it would help carers to decide if withdrawing life support (or euthanasia) is a good or bad thing.
Medically, a persistent vegetative state implies loss of cognitive function, but admittedly its diagnosis is controversial and requires plenty of testing with EEG, head scans and their responses to physical stimuli. It can be misdiagnosed in quite a few cases, though.
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