tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6612563867390490775.post233983145708869498..comments2024-03-01T06:30:22.313+00:00Comments on Jourdemayne: Sleep Paralysis: Leave Your Comments HereUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6612563867390490775.post-86058116180477765522011-12-18T02:14:58.182+00:002011-12-18T02:14:58.182+00:00A lot of people do not believe in sleep paralysis,...A lot of people do not believe in sleep paralysis, but I know for a fact that it is real. It can be extremely scary. I started going through it in my early twenties; unable to wake up, feeling others in the room with me, hearing and feeling the movement of others. It's like crossing over into another dimension. Though I find it interesting, I'm always happy to find I'm on earth when I wake up. <br /><br />Best regards,<br />Deborah Kennedy<br />Author of: Two Kinds of ColorDeborah Kennedyhttp://www.twokindsofcolor.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6612563867390490775.post-19216567270616038782011-12-05T11:06:09.242+00:002011-12-05T11:06:09.242+00:00Came upon this blog post late, but I'd like to...Came upon this blog post late, but I'd like to leave my experiences.<br />Yes, I've had loads of instances of sleep paralysis, especially in my teenage years. I remember at least one instance of feeling a heavy male body lying on top of me and penetrating me - I think; a virgin at the time, I had just a vague idea of what was involved in sex. <br />Lots of times of waking up and being unable to move, feeling SOMETHING in the room with me.<br />Lots of interesting hypnogogic experiences as well - waking up early one morning to see football-sized spiders scuttling across the floor towards me, for instance. Or half-waking to see the bedroom wall had disappeared, revealing strange other-wordly landscapes. Or seeing crowds of shadowy figures walking through the room, whispering unintelligbly, sometimes hissing at me as well.<br />Luckily I was the bookish sort; when I started having these experiences I immediately went to the library, started reading up on sleep and dreaming and quickly realised that this was a normal and explicable phenomena. After that, I regarded them as a form of free entertainment!<br />Alas, they trailed off and stopped when I was in my forties - when menopause started hitting - and I've not experienced any for years now.Mrs Grimblehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13144324075681694482noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6612563867390490775.post-54469240813838513532011-11-03T00:09:37.794+00:002011-11-03T00:09:37.794+00:00Never had sleep paralysis, never ever had (or at l...Never had sleep paralysis, never ever had (or at least woken up and remembered) a dream or nightmare in my 50 odd years of life. Don't really even have a clue as to what people mean when they say they have had a dream. <br /><br />I am not superstitous or religious and never have been - I have often wondered whether this is all connected.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com