The weirdest dream I ever had was when I dreamed I was a spy, rewiring a fuse box in a mansion, when the fuse box started to blink and beep. I woke up to find that my alarm was the beeping.
i keep dreaming that i forgot.. to finish a class in college.. or take some exam..
this dream comes up .. a few times a year.. really stresses me out.
when i wake up.. takes me a few secs to confirm i am NOT in college anymore.
yeah.. i finished college dregree over 20 yrs ago.
The weirdest dream I ever had was when I dreamed I was a spy, rewiring a fuse box in a mansion, when the fuse box started to blink and beep. I woke up to find that my alarm was the beeping.
No, not that I recall. But I've had tons of recurring dreams about aircraft crashing. It's usually a helicopter, but sometimes a plane, and it's always the same--it's flying low in the sky, then there's an explosion or the engines sputter, and I know it's going to crash, and it usually comes right at me. I can see it getting really big as it approaches. Very scary.Anyone else have the "meteor dream"? I have ran a across a couple people who have had the same similar one and often wonder if its widespread or not.
It wa a few years ago, but basically was looking at the sky, then noticed shooting stars, and there became hundreds of them (kinda like braveheart with all the arrows, but meteors). And you can actually feel the heat as they land? theres more to it than that, but thats a rough outline.
ever been in a nightmare ..
the realize that you are dreaming.. must be a dream..
try to wake up...
but never do!!!! awwwwww (
That's sleep paralysis. It's a normal part of REM sleep, but can continue after you wake up--and it's scary.there is a thing vietnamese call... translated: "ghosts hold you down" when you know you are a sleep.. having a nightmare.. want to wake up. you can hear and maybe see around you. But you can not move any muscles.
this happens to me a few times...
and for me to get out of it.. i have to relax..
and concentrate to move 1 finger! then i can wake up.
Such experiences are caused by what's known as sleep paralysis (or SP), a phenomenon that occurs every night in the typical sleeper to prevent him or her from acting out dreams during REM sleep (more on this below). When this paralysis outlasts sleep, as it sometimes can, you get instances like those described above. Waking up to SP can be an extraordinarily frightening situation, as you might know from personal experience or can tell from the personal stories on this page, but rest assured that it is not uncommon and typically not a cause for too much concern.
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