Here we get more insight into the dream state and its behavior. The
best take home here is to become mindful during such an episode.
Better still, try to gain data.
It is startling to have a childlike image pop into a demon of all
things. Where in fact does this image come from? It is not part of
the natural pantheon nor is it really something the individual
believes in.
Yet we have it represented all over through the centuries. Why not a
dog? Or anything else for that matter. This has no proper aspect in
nature, yet here we have an individual reporting it.
That is the interesting problem!
Strange Sleep
Disorder Makes People See 'Demons'
Stephanie Pappas
Date: 31 March 2013
When filmmaker Carla
MacKinnon started waking up several times a week unable to move, with
the sense that a disturbing presence was in the room with her, she
didn't call up her local ghost hunter. She got researching.
Now, that research is
becoming a short film and multiplatform art project exploring the
strange and spooky phenomenon of sleep paralysis. The film, supported
by the Wellcome Trust and set to screen at the Royal College of Arts
in London, will debut in May.
Sleep paralysis
happens when people become conscious while their muscles remain in
the ultra-relaxed state that prevents them from acting out their
dreams. The experience can be quite terrifying, with many people
hallucinating a malevolent presence nearby, or even an attacker
suffocating them. Surveys put the number of sleep paralysis sufferers
between about 5 percent and 60 percent of the population.
"I was getting
quite a lot of sleep paralysis over the summer, quite frequently, and
I became quite interested in what was happening, what medically or
scientifically, it was all about," MacKinnon said.
Her questions led her
to talk with psychologists and scientists, as well as to people who
experience the phenomenon. Myths and legends about sleep paralysis
persist all over the globe, from the incubus and succubus (male and
female demons, respectively) of European tales to a pink
dolphin-turned-nighttime seducer in Brazil. Some of the stories
MacKinnon uncovered reveal why these myths are so chilling.
Sleep stories
One man told her about
his frequent sleep paralysis episodes, during which he'd experience
extremely realistic hallucinations of a young child, skipping around
the bed and singing nursery rhymes. Sometimes, the child would
sit on his pillow and talk to him. One night, the tot asked the man a
personal question. When he refused to answer, the child
transformed into a "horrendous demon," MacKinnon
said.
For another man, who
had the sleep disorder narcolepsy (which can make sleep paralysis
more common), his dream world clashed with the real world in a
horrifying way. His sleep paralysis episodes typically included
hallucinations that someone else was in his house or his room —
he'd hear voices or banging around. One night, he awoke in a
paralyzed state and saw a figure in his room as usual. [See
MacKinnon's Artistic Images of Sleep Paralysis]
"He suddenly
realizes something is different," MacKinnon said. "He
suddenly realizes that he is in sleep paralysis, and his eyes are
open, but the person who is in the room is in his room in real life."
The figure was no
dream demon, but an actual burglar.
Myths and science of
sleep paralysis
Sleep paralysis
experiences are almost certainly behind the myths of the incubus and
succubus, demons thought have sex with unsuspecting humans in their
sleep. In many cases, MacKinnon said, the science of sleep paralysis
explains these myths. The feeling of suffocating or someone pushing
down on the chest that often occurs during sleep paralysis may be a
result of the automatic breathing pattern people fall into during
sleep. When they become conscious while still in this breathing
pattern, people may try to bring their breathing under voluntary
control, leading to the feeling of suffocating.
Add to that the
hallucinations that seem to seep in from the dream world, and it's no
surprise that interpretations lend themselves to demons, ghosts or
even alien abduction, MacKinnon said.
What's more, MacKinnon
said, sleep paralysis is more likely when your sleep is disrupted in
some way — perhaps because you've been traveling, you're too hot or
too cold, or you're sleeping in an unfamiliar or spooky place. Those
tendencies may make it more likely that a person will experience
sleep paralysis when already vulnerable to thoughts of ghosts and
ghouls.
"It's interesting
seeing how these scientific narratives and the more psychoanalytical
or psychological narratives can support each other rather than
conflict," MacKinnon said.
Since working on the
project, MacKinnon has been able to bring her own sleep paralysis
episodes under control — or at least learned to calm herself during
them. The trick, she said, is to use episodes like a form of
research, by paying attention to details like how her hands feel and
what position she's in. This sort of mindfulness tends to make
scary hallucinations blink away, she said.
"Rationalizing it
is incredibly counterintuitive," she said. "It took me a
really long time to stop believing that it was real, because it feels
so incredibly real."
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