From: Toronto Telegraph

Scientists provide fresh insights into post-sleep paralysis distress

Toronto Telegraph:

Canadian scientists have identified the factors that cause distress after sleep paralysis, a psychological phenomenon of which little was previously known, according to a study.

Sleep paralysis is a distressing phenomenon often accompanied by vivid sensory or perceptual experiences, which can include complex and disturbing hallucinations and intense fear, which is often experienced by people immediately before sleeping or waking up.

For some people, sleep paralysis is a once-in-a-lifetime experience; for others, it can be a frequent, even nightly, phenomenon, Science Daily reported.

The study, conducted by researchers James Allan Cheyne and Gordon Pennycook of the University of Waterloo in Canada, was published published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, and explores the factors associated with distress after sleep paralysis episodes.

Read the whole story: Toronto Telegraph

Comments

I have experience sleep paralysis several times. The last was just a couple of days ago. In the past I have never given them a second thought, but this was different. I experienced pain during the paralysis and long after. Can you please give me some insight into this? What made this time different? Has anyone else experienced pain?
Kathy


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