When you hit the sack tonight, get ready for sex dreams, exploding heads, and more!
1. Feeling like you're falling.
Also known as a hypnagogic jerk, it tends to
happen as you're falling asleep. Typically when you dream, your body is
paralyzed, but sometimes you can start dreaming before your body is on
"off" mode. With hypnagogic jerks, you might act out a dream like falling
off a cliff, falling from the sky, or tripping, says W. Christopher Winter,
M.D., Men's Health sleep advisor and medical director of
the sleep center at Martha Jefferson Hospital in Virginia. Why the falling?
Researchers aren't sure. "It's more likely to happen when you're
overtired, sleep-deprived, or stressed," Dr. Winter says. "And your
brain enters into sleep cycles more aggressively, but your body hasn't caught
up."
2. Sleep
paralysis.
You start to wake up in the
morning and realize you can't move a muscle or speak. It can last from several
seconds to several minutes, and it's completely terrifying. Essentially, it's
the opposite of what happens with hypnagogic jerks, where your brain wakes up
before the paralysis that accompanies deep sleep goes away, Dr. Winter says.
"You may feel like you can't breathe. Many people describe it as an
elephant sitting on their chest. That's because all of the muscles that control
your breathing except for the diaphragm are still paralyzed."
3. Sleepwalking.
Most sleep-related behaviors
are harmless. But sleepwalking can be a dangerous issue, since you can trip,
walk into something, leave your house, and even get behind the wheel.
"With sleepwalking, you're coming out of sleep just enough for your body
to move, but not enough for your brain to be awake," says Dr. Winter.
That's why you probably have no recollection of your late-night jaunts. The
prescription sleep-aid Ambien has been linked to some of the more bizarre
sleepwalking incidents including cooking, binge eating, and driving while
zonked out. That's because even if you wake up during the night, the drug keeps
your brain sedated so you're still in an unconscious state, Dr. Winter says. If
you experience unusual or dangerous nighttime antics and pop the sleeping pill,
talk to your doctor about switching prescriptions.
4. Sleep-talking.
About 5 percent of adults yap
in their sleep, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Most
pillow-talk sessions last only about 30 seconds on average. "It often
happens within the first hour or two of sleep when your body is entering into
deep stages of sleep, but there's still enough muscle tone to produce sounds or
movements that may accompany dreams," says Dr. Winter.
5. Recurring
dreams.
"Dreaming is a way for
your brain to sort out things it needs to reevaluate and process before it can
file them away as memories," Dr. Winter says. "Recurring dreams may
happen with unresolved psychological issues your brain is trying to sort
out." Oftentimes, recurring dreams are based partly in reality. "If
you were robbed at the grocery store, you might replay that over and over
during sleep until you come to grips with it—whereas if you went to the store
to get bread and milk, your brain would process it right away and move
on," Dr. Winter adds.
6. Sleep
sex.
You're not the only one who has
woken up mid-act. In a study of more than 800 patients at a sleep disorders
center, about 8 percent of patients reported incidents of sexsomnia—initiating
sex with a partner while asleep, according to researchers at the University
Health Network in Toronto. "In my experience working with patients, the
attitudes, behaviors, and things people may say during sleep sex are often very
different from what they'd do and say when fully awake," Dr. Winter says.
As a parasomnia, the phenomenon is similar to sleepwalking—you're coming partly out of deep sleep enough that you can move and possibly talk, but your brain isn't awake enough to be fully conscious. "Many people have a vague recollection of it happening during the night or they wake up during sex," says Dr. Winter. "It's possible you may have been dreaming about sex or perhaps you went to bed with the urge.
As a parasomnia, the phenomenon is similar to sleepwalking—you're coming partly out of deep sleep enough that you can move and possibly talk, but your brain isn't awake enough to be fully conscious. "Many people have a vague recollection of it happening during the night or they wake up during sex," says Dr. Winter. "It's possible you may have been dreaming about sex or perhaps you went to bed with the urge.
7. Exploding
head syndrome.
It's just as freaky as it
sounds: "All of a sudden, the person wakes up having heard a really loud
noise, like an explosion, a flash of light, or a sense that their head is
exploding," says Dr. Winter. "In reality, nothing has actually
happened." It's a type of hypnagogic jerk, similar to feeling like you're
falling: You're heading toward deep sleep, but your body hasn't achieved
paralysis yet, and your senses are still turned on.
2 comments:
mmmmm!! thats true
Nice Article in there
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