When Sleep Fights Back: My Battle With Sleep Paralysis

I honestly can’t remember when it started, this strange, terrifying thing. All I know is, sometimes I’d "wake up" and not be able to move a single muscle. I’d be fully conscious. I could hear sounds around me, even feel the breeze from the window. But my body? Completely unresponsive. It's as if someone pressed the pause button and forgot to hit play.
And then came the drama. One time, it felt like someone was standing at the edge of my bed. Another time, I was sure I was falling from a skyscraper. My heart would race, my breath stuck somewhere between my chest and my throat. I wanted to scream. Nothing came out. If Nollywood ever needs a horror scene, I’ve got real-life inspiration.
At first, I thought it was just a nightmare. Then it became regular. Exam season made it worse. Stress plus no sleep? That’s the devil’s combo. And when I finally told my parents, it sounded too bizarre. I could tell they were trying not to laugh. So I shut up and kept suffering in silence.
But I knew something was off. One day, I went on a detective mission and started researching my symptoms. That’s when I found it: Sleep Paralysis. The name alone gave me peace. I wasn’t crazy. I wasn’t under spiritual attack. It had a name. A reason.

Turns out, it happens when your brain wakes up before your body does. Most times, it’s caused by......you guessed right.... stress, poor sleep habits, or sleep deprivation. So basically, me.
Since then, I’ve been more intentional about rest. I try not to joke with sleep anymore. Because if sleep is sweet, then sleep paralysis is its wicked cousin.
Now I’m curious: have you ever experienced something like this? That creepy, in-between state where you're stuck inside your body?
Let’s talk about it. And maybe, just maybe, take that nap today instead of doom-scrolling for another hour. Your body and your dreams deserve better.
That is why it is good to have rest
Yes, it's very important.
Sleep paralysis is something a lot of people have to deal with, I cannot say if gets worse but try and put it to a stop.
Yes, thank alot.
Often what you think about during the day appears in your dreams at night. Sometimes the opposite can happen, like falling from a height, which often happens to me, and these dreams cannot be controlled.
Hmmmmm, so true.
When I first experienced sleep paralysis, I ran to church, until I made my research too via Google, I really it's wasn't spiritual.
It's a scary experience though, very scary.
yeah very scary.