The early morning on a cool spring day, the sky is clear and the breeze is blowing dandelion. As the sun rises, its warm light gently spreads over the hills covered with flowers. Butterflies gently kiss each flower, so they are scattered on the green lawn. The air is fresh and full of birds and cock called in the morning. These are images that Qi Li experienced vividly in her mind. These are the images she dreamed of and did not wake up for at least several hours.
People with narcolepsy may experience realistic dreams when they fall asleep or wake up. The hallucination of falling asleep is called hypnotism; when you wake up, hypnotism. These hallucinations can be experienced as a multifaceted sensation and feel very realistic. People with narcolepsy usually shift directly from REM to REM sleep. This may be the basis of this experience. Memory loss, carelessness and automatic behavior leads to psychosocial barriers, affecting interpersonal relationships, academic achievement, occupational success and leisure activities. Driving is particularly challenging for those experiencing severe excessive daytime sleepiness. In addition, as all activities and practices do not match the types of schedules that Narcolepsy may need, diagnosis of narcolepsy may affect education and career choices.
Narcolepsy is a neurological disorder affecting sleep and wakefulness control. People with narcolepsy experience excessive daytime sleepiness and daytime intermittent and uncontrollable sleep events. These sudden sleep attacks can occur during any day of the day. During a typical sleep cycle, we first enter the early stages of sleep, then enter a deeper sleep phase, and eventually enter (REM) sleep on (about 90 minutes later) sleep. For those suffering from narcolepsy, REM sleep occurs almost instantaneously during the sleep cycle and occurs regularly as it wakes up. During REM sleep, we can experience dreams and muscle paralysis - this explains some of the symptoms of narcolepsy