The concept of sleep paralysis is not necessarily a "concept" but a reality. I have made this happen countless times during most of the past 20 years. What constitutes this "concept" and how it will happen. I think that it alone is not enough, I truly believe that more people will be interested in knowing what this situation is. A condition known as sleep paralysis is defined as the ability to move a person's limbs, torso and head, even when fully awake.
Sleep paralysis is a terrible, confused sleep experience. When sleep phlegm occurs, you wake up from sleep, you can see that you can neither move nor talk. Sleep paralysis is a symptom associated with several other sleep disorders including narcolepsy, sleep apnea, and REM sleep behavior disorder. It also occurs due to sleep deprivation or drug side effects. Sleep paralysis occurs when you wake up from sleep while REM sleeps. In Lem, the body is mainly paralyzed, and the temporary condition is called Rem Remitonia. This temporary paralysis helps to prevent the body from reacting to vivid dreams that often occur during REM sleep. Your body can still paralyze when you wake up during the REM sleep stage, rather than switching to a lighter stage of sleep than REM sleep. After waking up, sleep paralysis usually lasts from a few seconds to a minute or two.
Sleep scientists believe that sleep paralysis can occur if REM sleep or other phases of sleep migration fail. Phlegm that is usually confined to REM sleep may be overflowing to other stages of sleep - if you awaken, you will know that your body is paralyzed and that you move or talk You can see that you can not. Sleep paralysis may also include hallucinations. People often explain that there are ghosts in the room, and the feelings of fear and sin. These hallucinations may include strange sounds and smells, as well as feelings of falling and flying. Sleep paralysis does not affect the breathing mechanism, but people sometimes feel breathing difficult and often feel more pressure on the chest. Especially when you first appeared, that experience may be terrible.
Sleep paralysis involves several types of hallucinations. There are intruders in the room, there are incubators, floating feeling and so on. The neurological hypothesis is that, in sleep paralysis, usually a mechanism that adjusts body movements to provide position information of the body works and there is no actual movement, which causes a floating sensation. Advanced alertness of the midbrain can further lead to hallucinations. More specifically, when an individual awakens and becomes vulnerable, emergency response is started in the brain. This helplessness can strengthen response to the threat far beyond the typical level of normal dreams. This explains why this vision during sleep paralysis is so vivid.