Question:
Morning vision/hallucination?
Pugman
2008-05-07 11:58:56 UTC
Does anyone else occasionally see things in the morning? Like, you want something to drink in the morning and you see a gatorade bottle on your dresser and you reach for it and your hand like, goes through it and then you freak out and then you realize its not really there and then it fades away... that happened to me this morning and im wondering if that happens to anyone else... or if anyone knows what thats called, stuff like that has always happened to me in the mornings since i was little.
Three answers:
Aria T
2008-05-07 14:47:35 UTC
I investigated your experience by searching through the International Classification of Sleep Disorders online, but I really couldn't find anything that showed your hallucination as a symptom. I'll give you the link for it so you can page through there and see if you can find anything like what you're experiencing.



Otherwise, my suggestion is that you may have still been lingering between sleep and wake - sometimes it takes a few minutes for your brain to become fully aware and active in the morning, and perhaps what you experienced was just that - your mind still trying to dream, your vision a bit unclear, or even just a misperception of your mind. I know there's a name for that occurence, when you think you've woken up, but instead you're still asleep and you dream about doing regular every day stuff and wake up and believe you actually did those things (I've skipped eating breakfast before because I had a dream that I ate, and when I woke up, I thought that I actually had, but it turns out, I just dreamt it all!).
cura
2016-09-07 13:34:25 UTC
Characterized via visible hallucinations, this syndrome used to be first defined in 1780, via the biologist Charles Bonnet (1720–ninety three). Although the situation used to be identified then, it's probably is going unrecognized in gift scientific train. This is due in part to the below-reporting of signs via sufferers associating hallucinations with intellectual sickness. Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) happens in individuals with visible impairment and is so much ordinary within the aged. Although the aetiology of CBS is doubtful, cognitive defects, social isolation, and sensory deprivation have all been implicated. The hallucinations include good-outlined transparent photos that don't seem to be below the sufferer's manipulate and might contain a sort of photos from functional traces and styles to elaborate scenes of fictional and non-fictional characters and locations. Images final from seconds by way of mins to hours. Patients as a rule have perception into the unreality in their revel in, even though the ones that don't is also distressed via the worry of madness. Unfortunately, there's no identified healing or cure for CBS. However, reassurance and clarification that the visions don't seem to be truly and don't symbolize intellectual sickness have optimistic healing results.
2008-05-07 12:33:43 UTC
You could be suffering from sleep paralysis.



Check this site out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_paralysis


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