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| | Notices | Welcome to PTSD Forum. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a life threatening, debilitating disorder that can break down a sufferer’s body through anxiety and stress. Further it poses a significant suicide risk resulting from the brains neurological imbalance and chemical depression. Sufferers often live in denial, thus this community is aimed at helping PTSD sufferers help themselves through others experiences, guidance and education. We are here for the sufferer, spouse and families surrounding PTSD. Spouses and family are too often forgotten in this equation, and often they receive all the worst that PTSD has to offer. If you're involved in any way with PTSD, get registered and help yourself now. Non-active members will eventually be deleted. If you are not a sufferer, carer or someone within the mental health industry, and active, then there is little reason for you to be a member of this forum. Non-active members with zero posts are deleted periodically during the year. |  | | 
30-01-2007, 04:35 AM
|  | | | Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 281
| | Waking Myself Up To Escape a Bad Dream Usually an hour or two after I fall asleep, I found myself waking up staring ahead before going back to sleep again. Just seconds of spontaneous act, me awaken suddenly, intense staring ahead before falling back into my sleep immediately. Not sure either whether am I truly awake at that moment, only found myself very alert for that few awaking seconds before snapping back to deep sleep. And this has been happening almost every night for some weeks now. In the past, it did occur once in a while but not for this lengthy period as what I am experiencing lately.
And Yesterday, I was not awakening staring but by a bad dream instead, I couldn’t remember the dream but I remembered feeling extremely helpless trying to escape from the dream. Me wanting to set myself free badly. I remembered telling myself to wake up knowing it’s only another bad dream of mine. I managed to wake myself up after some struggled, and immediately I looked for hubby who was sleeping far at the other end of the bed; I gripped and held his hand tightly in mine.
Just wondering is this normal as sometimes, I always try to wake myself up from a bad dream when it went horribly intense. I remembered my grandma found me slapping myself in my sleep when I was kid because I wanted to escape from the horrible dream I was in and wanted it to stop badly, and knewing that I’ll be ok if I woke up from it. I tried to wake up from my sleep then but my body was not responding and I was still trapped in the dream. So I tried to slap myself awake instead but still I could not wake myself up, not until my grandma shook my body, asking me why was I slapping myself in my sleep? | 
30-01-2007, 05:25 AM
|  | | | Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: T. Bay, Ontario Canada
Posts: 3,231
| | I do the whole wide awake for ten seconds then fall into a coma most of my sleeping. I also attempt to wake myself up from nightmares, although I've never slapped myself.
I think this is normal, for me anyways, as I've had this sleeping pattern since I was little.
bec | 
30-01-2007, 08:33 AM
| | | | Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: London, UK
Posts: 6
| | The bad dreams are the worst(!), and I unfortunately don't think I can be of much help. :( Congratulations to you though, and to anyone who is able to realize their dreaming enough to get out of it!!
I'm too stuck in the nightmare to realize that it's a dream and that it's happening over and over and is not real. Unless someone awakes me seeing that I'm in a cold sweat or something noticeable, then the dream always ends before I'm able to wake. I'm known for sleeping through any alarm while having a nightmare!
So to answer your question, I'm not sure if it's normal, but I think it's a start, even if you've always had trouble getting yourself out of it. Some of us don't know we're dreaming! | 
30-01-2007, 09:38 AM
|  | | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Oranjestad, Aruba
Posts: 2,305
| | I usually can't wake myself up, so I think normal or not, it's a great asset to be able to wake yourself. It sounds kind of like lucid dreaming, where you have some control over your dreams. Overall I think it's a positive thing. | 
30-01-2007, 12:21 PM
|  | | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Maryland, US
Posts: 292
| | I have had experiences where I am in two layers of dreams/nightmares. I will be dreaming and wake myself up only to find myself still dreaming then I wake up for real freaked out. I don't know about "normal" but nightmares (as we know) and issues with sleep/waking up are common for PTSD sufferers. | 
30-01-2007, 06:55 PM
|  | | | Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 281
| | Ok let me clarify a bit here, sometimes I managed to wake myself up during a bad dream (not always) but I don't remember any attempt to wake up from my nightmares. I only wanted to escape from those bad dreams and usually I don't remember the content of the dream besides trying to escape badly. As for my nightmares, usually related directly to my trauma day, replication of it and I'll be spontaneously awaken at its peak and I can remember every details of it. Usually bad dreams are not as terrify as my nightmares. | 
31-01-2007, 06:15 AM
|  | | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 1,948
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Midnite I remembered telling myself to wake up knowing it’s only another bad dream of mine. I managed to wake myself up...
Just wondering is this normal... | Midnite, glad you're awake now. Nightmares or bad dreams...they're frightening...different degree's, different intensities, but with all they suck. Just a short time ago I awoke up from a bad dream, that was getting worse. I woke for a moment, layed there, stared and boom....just as fast as I awoke I was asleep again. Over and over, I was convincing I had woken and gotten up and for certain and what I was seeing and experiencing was real. I did finally wake up. But the things I saw having done so, well...they weren't so cool...
...thought I saw a full black, body bag lying alongside my deck in backyard til I discovered it was patches of snow.
With PTSD so much surrounding bad dreams and nightmares is normal...normal for PTSD. Absolutely! And, it doesn't always stay the same either. Back in 94' I had the worse dream ever in my entire life...so terrorfying, bizarre and unusual that even after truly awake, I must have been hallucinating or something...it was as if I could hear from somewhere surrounding me an invisible spirit telling me to go committ murder within that house.
Well!..... we get through it, And from somewhere strength comes...I suppose having PTSD then and choral hydrate for sleep evenings then, had something to do with perhaps hallacinating.
This whole PTSD sucks, and if you can and will in over time, find your way past and through it all I say go for Midnite...go for it! | 
31-01-2007, 11:26 AM
|  | | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Tampa, Florida
Posts: 2,208
| | I have a question that goes along with this thread. Yesterday, I was determined to relax as it had be a bit of a rough day. I took a hot bath, climbed into some warm PJ's and got into my recliner under a blanket for a small nap.
I was asleep for about an hour when I woke up. What woke me up was the fact that my heart was beating fast and my anxiety was raised. I've never woken up like that. My first thought when I awake enough to have one was 'My heart shouldn't be beating fast...I've been asleep and relaxed'. I was scared to go to sleep last night for the first time in my life because I didn't want to wake up like this again.
I don't know if I was dreaming (I don't remember my dreams) or what.
Has anyone ever woken up like this before? Is this another new, fun PTSD thing I get to deal with now?  | 
31-01-2007, 03:51 PM
|  | | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 1,948
| | I've woken up like that many, many times. For that matter I think I do more often than not. Marlene, don't be discouraged though bc healing from the trauma of PTSD does exists. And, I believe so does miracles. And, I'm one whos has lived far too long with unknown, untreated and uncontrolled PTSD and trauma, (not all do), it doesn't have to be this way for many, and with the results of healing comes some great relief from symptoms. This I know is true, but now I have a question. Can thouroughly healing our trauma completely evaporate all PTSD symptoms, (if we're managing and controlling our PTSD)? Or is what I put in parenthesis, the answer? What's what? | 
31-01-2007, 03:58 PM
|  | | | Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 281
| | Hi Marlene,
Whenever I am shattered by a provoking incident while sleeping, I’ll be awakening many times during the following nights with a racing heartbeat. Its beating so fast usually made me feel like fainting. At some point, worrying it may give way and stop beating totally. I know there is nothing to fear as my home is safe and hubby is with me but I just can’t help but feeling terrified. I got so carried away by my physical responses; making my mind thinks the fear is real and I may collapse. At the end, exhaustion will put me back to sleep. | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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