Chuckleberryfinn
Paranormal Maven
I awoke last night in sleep paralysis with about 8 grays in my room, one of them hovering over me, saying "reces pieces." Pretty strange. I know it's just sleep paralysis, but it's still scary when that happens.
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It's even scarier when it's hairy, clawed dwarves with feces-pieces.I awoke last night in sleep paralysis with about 8 grays in my room, one of them hovering over me, saying "reces pieces." Pretty strange. I know it's just sleep paralysis, but it's still scary when that happens.
It's even scarier when it's hairy, clawed dwarves with feces-pieces.
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So you actually saw aliens?
Well, no. They weren't real aliens. Hallucinations often accompany sleep paralysis. It's not the first time it's happened, nor the second. Did the hallucinations look like grays? Yes, certainly. And they were floating in the air.
Pami, I ate chili for dinner. Yummy, very good, my own recipe. I did fall asleep listening to Vaeni and Ritzmann's interview with Dolan, not watching ET. That probably had everything to do with it.
The last time it happened, before this time, it was only two grays, as I recall, one of them standing in the background, throwing punches in the air, while the other tinkered with my head. I am not claiming that either of these incidents was actual alien abduction. It wasn't, I am not an abductee.
Well, no. They weren't real aliens. Hallucinations often accompany sleep paralysis. It's not the first time it's happened, nor the second. Did the hallucinations look like grays? Yes, certainly. And they were floating in the air.
Pami, I ate chili for dinner. Yummy, very good, my own recipe. I did fall asleep listening to Vaeni and Ritzmann's interview with Dolan, not watching ET. That probably had everything to do with it.
The last time it happened, before this time, it was only two grays, as I recall, one of them standing in the background, throwing punches in the air, while the other tinkered with my head. I am not claiming that either of these incidents was actual alien abduction. It wasn't, I am not an abductee.
The last time I experienced sleep-paralysis, about a year ago, I saw an apparition at the foot of my bed that looked like Doc from "Back To The Future," and there was a dwarfish, dark, blobby critter on the bed. It kinda sucks while it's happening, but after I get reoriented in the waking world it seems kinda cool.Well, no. They weren't real aliens. Hallucinations often accompany sleep paralysis. It's not the first time it's happened, nor the second. Did the hallucinations look like grays? Yes, certainly. And they were floating in the air.
When I've experienced sleep paralysis, I've never seen anything like Aliens or ghosts or people at all.
I DO see spiders and roaches when it happens to me, tho.
(Mostly it will usually be one spider, and it will crawl right across the bed and I end up waking my poor hubby telling him there's a spider crawling towards him, lol)
Are you bothered by spiders and roaches?
The assumption is that most people that claim to be abducted by aliens are those that are interested/afraid of the subject, which is why everyone sees more or less the same thing. Anytime someone says they were abducted from their bedroom in the middle of the night, I blame sleep paralysis or some other type of sleep disorder.
I'm highly skeptical of anybody that claims to have been abducted by aliens. I'm not calling them liars, because I don't think abductees/experiencers are lying, I just don't think that beings from another planet/dimension are doing this. I'm more inclined to think it's psychological, but that's just my opinion.
So, if I may ask question?
How does one reconcile the sometimes projected absolutism of sleep paralysis as an explanation for the phenomena with cases in which multiple witness are present, are 'non-bedroom' events, no hypnosis required, etc? Do those fall under some other catch-all explanation as well? I don't see how these views are reconciled. To go a step further, how can one believe or strongly suspect that intelligently controlled, technologically advanced aerial phenomena exist without extending it logically to that intelligence and it's likely interaction with us on a more discreet covert levels, which would logically include all venues and times of day, preferably when the taret might be in a more controllable state. It's seems like an all or nothing position.
To embrace sleep paralysis as a total explanation for the phenomena, as McNally and Clancy once again did tonight on the ABC Primetime and aptly named "Outsiders" special, isn't truly reconciled with the various scenarios outlined above. I was -not- surprised by the fact that their segment starts out with the misleading assumption that all abduction events occur while the claimant is sleeping, ergo - the sole answer is SP. All I'm saying is I feel that vibe here, understanding that this is a personal experiences post and so the OP is welcome to create any vibe they like....
Sorry for mine. Exposure to Clancy and McNally - and their smarmyness- make me very sensitive to even the faintest whiff of absolutism and the rest. However, I -am- interested in how these positions can be reconciled by some.
I certainly didn't mean to perpetuate such an attitude. Multiple witness abduction cases, not in the bedroom, where the witnesses remember the event without hypnosis clearly does not fall under sleep paralysis. I never said otherwise. Perhaps you've got an example of such a case to help clear up the confusion for others? What is a good abduction case involving several witnesses and no regressive hypnosis?
I'd say the stuff that Jeff Ritzmann has experienced and spoken openly about falls into that category. He says he can not explain what has happened to him. He doesn't believe in hypnosis as a good tool for retrieving memories, so what he talks about is stuff he actually remembers. If it's true (and I doubt he's lying), his case is really interesting and terrifying.