Vicky
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It can seem like you'd want to call it an OBE, but night terrors are not the same thing, no. What you describe sounds like night terrors. They seem to run in the family. I had them frequently growing up, and even a few as an adult. My son had them too, from the age of about 1.5 but he fortunately grew out of them very quickly.
They happen in the deepest stage of sleep and to the person having it, what you experience seems just as real as real life. You cannot tell the difference. The person seems to be awake, and to them they think they are awake and think that what they experience is real reailty. But anything and everything is complete terror and it just grows. If you try to comfort them, they see you as something hideous.
I tell my kids not to ever, ever, ever touch me while I'm sleeping. If they need me they have to knock or call my name, but never touch me. In that deep stage of sleep, just being touched can bring on a night terror.
One example when I was about 19, I was living with my boyfriend and woke in the middle of the night. I was frightened, not knowing why, and got out of bed. When I pulled the covers back, there was a pool of blood in the bed under me. I got out of bed and screamed. My boyfriend got up and asked what was wrong and I showed him the blood and he said there wasn't anything there. I even touched it and had blood all over me, but he tried to reassure me there wasn't any blood. I was shaking and crying and could not understand why he couldn't see the blood. So far, this is how the experience went for the both of us. However, then it changed for me. After a couple minutes in my experience, he turned into a some kind of half human half creature. He had sores all over him and he began to talk mean, act like he was going to kill me, etc. But in reality, he was still trying to comfort me and reassure me I was only dreaming. In my experience, I tried to convince HIM there was something wrong with HIM! Finally I did wake up to normal consciousness while still standing there. All of a sudden he was back to normal, and the blood was gone. The worst feeling in the world was waking up at that moment, because there was absolutely NO change in my consciousness whatsoever.
Usually when you wake up from a dream, your brain goes through the changes in consciousness, however waking from a night terror is as if nothing has changed. Just one moment to the next you suddenly aren't seeing all the hideous things you were just seeing a moment ago. You feel like, "What is happening to me? Am I going crazy?" It's a very scary thing.
I think my experience was extreme though. I know that usually the person having the night terror will transition into another sleep stage and not remember much of what was going on. For kids, it seems easy for this to happen, but for the parents trying to comfort them, it is hard to give comfort when your child is terrified of you. My advice is just to try and soothe them, hug them, or wake them as quickly as possible. They will usually awaken or just fall back to regular sleep.
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