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Sleep Paralysis: What It Is and How to Stop It (2026 Guide)

Experience sleep paralysis? Learn what causes it, why it happens, and proven techniques to prevent and stop sleep paralysis episodes.

Sleep Paralysis: What It Is, Why It Happens, and How to Stop It (2026)

Waking up unable to move, with a heavy presence in the room, fully conscious but completely frozen — sleep paralysis is one of the most frightening sleep experiences a person can have. Yet it is also one of the most misunderstood. Here is everything you need to know.

What Is Sleep Paralysis?

Sleep paralysis is a temporary inability to move or speak that occurs either when falling asleep (hypnagogic) or waking up (hypnopompic). It typically lasts between a few seconds and two minutes, though it can feel much longer. During an episode, the person is fully conscious and aware but cannot move any voluntary muscles.

It is estimated that 7.6% of the general population experiences sleep paralysis at least once, with higher rates among students (28.3%) and psychiatric patients (31.9%).

What Causes Sleep Paralysis?

The Science: REM Atonia

During REM sleep, your brain paralyzes your voluntary muscles to prevent you from physically acting out your dreams — a mechanism called REM atonia. Sleep paralysis occurs when this paralysis persists as you transition to wakefulness. Your brain wakes up, but the "muscle switch" has not yet turned off.

Common Triggers

  • Irregular sleep schedule — shift workers and jet-lagged travelers are at higher risk
  • Sleep deprivation — sleeping fewer than 6 hours significantly raises risk
  • Sleeping on your back — supine position is strongly associated with episodes
  • High stress or anxiety — activates the sympathetic nervous system
  • Narcolepsy — sleep paralysis is a classic symptom
  • Sleep apnea — disrupted sleep architecture increases risk
  • Substance use — alcohol and certain medications interfere with REM cycles

The Hallucinations: Why They Happen

Up to 75% of sleep paralysis episodes involve hallucinations. These fall into three categories:

Intruder hallucinations — the sense of a threatening presence in the room. This is caused by hyperactivation of the amygdala (the brain's threat-detection center) while the prefrontal cortex is still waking up.

Incubus hallucinations — a heavy pressure on the chest, difficulty breathing, sensation of being held down. Caused by awareness of restricted breathing during REM and the inability to move.

Vestibular-motor hallucinations — floating, flying, or out-of-body sensations. These are actually considered pleasant by many experiencers.

Sleep Paralysis in Different Cultures

This experience has generated ghost stories worldwide:

  • "The Old Hag" (Newfoundland) — a witch sitting on the sleeper's chest
  • "Kanashibari" (Japan) — being bound by supernatural rope
  • "Jinn" (Islamic culture) — a spirit sitting on or possessing the sleeper
  • "The Incubus/Succubus" (Medieval Europe) — a demon causing the pressure

These cultural interpretations share a striking similarity: a malevolent presence pressing down on the chest. They all describe the same neurological event.

Islamic Perspective on Sleep Paralysis

In Islamic tradition, unexplained sleep disturbances are often attributed to jinn or Shaytan. The recommended response includes:

  • Reciting Ayat al-Kursi (Quran 2:255) before sleep
  • Reciting the three Quls (Al-Ikhlas, Al-Falaq, An-Nas)
  • Sleeping in a state of wudu (ritual purity)
  • Seeking refuge in Allah: "A'udhu billahi min ash-Shaytan ir-rajeem"

Whether one interprets sleep paralysis spiritually or neurologically, these practices also reduce anxiety and promote calmer sleep, which directly reduces episodes.

How to Stop Sleep Paralysis During an Episode

When an episode begins, the instinct is to panic and fight — but this prolongs it. Instead:

  1. Stay calm — remind yourself this is temporary and physiologically harmless
  2. Focus on small movements — try wiggling a toe or finger rather than the whole body
  3. Control your breathing — slow, deliberate breaths reduce the sense of suffocation
  4. Move your eyes — eye muscles are not paralyzed; moving them can help break the episode
  5. Do not fight — relaxing into the paralysis often ends it faster

How to Prevent Sleep Paralysis

  • Consistent sleep schedule — same wake time every day, even weekends
  • Sleep 7-9 hours nightly — deprivation is the most common trigger
  • Avoid back sleeping — try sleeping on your side; a pillow behind your back can help
  • Reduce stress — meditation, exercise, and journaling all reduce episode frequency
  • Limit alcohol and caffeine — especially within 4 hours of bedtime
  • Create a sleep sanctuary — dark, cool, quiet, screen-free

When to See a Doctor

Consult a sleep specialist if episodes occur more than once a week, are accompanied by excessive daytime sleepiness (possible narcolepsy), or cause significant anxiety or avoidance of sleep. Effective treatments include CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia) and, in severe cases, REM-suppressing medications.

Resources

Sleep paralysis is frightening but manageable. Understanding the science removes much of the terror — and simple lifestyle changes can dramatically reduce how often it happens.

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