Sleep Paralysis in Thailand: What Science Means for Nighttime Fears
A shadowy figure in the corner, a chest that feels pinned, and a voice that won’t come out—sleep paralysis turns dreams into a terrifying real-world encounter. New research is helping Thai readers understand why the body betrays us at night and how to respond with calm and practical care.
Recent science explains sleep paralysis as a brief glitch during the transition into or out of REM sleep. The brain wakes before the body’s natural paralysis has finished, creating a “traffic jam” that can fuel vivid, frightening hallucinations. According to experts at top research centers, these episodes are not supernatural, but a momentary miscue in brain and muscle control.