A friend of mine was sleeping with his back facing the wall. At one point in night, he woke up and felt that his body was pulled by something towards the wall. He tried to move and speak but he couldn't. He says that the entity stopped pulling him when it noticed that he was awake. After it stopped, my friend fell on his back laying face up. When the entity stopped, he heard something like a mouse squeak. It was blackout in his room but he thinks that the entity was staring at his face for a coupe of seconds before it left. He says that he didn't feel a sensation of fear or something uncomfortable, he didn't feel anything until the entity left his room, then he felt scared. He lives alone and says that this would be the third time he was visited by something like this.
So, what would that entity be guys? I'm thinking that he was just having a scene of sleep paralysis but, he was "pulled" in his bed. He didn't feel fear so I doubt that it would have been a demon visiting him.
At first, I say that we see this from a more mundane point of view. This seems just like your good old sleep paralysis.
If no other signs of spiritual activity show up, then that's just it. If such sleep paralysis episodes are frequent however, and among them some other symptoms are present then perhaps there is indeed something deeper behind this.
Time will tell. But most likely, it is just a bad sleep paralysis.
Re: Friend pulled by entity? By: Whiskies / Beginner
Post # 8 Nov 12, 2017
Sleep paralysis is a feeling of being conscious but unable to move. It occurs when a person passes between stages of wakefulness and sleep. During these transitions, you may be unable to move or speak for a few seconds up to a few minutes. Some people may also feel pressure or a sense of choking. Sleep paralysis may accompany other sleep disorders such as narcolepsy. Narcolepsy is an overpowering need to sleep caused by a problem with the brain's ability to regulate sleep.
Not to mention that often a person experiencing sleep paralysis will still be in a hynagogic state, that is awake but still sleeping, to be far too simplistic in the explanation.
This leads a lot of people to still be having dream-like experiences, such as seeing figures or hearing voices. If a person experiences exploding head syndrome, waking is one point at which these anomalies may also occur.
The feelings of being trapped or pinned down may also be associated with other sensations, similar to being in a dream, such as floating, falling, weightlessness, or other disorienting experiences seeming like an external influence is being exerted on the body.