Ghost repelling off-grid device

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025

Комментарии • 968

  • @capq57
    @capq57 2 года назад +365

    I don't have hypnagogia, but I do have a crippling fear of stubbing my toes in the dark. A night light is an absolute must for me.

    • @mCblue79
      @mCblue79 2 года назад +18

      Toe stubbing IMHO is equivalent to childbirth pain hahaha. In saying that, I am a man so there's that. Stepping on Lego is not far behind.

    • @draketungsten74
      @draketungsten74 2 года назад +8

      My very painfully throbbing toe would agree with you.

    • @androiduberalles
      @androiduberalles 2 года назад +9

      Lmao I still remember when I accidentally kicked the sharp corner of a table leg. I sat in my bathroom thinking I was going to bleed out (totally wasn't but it was relatively speaking, a lot of blood) 😂

    • @Eduardo_Espinoza
      @Eduardo_Espinoza 2 года назад +6

      Absolute banger of a comment! 🤣

    • @Dime_Bar
      @Dime_Bar 2 года назад +7

      Health and safety says you have to wear steel toe capped boots to avoid this happening.

  • @dozer1642
    @dozer1642 2 года назад +337

    Wow. You dove quite quickly into a very intimate detail of your personal life. I have never heard of hypnagogia. I’m so absolutely interested and sympathetic at the same time. You blow my mind on such a regular basis my friend. I absolutely appreciate your content. ✌️

    • @rudimentaryganglia
      @rudimentaryganglia 2 года назад +9

      I've been having it recently and feel a bit relieved as I thought I had late manifesting schizophrenia,I hadn't heard about the geometric moving patterns thing happening before and that's what I got the first time then the second a flash of a shadow person standing over my bed a differant time

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney 2 года назад +9

      Also Hypnopompia. Hypnagogic and hypnopompic hallucinations aren't that uncommon and can just happen in the transition between awake and sleep. Possibly many have them but don't realise it. I have them occasionally.

    • @rimmersbryggeri
      @rimmersbryggeri 2 года назад +4

      It can be very uncomfortable indeed. I use opaque drapes around my sleeping area to make the contours around me that the brain fills in as, ghosts,dead children, Keifer Sutherland etc durin REM less aparent. It works most of the time.

    • @rudimentaryganglia
      @rudimentaryganglia 2 года назад +1

      @@rimmersbryggeri Keifer Sutherland.

    • @TomTwain
      @TomTwain 2 года назад +1

      Yep, I have it... had it since I was a child. Worse than just seeing apparitions, I can see the structure of my roof through the ceiling... purlins, rafters, the lot. Sometimes it can take half an hour to clear the fog of the shadowy world, and what is worse... I'm seeing it with my eyes, and not with my imagination...🤔?!

  • @Shinare73
    @Shinare73 2 года назад +130

    Oh my god, I have the fractal vividly colorful patterns. I never knew it was a named thing. It's rather disturbing and beautiful at the same time. The worst thing about it is no control over it and not being able to sleep because of it. Thanks for naming it!

    • @DaniMakes
      @DaniMakes 2 года назад +9

      totally the same boat. It looks nice, but I want to sleep, dang it!

    • @Zadster
      @Zadster 2 года назад +3

      You might want to look up Retinal Migraine on the NHS site or similar. Not usually serious, but it is good to be informed.

    • @Eduardo_Espinoza
      @Eduardo_Espinoza 2 года назад +2

      My cat must have it too, poor thing. 😢

    • @herrkulor3771
      @herrkulor3771 2 года назад +2

      I get that too when I am overtired. Like having driven 20 hours and kept myself awake with energy drinks.

    • @charlesmurphy1510
      @charlesmurphy1510 2 года назад +1

      I have often woke from hearing a loud crash or someone shouting my name sta standing next to me or from a hypnic jerk .

  • @JimGriffOne
    @JimGriffOne 2 года назад +62

    I once forced myself into a state of hypnagogia. It was quite strage. I could hear a road with cars going down it and footsteps of people right next to my bed. It's so vivid and sounds so real! I purposefully kept my eyes open to see what would happen and I saw a guy looking in through my bedroom window, staring at me. Upon fully waking up, it all faded out quite fast. So I tried to get to half-sleep again and it all started to fade back in. Really bizarre experience! I can't imagine what it would be like living with the condition. Hope it isn't too bad!

    • @perstyr
      @perstyr 2 года назад +7

      When I was sleep-deprived, I was at work and wondered what the music I could hear was, as it sounded almost familiar. I asked a colleague, who said, "What music?" and the moment she questioned it, the music vanished and I realised it was just my brain interpreting background noise. It happened a few times. Weird experience.

    • @spicesmuggler2452
      @spicesmuggler2452 2 года назад +5

      @@perstyr When i was sleep deprived, background noise sounded like radio chatter with static.

    • @NoobNoobNews
      @NoobNoobNews 2 года назад +1

      When I was driving once, I saw the highway split off and go up into the sky, exits to somewhere, and other traffic phenomenon I knew was fundamentally impossible. Worst part is it was so vivid and I felt fully awake in that moment. I knew then to pull over and take a nap. When I snapped out of that hallucination, I felt super tired. It... is weird.

    • @javidmirza4584
      @javidmirza4584 2 года назад

      I sometimes get that, for me it’s some weird tune or horn going slowly more louder and distorted

    • @earth2k66
      @earth2k66 2 года назад +1

      @@perstyr I have had similar experiences since my childhood, it starts with soothing music but suddenly a loud bang/thud wakes me up to full panic mode. Nothing changed in my room to cause the sound.
      The human brain is complex, indeed.

  • @mysock351C
    @mysock351C 2 года назад +26

    That's one thing you don't often get now, is actual, genuine darkness. As a kid I used to stay with my grandparents on the family farm, and back then there was nothing there but just the few houses that belonged to my relatives, and the rest was fields and woods. At night in the winter, the windows literally looked like they were in outer space. Just nothing beyond the panes except pure blackness, and this was in the time when a "flashlight" was just a tiny little incandescent bulb with two D-cells. If I was lucky, it gave just enough light not to smash my teeth out when outside. Lot different than now where its pretty much light out round the clock.

    • @prow7
      @prow7 2 года назад +1

      That would be amazing! For sleeping, I like absolute darkness to the point that there's no difference if my eyes are open or closed.

    • @stepheneyles2198
      @stepheneyles2198 2 года назад

      @@prow7 totally agree - I find myself waking frequently when there's street lights shining through the window...

    • @kelleemerson9510
      @kelleemerson9510 2 года назад

      I wonder if earth got more attention (👽) after lighting became 24/7?

  • @stepheneyles2198
    @stepheneyles2198 2 года назад +1

    When I saw the title I thought "What? another weird claim by an eBay seller for something simple?" but hearing your (heartfelt) explanation made me feel firstly humbled, then thankful that I don't suffer the same thing. Our brains are an amazing piece of engineering, to say the least, and we normally take them for granted. I remember having recurring nightmares as a child but thankfully they disappeared after I'd got through my teens - it must be something to do with the brain reorganising itself or whatever... Long Live simple solutions to complex problems!

  • @adriansdigitalbasement
    @adriansdigitalbasement 2 года назад +24

    Pretty neat it lasts so long. Would be amazing for camping as well, just to have a little bit of light in the tent on super dark nights.

    • @plainedgedsaw1694
      @plainedgedsaw1694 2 года назад +1

      @@YourMotherSucksCocksInHell i believe bears aren't really lured by light, they're daylight animals (i assumed that because every case of bear ripping someone apart occured at day or when victim was asleep but had food nearby)

    • @treelineresearch3387
      @treelineresearch3387 2 года назад +2

      @@YourMotherSucksCocksInHell Only thing bears seem to care about when deciding on a target to raid is smell, they'll happily strike my garbage bins in total darkness and not be perturbed in the least by the motion sensor floodlights they set off. I wouldn't really expect predatory/scavenging land animals to be particularly attracted to artificial lights since it's a recent thing in evolutionary terms and trait attraction to light is probably more likely to get you selected out of the gene pool than find a meal. Even just making a habit of eating trash isn't particularly healthy for the near-tame city proximal animals that do it.

  • @davids8481
    @davids8481 2 года назад +1

    Not to be too off topic on this channel, but your referance to hypnagogia reminds me of my first shroom experiance many decades ago. After consumption, within two hours, I vocalized my closed eye visualizations of flying over brilliant green topo maps in 3D along with many other strange colorful geometric images in my head. No doubt, watching monty pythons reruns from BBC through PBS for six hours until sun up helped with my induced hypnagogia! Great channel to watch. Thanks.

  • @SpecialDeFX
    @SpecialDeFX 2 года назад +9

    You have explained so many technical issues in so many videos so far, but I think you just opened a new term and understanding of my own world. Thank you for every video and thank you for my new understanding of the phenomenon!

  • @MrAsBBB
    @MrAsBBB 2 года назад +8

    Oh wow Clive, I am 54 and have never realised what it was. I get green swirling patterns sometimes and something like a lighthouse swirl, going round and round. I have probably every few nights where I can see all sorts of things in my room but I know I am asleep so it’s not frightening. I can even have an argument with people in my dreams “Look I know I am asleep, you are not real so why can’t you be nice. After all you are a creation of my mind.” I still get nowhere. I can now wake myself up if I don’t like the dream. Not great for my sleep patterns though. All very interesting. I also get sleep paralysis but that too I know is just how the mind works so it’s still crap but I can tell myself its just sleep paralysis when it’s happening. All the best for the New Year.

  • @easyybreezeyy
    @easyybreezeyy 2 года назад +6

    I‘ve experienced hypnogogia 3 times as a child. I kept seeing weird patterns and hearing strange noises while having this weird dizzy, buzzing feeling in my head. It was so scary, it even made me cry. I now have a name for it, thanks for sharing!

    • @earth2k66
      @earth2k66 2 года назад

      For me, the patterns and noses are soothing. The terrifying part for me is that it ends with a loud bang/thud as if something heavy moved or had fallen in my room. I used to wake up in a panic and search the entire house for the source. Now I know it's probably in my head.

  • @XxVonsoulxX
    @XxVonsoulxX 2 года назад +1

    Thank goodness I've been having a hard time with wild ghosts while off grid this has been a life saver.

  • @Netbug
    @Netbug 2 года назад +107

    Thankfully I grew out of it. I used to have sleep paralysis and would see old men and women around my bed when I was a kid. The paralysis would wear off first, then the visions would go away after a few minutes. I was definitely partially awake because I'd draw under my sheets with a flashlight while waiting it out. This was after months of just freezing in terror hoping none of them looked at me. It really didn't help that it began when we moved into a 110 year old farm house that hadn't been inhabited in 30 years, and when we moved in we found half of a gravestone in the attic. I used to sleepwalk too, and got "dragged" down the stairs once. People witnessed me running around terrified of the house collapsing around us and/or ghosts. It was an absolutely terrifying time in my life but I look back on it with fondness. Both of the terror and that farm. It was all very surreal.
    I had it happen only once since 1993. It was 2005 and I woke up sometime around 2 am and knew the feeling. I couldn't believe it was happening again. I tried moving and speaking to wake up my girlfriend but couldn't. Then I heard the loud banging sounds that preceded the people showing up. This time though, as an adult, I just got incredibly pissed off and it faded away. Hopefully that's the last of it.

    • @Lemon_Inspector
      @Lemon_Inspector 2 года назад +33

      I had a very similar experience, but it turned out to be just actual old people coming into my room and making loud noises.
      Thanks, mum.

    • @Poodleinacan
      @Poodleinacan 2 года назад +7

      The ghosts became terrified you'd go DOOM on them

    • @jacobpeters5458
      @jacobpeters5458 2 года назад

      why didn't u just try punching one of them?

    • @CrippleX89
      @CrippleX89 2 года назад +5

      I've had the same experience as a kid, also after moving into an old house (in the middle of the woods). I just thought of them as very realistic dreams and I never knew this was a thing until I read your comment! Maybe the feelings of a certain place might potentially trigger this? I don't know but it's very interesting.

    • @Curt_Sampson
      @Curt_Sampson 2 года назад +7

      This just brings up all sorts of questions. Such as, "Why is there half a gravestone in the attic?" (Well, maybe that's an easy one: "A full gravestone would have been too heavy to carry up there." Though that just begs more questions....)

  • @ethanpoole3443
    @ethanpoole3443 2 года назад +29

    Thank you, Clive, you just gave me the proper name for what I have always experienced while on the edge of the hypnotic sleep state when slowly drifting off to sleep. Never knew the proper term for such. Thankfully I never saw bodies moving about at night as a child but I would see dark shadows that my childhood brain would predictably interpret as monsters! I will also experience very lucid dreams and occasionally hear odd sounds during that time. I learned from an early age to always sleep with a nightlight as a child and at least a hint of light as an adult. That usually includes some battery backed light, whether battery powered emergency lighting or a UPS, as my entire sense of balance is visual based due to SSCDS (or SCDS, depending upon the source) and so waking up to a pitch black room in a power outage is rather dangerous for me…especially given I’m a bit of a pack rat/hoarder as well nor do I wish to step on my feline friends!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 2 года назад

      Ghost Repeller sounds like a scam to make you spend your money on something that give you a placebo effect🤣🤣🤣

  • @Convolutedtubules
    @Convolutedtubules 2 года назад +6

    When I was a teenager sometimes I could fly in my dreams, like superman or more like flappy bird lol. At first I had to learn, get the hang of it by practicing jumping onto the roof, staying in the air etc. until I got confident. It was incredibly realistic. Being able to just jump in the air and travel quickly was very cool and surreal. It happened once again a few years later, this time it was a big flight across the ocean, guided by landmarks, towards home.
    I never heard of hypnagogia, thanks for the info on that, and the nifty little bat-pow LED

  • @Skimmo23
    @Skimmo23 Год назад +1

    I built this 3 Months ago with a 120Ω resistor and it's been lit 24/7. The battery voltage has only dropped from 2.458 V to 2.437 V with the LED still being about as bright as in the beginning. It's really amazing how "much" light it can put out over such a long period of time.

  • @FlyingBystander
    @FlyingBystander 2 года назад +7

    Today I learned about Hypnagogia. In return, I wanted to say something witty and delightful, because I enjoy your channel. The best I could come up with was : "I have a pair of Hypno-Goggles."
    Which I don't, so I don't know why I thought of saying it.
    I'm going to attach one each to our puppies. 3am toilet trips are fraught with danger.

  • @Tomsonic41
    @Tomsonic41 2 года назад +1

    I am blind on the right side of my vision. Occasionally when I'm just waking up, or just falling asleep I'll have hallucinations on that side for a few seconds - things like seeing my deceased cat down the back of the bed, or a water bottle floating around in space.

  • @iamdarkyoshi
    @iamdarkyoshi 2 года назад +37

    At my job, we often need to crimp new connectors onto our test leads. I've actually found that I like the cheap single jaw crimpers with like 8 different sizes the best, you do need to crimp the conductor and the strain relief separately but I find I get the best results and they'll work on nearly any connector brand. And they're cheap. "Open Barrel" or "molex style" seems to be the magic keywords for ones that look like the pair at work.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +20

      They are very useful. I have ones by Engineer and iWiss and they are good.

  • @bigrockk2980
    @bigrockk2980 2 года назад +1

    I joined the New years live stream just as the "shadow people" poll was ending, didn't have a clue what that was about. First time I have heard of hypnagogia and I quite happy I'm not afflicted as I imagine it could be quite disconcerting! Amazing the things I learn from this channel!

  • @TobyRobb
    @TobyRobb 2 года назад +37

    Hey really interesting to hear you talk about your hypnagogia. I know people who have ringing in the ears eg Ménière's disease they can sometimes use technology to alleviate their symptoms , so good on you for talking about it because you might be helping a lot of people..

    • @TobyRobb
      @TobyRobb 2 года назад +4

      One other thing on this, You have it all the time but maybe a proportion of us experience it periodically. By talking about it, I get a much better understanding about it when it happens. Thanks man. Cheers!

    • @darreng745
      @darreng745 2 года назад +8

      Ringing in the ears can just be Tinnitus which I have suffered from on and off for over the last 5 years, Ménière's disease is a lot more complex and is linked to vertigo amongst other conditions and is often seen as a final point for Tinnitus sufferers. More to the point it is annoying sitting here headphones on hearing and a sibilant hiss in your ears and knowing that there is nothing you can do about it.

    • @sssleon3320
      @sssleon3320 2 года назад +2

      So I get the random patterns, I'm genuinely considering going to a doc to see if its this cause my god that would blow my mind and prove that it's good that you've talked about this cause Id have no idea (worth mentioning I have a few sleeping conditions already diagnosed)

  • @G1itcher
    @G1itcher 2 года назад +10

    When I was a kid I used to see what I described as a force field around my bed. It was as clear as day to me, made up of tiny weird particles that would swirl around eachother and altogether move at speed around my bed. Parents thought I was making it up. Nice to have a word to put to it.

    • @nowirehangers2815
      @nowirehangers2815 2 года назад +1

      Agreed I still have it
      Didn’t know there was a word for thought it was the same for everyone

    • @easyybreezeyy
      @easyybreezeyy 2 года назад

      Me too omg!

  • @tonysheerness2427
    @tonysheerness2427 2 года назад +3

    This explains your fixation to lighting and how to make them last as long as possible, can not have one that fails or the ghosts will reappear. The plus side is that you give your knowledge and expertise to others and get them into a hobby that can be rewarding and relatively cheap.

  • @sgtsquank
    @sgtsquank 2 года назад +4

    There were a number of years where I intentionally tried to train my brain to stay aware and awake during hypnagogia. Or hypno, can't remember which one is which. Regardless, it is an absolutely fascinating mindset. I remember a very vivid, vibrant translucent blue orb surrounding my bed as I rocked back and forth, ultimately hoping to pop into an OBE or lucid dream.
    I say all this because a) it can absolutely be terrifying but b) honing and working with that state of being can result in some really amazing explorations. And there's my random morning aside, thanks as always for the content.

  • @pyromen321
    @pyromen321 2 года назад +50

    I occasionally have hypnogogia where I hear people talking incoherent sentences around me. This happened a lot when I was a teenager, but is super rare now.
    However, I always have had the psychedelic patterns when falling asleep and still get them every night. I kind of like it, because it lets me always know how close I am to falling asleep, as the pattern changes while I get closer to sleep. I see distorted waves of colors sweeping in to the center of my vision, with each wave getting faster and more frequently blue as I get closer to falling asleep.
    Additionally, it’s worth noting that I practiced wake induced lucid dreaming for a couple of years, and that was the natural next step of my hypnogogia. If I manage to stay conscious though the colorful waves getting more distorted and more blue, eventually it becomes a colorful noise that slowly transitions into complex, lifelike scenes. I get taken on a wild, trippy ride by my subconscious. After enough time, I can gently start to take control. The tricky bit is learning how not to “break the spell.”
    If you heighten your focus too much, you get kicked out of it and brought back to the early stages. You’re constantly walking on a tight rope, preventing yourself from falling asleep, controlling what you see and not activating your mind too much. As you go deeper and deeper, you slowly are able to gain more control and are able to be more active and look around more without being kicked back to an awake state.
    One of my friends who messed around with this a lot was able to get to a full lucid dream state consistently and actually interact with the world and create stories, but I’ve never gotten to that point. About 50% of the time I put in effort, I can see anything I want to see and go anywhere I want to go, but I’m just a passive observer floating around. The biggest problem, though, is that I’ll often abruptly get knocked out of it and end up in a fully awake state unable to go to sleep for another hour, which has resulted in me playing around with it less frequently as I have gotten older and have more responsibilities.
    Completely random question, but somewhat on topic. Do any of you have visual snow? It’s something commonly associated with hallucinogen persisting perceptive disorder, but I’ve had it as long as I can remember.

    • @BPantherPink
      @BPantherPink 2 года назад +2

      Lovely read Sir...but I want to know what you too are smoking 😁😁
      No seriously...your comment is most detailed and enlightening !

    • @felixcosty
      @felixcosty 2 года назад +6

      @@BPantherPink He is not smoking anything, just lucid dreaming. Lucid dreaming is controlling your dreams and making the dream what you want. You can do very interesting things in a lucid dream.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +10

      I've never had the visual snow. Other than an unfortunate event when I ended up on the ground getting my head kicked from all directions.

    • @pyromen321
      @pyromen321 2 года назад +4

      @@bigclivedotcom are you thinking of the cartoon little birds effect/seeing stars? I’ve had that from a head injury before. Visual snow is when flat colors or closed eyes leads to an effect similar to television static.
      I thought that was completely normal until I discussed it with my partner a few years ago and found out she didn’t have it.

    • @mrfrenzy.
      @mrfrenzy. 2 года назад +2

      I used to have sleep paralysis and see strange shadows in the bedroom until I got diagnosed with severe sleep apnea. After I started using CPAP it all went away. (Also I am a lot less tired during the days of course)

  • @brianartillery
    @brianartillery 2 года назад +1

    Fascinating, Clive. I saw the title, and thought that you had bought some shonky device from ebay that claimed to lay ghosts. Not that at all, though. I saw 'Shadow People' when I was depressed after my parents died. They are scary - I'd wake up, and one might be lurking at the foot of my bed, or worse, leaning over my head, as if staring at me. They never actually did anything, but their presence was undeniably sinister and menacing. It probably wasn't ideal me living alone for eight months after my mum died, thinking about it. My neighbour has security lights in his back garden, and the light through my curtains would throw the figures into disturbingly sharp relief. I took to sleeping with my bedside light on. I did work nights, and did see them in the daytime, too. They always reminded me of the evil shadow people, trying to cross over into this dimension, that are featured in Alan Garner's brilliant novel, 'Elidor'. After my brother moved back in, in August 2007, I stopped seeing them regularly, and have not seen them at all now, for many years.

  • @muh1h1
    @muh1h1 2 года назад +4

    I think i have experienced something simular to hypnogogia when i was a kid. Sometimes as soon as the door to my bedroom closed i saw crows flying all over the room. I am talking about dozends of crows and it felt absolutely real. I think i could even hear them if i remember correctly. Thankfully i only had that happen a few times as a young kid and never again as an adult, but i still vividly remember it!

  • @Snotnarok
    @Snotnarok 2 года назад +1

    When you had your poll up I didn't know you meant your condition was like this. Like- I see things in very dark areas in video games (usually horror games) but that's likely just the mind trying to see things that might be dangerous; it doesn't sound at all like this. Wow that sounds like a lot of ...'fun'.

  • @ChrisContin
    @ChrisContin 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for sharing! To write a purpose is to leave a mark, so the brain is telling you the purposes it found all day (or so). Let yourself see pleasant things to reset the patterns- flowers, landscapes, or minimally-moving scenes. Try for about supper-time. Hope this helps!

  • @samuels1123
    @samuels1123 2 года назад +1

    I see a sort of very faint version in some cases, the pattern on my carpet upstairs being barely lit by the sunrise produces unnoticeable shadows which are interpreted as vertices of some weird impossible shape, the lines through the bathroom tiles form a hologram that lifts off into the ceiling, generally the less light you have the more your brain guesses patterns. I always sleep with my bathroom light on because through the hallway it acts as a dimmable light shining into the room

  • @robames1293
    @robames1293 2 года назад +14

    I have only twice experienced a prolonged "stay" in that zone between awake and asleep, but both cases were so peaceful, serene and wonderful.

    • @Nine-Signs
      @Nine-Signs 2 года назад +2

      regularly here, and I can assure you it is anything but serene and peaceful. Usually blood-curdling terrifying in my case, so I do envy you.

    • @chrisglen-smith7662
      @chrisglen-smith7662 2 года назад +1

      I like to do that every morning ! 🤣🤣

    • @Reddotzebra
      @Reddotzebra 2 года назад +1

      @@Nine-Signs The one time it happened to me I was laying with my face inches from a spotted wallpaper, feeling unable to breathe and freaking out over the blue spots, probably the most frightening thing in my life, and I regularly handle biohazardous materials. xD

  • @cuttinchops
    @cuttinchops 2 года назад

    hypnagogia, wow. This explains so much as a kid. The shapes, the colors, I remember waking up and going to bed freaking out from “seeing” this. Have always wondered what those few episodes were about. Thank You!

  • @davidg4288
    @davidg4288 2 года назад +4

    I used to get hypnagogia as a child, people would come into my room at night and I was disappointed when my hand went right through them. Also a corner of my room would open up and flying creatures would come in and start biting me. Sometimes transparent luminous beings would circle around me, they were friendly.
    I'd also see blinding flashes of various colors in sequence, which were pretty until the bright white ones hit. The white ones were painful. I learned many many years later that those were migraines, nothing to do with the dark.
    I can still see kaleidoscopic color patterns in the dark, I think those are a normal aspect of human vision and perception.
    I needed a night light as a child, now I prefer it dark at night. Blinky lights are especially annoying, and any color other than red.

  • @johncherry108
    @johncherry108 2 года назад +1

    From your description, this sounds like a condition I had as a young child, but I grew out of it SIXTY years ago. Now as an MS sufferer with bladder problems, night lights are important to help me keep my balance during nocturnal visits to the toilet. I might try your suggestion, thanks.

  • @piciu256
    @piciu256 2 года назад +16

    Damn, I think I do have this hypnagogia then, never took notice if any shadowy figures etc. but I definitely do have weird shapes floating in my sight with closed eyes or when it's just completely dark, sometimes these shapes resolve into weird scenes, almost dream like.
    I only really noticed these things when I'm really tired, say not enough sleep the night before and a very long day at work or otherwise, when I got past the window when I'm sleepy, so just ended up very tired but unable to fall asleep. Normally the transitional state is quick enough that I don't think about it.
    Then again, maybe I don't experience the other stuff because it's not completely dark in my room, there is a wifi router and an extension cord giving a gentle glow, plus my drapes don't keep the street lights out completely.
    I always assumed it's normal for our brain to wander in this state.

    • @Unsensitive
      @Unsensitive 2 года назад

      Similar here
      Boring shadowy figures that move somewhat randomly, which are usually easy to ignore, but on occasion I find my mind chasing em around. Must be dark enough though.

    • @pbp6741
      @pbp6741 2 года назад

      It’s normal.

    • @piciu256
      @piciu256 2 года назад

      @@pbp6741 that's what I always assumed, that everyone experiences it 🤷

  • @cognitivedissident9825
    @cognitivedissident9825 2 года назад +2

    Buzzing bees followed by a sensation of "falling backwards" coupled with a disturbing array of alarm bells. Never gets old.

  • @NoobixCube
    @NoobixCube 2 года назад +23

    Huh... So I guess I've had a suite of sleep disorders my whole life? I never realised the shadow people, the red and blue imaginary line traceries, the full-body twitch, and the loud snapping sound I experience before sleep were all part of one category.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +20

      Bangs, phantom doorbells and voices. All part of the wondrous experience of sleep transitions.

    • @SudosFTW
      @SudosFTW 2 года назад +9

      @@bigclivedotcom let's not also forget someone calling your name and then abrupt silence. in my case, a family member, despite them being many miles away.

    • @pbp6741
      @pbp6741 2 года назад +2

      It’s not a disorder merely a transitory state. How your mind interprets that state can vary wildly.

    • @Reddotzebra
      @Reddotzebra 2 года назад +3

      The loud snapping sound reminds me more of that wonderfully named sleep disorder called "Exploding head syndrome" (Because "Imaginary loud noise syndrome" didn't sound frightening enough I guess?)

  • @emm_arr
    @emm_arr 2 года назад +1

    A very interesting vid, as usual. Thank you.
    A side note: those flickering candle bulbs and flickering candle night lights really do seem to help me fall asleep. I'd have laughed if you had told me that a couple of years ago, but I am now sure I sleep better because of them, so thanks again, BC.

  • @thebloody_blue
    @thebloody_blue 2 года назад +3

    At some point in our life, we are all afraid of dark!
    Thanks for another great useful video.

  • @radio-ged4626
    @radio-ged4626 2 года назад +2

    I sometimes get the audible version of Hypnagogia where I hear a loud knocking or banging sound where I think someone is hammering on the door, it's rare and usually happens when I am very tired. My wife likes to sleep with the radio on low for half an hour or so. I never get it when the radio has been on.

  • @CH11LER.
    @CH11LER. 2 года назад +8

    I always thought I had mild X-ray vision as with no light in the room with my eyes closed, I can still make out random things like the bedside table and my hands etc.
    Sometimes, the shapes would just morph into random figures, patterns or shapes, I just used to think I was too tired for it to work lol.

  • @-Deena.
    @-Deena. 2 года назад +2

    I have mainly auditory hypnagogic hallucinations. It took me long time to stop jumping up to answer three very loud bangs on my front door knocker in the mornings. There was never anyone there? Penny finally dropped when I realised that I didn't have the old crappy cast iron door knocker on my door anymore and hadn't for about two bloody years! I recognise the sound now and just ignore it 🧡

    • @liquidsonly
      @liquidsonly 2 года назад +2

      I get that occasionally. I accused my lorry driving neighbour of knocking on my door in the early hours. Not him. it turns out, just in my head. These days I go to sleep by the gentle glow of my self built Numitron internet-radio alarm clock. I run the tubes at 3V to prolong their life and for better night time effect. Tubes are off during the day. Hard to find these days and expensive when you do. I spotted mine in a bucket (literally) of ex-arcade games machine stuff and got them for free as the bucket-o-junk guy didn't know what they were.

    • @-Deena.
      @-Deena. 2 года назад

      @@liquidsonly Knock knock. Who's there?
      No one - we're both just mental.

  • @mousefad3673
    @mousefad3673 2 года назад +7

    I didn't know seeing patterns in the noise was something associated with hyponogoia - interesting. I sometimes find it helps to fall asleep by concentrating on the very low contrast patterns I get when my eyes are closed in the dark. I focus on them and try to see patterns in the noise. Quite often it looks a bit like one of those "plasma" effects common in demos on the 16-bit platforms where the colour palette was cycled with a blobby image. They get more vivid and multi-coloured often turning into slow pulses of light. This sometimes helps me fall asleep as I start to perceive objects and scenes in the patterns and that sort of leads me into dreaming.

    • @Squidbush8563
      @Squidbush8563 2 года назад

      Those patterns aren't normal? I see them all the time when I close my eyes. I assumed everyone else did too.

  • @trhosking
    @trhosking 2 года назад +1

    I have chromesthesia, which means that I perceive sound, particularly music, as colours. It’s like having a build-in music visualisation plug-in. The funny thing is that I didn’t even know that this was a thing until my late thirties because I assumed that everyone did this. It was only after spending an hour trying to describe to my fellow band members why our attempt at a song was chromatically chaotic that I realised that they couldn’t actually ‘see’ it that I realised that I was somehow different.

  • @rustymotor
    @rustymotor 2 года назад +5

    Might be a useful night lamp, here in central Australia ghosts and other entities are not a big issue but roaming Snakes at night more so. I have heard of solar powered Snake repellers that people can place in the garden, looks similar to a solar powered garden light. Apparently they emit some sort of pulsed ultrasonic sound waves that Snakes avoid and enough of those devices strategically arranged in the yard forms a Snake barrier. Be good to find one of those units and see how they are made and if they have an effect on a Serpent.

    • @theoztreecrasher2647
      @theoztreecrasher2647 2 года назад +2

      I've always found that the smell of gunpowder is the best snake repellent.

    • @fenman1954
      @fenman1954 2 года назад +2

      Snakes can not hear sounds but can feel vibration through the ground, I have seen videos showing these snake repellers don't work

    • @rustymotor
      @rustymotor 2 года назад +3

      @@fenman1954 Yes, Snakes cannot hear so I figure those devices would not work. Walking around will disturb snakes and they do their jolly best to avoid trouble however people can accidentally step on one and get bitten. Often the bite is a dry bite without venom being delivered as a warning which is lucky as we have many deadly serpents. One snake we have is known as an Inland Taipan otherwise known as a Fierce Snake which is regarded as the worlds most venomous snake however despite the name it is very shy and reclusive and noone has actually died from a bite. I caught one once thinking it was a black headed python, it was rather docile like a python and not at all aggressive thankfully, I took photographs of it before letting it go and I showed the images to a friend who is more familiar with reptiles and told me what it was, lesson is always carefully identify a snake before catching it!

    • @8bitwiz_
      @8bitwiz_ 2 года назад +2

      The best part is that unlike cane toads, the snake repellers don't procreate.

    • @theoztreecrasher2647
      @theoztreecrasher2647 2 года назад

      @@8bitwiz_ Unfortunately that's not quite true. These crap scam devices will continue to exponentially explode from China (et al) as more of their smarter crooks start to understand just how DUMB a huge proportion of the consuming world actually is! 😱

  • @graemezimmer604
    @graemezimmer604 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for telling us about hypnagogia. Fascinating stuff. Where I live it is very dark and unless I leave a little homemade digital clock running, I can get very lost and confused when I awake. Thanks again.

  • @PghFlip
    @PghFlip 2 года назад +4

    Interesting bit about the hypnogogia! I used to say that when i close my eyes, i don't see "nothing" but rather a few different things... one of which is a pulsing diminishing circle. My ophthalmologist posited that i was perceiving the calcium shedding from when eyes go into rod mode in low light. Lately it's been manifesting as almost fractal plasma animations, or sometimes as a murmuration of a particle field. Surprised you didn't complicate things by making a joule thief to use up any non rechargeable bats you have lying around.

  • @alanh8664
    @alanh8664 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for reverse engineering your own design, complex crkt for sure :) I really enjoy how you speak, wonderful channel. The best presenter's are ones you want to watch because of their presentation personality, production values, more than sometimes the specific subject content. Thanks Clive; best wishes to your mom.

  • @ajltroughton
    @ajltroughton 2 года назад +3

    Maybe adding an LDR so it only comes on when it gets dark. Combined with the solar charging element it would become a totally automated circuit 😊

  • @NoahErickson
    @NoahErickson 2 года назад +1

    The addition of the connector to make the LED modular is very nice. I didn't know I experienced hyprogogia, but now I know that the muscle jerk I usually experience while falling asleep (as an adult; as a child it was a falling sensation probably 90% of nights) is technically a manifestation of that.

  • @piciu256
    @piciu256 2 года назад +8

    Damn, it pays off to read through the comments sometimes :)

  • @roberttaylor2328
    @roberttaylor2328 2 года назад +2

    Excellent, Clive. I too, am a lifelong 'beneficiary' of hypnagogia, and hypnagogic paralysis. While your and my experiences differ a bit, I will not belabor them here. Love your channel.

  • @Erik_Swiger
    @Erik_Swiger 2 года назад +10

    Interesting to hear you talk about hypnagogia. I have bouts of scintillating scotoma, which is apparently some sort of migraine, but I don't have pain. What I do have is distorted vision, with changing, rainbow, geometric patterns (typically zig-zag type shapes) all around the edges. It last for a few minutes, sometimes a bit longer. The brain is a fascinating thing.

    • @chrisglen-smith7662
      @chrisglen-smith7662 2 года назад

      Hi Erik, Thanks for that, I have the same thing occasionally. I didn't know it had a name, though I'd guessed it was similar to some symptoms of a migraine. Like you I don't have the headache , thankfully.

    • @mousefad3673
      @mousefad3673 2 года назад

      I get a similar thing when I'm falling asleep sometimes. What a fantastical lump of putty it is that is rattling around inside the old head bone, eh?

    • @rose-ey6ct
      @rose-ey6ct 2 года назад

      Interesting. Day before I had heart attack 30 years ago, I had the same thing, which lasted for circa 20 mins. Subsequently, it reppeated every 3 months or so, until I had a stent in 2 years ago, and it stopped completely.

    • @tc2486
      @tc2486 2 года назад +1

      I also have visual migraines (pain free and not harmful) causing hallucinatory geometric patterns in my vision. Having had a couple of real migraines in my life, I'm happy to settle for these psychedelic versions instead!!

    • @HaralHeisto
      @HaralHeisto 2 года назад

      Scintillating scotoma is a warning sign of incoming migraine to some people, in which case it's referred to as a "migraine with aura". For me it almost looks like a crack in the universe opening out to TV snow outside. When I get it, I know I'm getting a stonking 12 hour migraine within the next 30 minutes, so time to get safely into a cool, dark room.
      The underlying cause is dilation of a blood vessel on the back of the eye, and you're actually seeing the white blood cells travelling through! The exact appearance can vary from person to person depending on exactly how the blood vessel has formed, but it should be reasonably consistent each time you get it.

  • @mwilson14
    @mwilson14 2 года назад

    I never heard of hypnagogia until your video, but I have experienced the symptoms since childhood. I also get temporal lobe seizures which adds another level of crazy experience to life. Glad you found a way to reduce your symptoms!

  • @apophisdd
    @apophisdd 2 года назад +3

    I turned a tiny CR2032 battery housing into a gentle red light recently. If you are walking about at night without wanting to disturb anyone, even your own eyes if just awoken, or if you want a simple indicator for if you are home-working and in a meeting, it works nicely. Dead simple and dead useful.

  • @bosstowndynamics5488
    @bosstowndynamics5488 2 года назад +2

    Just as a heads-up, Eneloop Pros are often sold pre charged but from what I understand they don't have the same low self discharge property that makes normal Eneloops so good

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +2

      Generally the higher the capacity, the higher the self discharge of these modern cells.

  • @michaelbuckley3808
    @michaelbuckley3808 2 года назад +3

    Much safer than a candle! Thanks for sharing!

  • @8bitwiz_
    @8bitwiz_ 2 года назад +1

    I think that low-level lighting is underrated. A year or so ago I wired up a dimmer switch to the upstairs hallway light. Then I set it to a low level, and have not touched it since. At night it's more than enough light to see by, without messing up my night vision. And it's using a non-dimmable LED bulb! I had meant to change it to a dimmable bulb, but it worked, and the slow flickering feels rather natural, like a candle. Of course this very under-powered LED bulb will last forever.
    I also have a power strip on the floor in my bedroom along where I walk. I do plan to re-route it when certain furniture can be moved, but as this powers my DVR computer, it is bad when one of the US-style plugs in it gets bumped. I plugged a very old EL panel night light into the power strip, so there is now a big green circle on the floor to avoid at night.

  • @cs_fl5048
    @cs_fl5048 2 года назад +4

    I remember seeing a gorilla creeping past my window in an episode of hypnagogia. Stared at it for some time... it never moved. Of course I knew it must be a hallucination, but it was very real appearing.

    • @tniemi
      @tniemi 2 года назад

      Sleep paralysis is a similar thing. (I've had it a couple of times.) Human brain is kinda glitchy when it is somewhere between wake and sleep.

  • @superdau
    @superdau 2 года назад +1

    I didn't know hypnagogia is something you can't have. Didn't know its name either. I thought it's normal and everyone has it. I do love the patterns I see when going to sleep. If I've drunk a lot of coffee it's more like an old TV tuned to no station, but generally it turns into repetitive color sweeps. I even concentrate on them and try to "see" them as well as possible.
    What's more annoying are sounds. Snaps about as loud as a switch being flicked in another room sometimes turn into bright flashes (I do have that in a limited way while fully awake as well). And once in a while when I try to take a nap during the day, I often "hear" the doorbell waking me up again.

  • @MrShwaggins
    @MrShwaggins 2 года назад +3

    I never thought there was a name for that. I remember when I was in grade school the shadows would play on the walls and doors when I was in that state between being awake and passing out. Now that I'm an adult I just flop on the bed and pass out. My mother even said I never wanted to sleep and force myself to stay up. I will say that there was this one time that was pretty vivid with my eyes shut I thought I felt something close. It didn't seem like I was in danger but I kept my eyes closed and I got that sensation of something being really close to my forehead similar to when you close your eyes and place your finger near the middle of your forehead. You feel "something" even though your not touching. I wonder if its the electrical currents inside your body that keeps your heart beating.

    • @Lemon_Inspector
      @Lemon_Inspector 2 года назад +2

      You probably feel something on your forehead when you bring a finger close to it because your brain knows where your finger is, and not because it's actually sensing something close to your forehead.

    • @MrShwaggins
      @MrShwaggins 2 года назад +1

      @@Lemon_Inspector I wonder. I remember getting someone to get close to touching that spot and I felt something. I wonder if it was anticipation. Also there is a story about native Americans being extremely good at tracking to the point they thought it was magical. The army hired them to test and after they shaved their heads they lost the ability. It was like the hair was acting like an antenna to something we don't know about.

  • @erwinvb70
    @erwinvb70 2 года назад +2

    I used to have a small neon bulb lamp with diffuser (like the ones you find in switches) that plugs directly into the socket. That emitted a nice orange glow all around the room. Always thought there was something special about that color that made me fall asleep really fast.

  • @mCblue79
    @mCblue79 2 года назад +4

    I would love to see all the lights and gadgets Clive has rigged up in and around his house 😁

  • @Marfprojects
    @Marfprojects 2 года назад +1

    As a child and still today i see those vividly colorful patterns as well, maybe not as vivid as it used be. that also reminds me that during my younger years i always had a night lamp running in the hallway so that it just gave some light in my bedroom because i had so many nightmares, it became so bad that it made me afraid to sleep. this caused that i became really tried, and i remember one time that i got awake in the middle of the night and saw stuff moving around me I think i was 11 or 12 years old at the time. this scared me and i turned my bedroom lamp on, and it was gone.
    worst thing is that my classmates for instance called me crazy. :/

  • @daveseddon5227
    @daveseddon5227 2 года назад +4

    You can buy 10 of those battery cases (with switch) from AliExpress for £6.39 (inc. shipping) - how mad is that!
    My Plusnet router provides all the light I need in my room at night.

    • @richardturton6900
      @richardturton6900 2 года назад +5

      At the moment Poundland are selling sets of Christmas tree lights for 50p which have have a 2 AA cell battery pack with switch.

    • @daveseddon5227
      @daveseddon5227 2 года назад +1

      @@richardturton6900 Wow, that's insane!

  • @Epsicronics
    @Epsicronics 2 года назад +1

    Now let's just hope those shadows dont start appearing with that light on because that would be somewhat worrying to say the least

  • @peter.stimpel
    @peter.stimpel 2 года назад +4

    "never charge it again" ... sounds good to me. But adding solar to such a lamp would end up terrible on my side. It would be like cordless dect phones. You always forget to put them back to their cradle (the lamp to sunlight), and they are always unusable when you need them. I had 51 ys to learn, but failed on this one.

  • @sinestesiagaming
    @sinestesiagaming 2 года назад +2

    Wasn't aware of its name before now, but ever since moving into a hamlet outside of Reading I've seen shadows around the bed/in the bedroom in the dark, been pulled out of bed/had the feeling of being pulled out of bed, sleep paralysis. Parents didn't understand and insisted that I sleep with the lights off. Everything persisted until I moved to University, where things susbsided until I moved back home for an extended period and it all picked up again and has continued for the last decade. I moved house in the autum of 2021 and the incidents have decreased significantly, but I still sleep with a dim light on, or prefer to sleep during the day (that's probably also not helped by working nights for 15 years!).

  • @Brett3am
    @Brett3am 2 года назад +3

    I have experienced extreme hypnagogia my entire life including the fractals. Definitely an odd experience.

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek 2 года назад +1

      have you ever tried LSD for comparison? because that produces mostly fractal vision, too.

    • @Brett3am
      @Brett3am 2 года назад +1

      @@Ass_of_Amalek ahh yes yes, the experience is very similar for sure!

  • @GashimahironChl
    @GashimahironChl 2 года назад +1

    Been forced to drive while far too tired one too many times, those hallucinations you speak of are similar to the ones i had while on the road, on the brink of falling asleep on the wheel.
    Some wild hallucination would kick me out of sleeping every time, which is where i think people get the idea of gods and guardian angels from.

  • @m0L3ify
    @m0L3ify 2 года назад +3

    I have Narcolepsy. I know exactly what you're talking about! I've seen weird things like icicles falling from the ceiling or a bunch of framed paintings in my living room. Not as many sleep paralysis demons, thank goodness. Well, not awake, anyway. Once I had a dream about a demon, and then I started to wake up, and the demon tried to come through me out of my dream and roar at my wife, but all I could do was make this paltry little gurgling sound lol. It made the demon very angry. 😂

  • @andymouse
    @andymouse 2 года назад +1

    I always thought it came with my sleep paralysis, I didn't know it had a seperate name. I wouldn't want to get rid of it as I have learn to use it for lucid dreaming. You learn something new every day !....cheers.

  • @jordverm
    @jordverm 2 года назад +4

    Hi Clive,
    Me as a DIY person love your interesting videos and inspire me to try and make my own projects. But the biggest problem I have is finding the right type of connector for the projects. And since you recommend several diffrent molex style connectors maybe it would be interesting to make a video for persons like me how to identify different styles (mainly small low voltage) for indoor and outdoor usage. And where to buy them "cheap". Here in Belgium I find it hard to find suppliers who sell to non proffecionals.
    It would really help me personally to raise my DIY projects. Instead of always working with big wago connectors.
    Thanks!

  • @migsvensurfing6310
    @migsvensurfing6310 2 года назад +2

    The resistor is important. Always connect one in series before powering LEDs.

  • @tbelding
    @tbelding 2 года назад +3

    It looks like you could fit two D cells in there, but I'm pretty sure those are AA's. :)

  • @objection_your_honor
    @objection_your_honor 2 года назад +1

    I've only had sleep/awake moments twice in my 60 years living.
    I was flying like a bird on the first one. It was indescribable. Since that day, I am jealous of all birds.
    For the second, I was standing in the middle of space and looking into the universe all around me. It was breathtakingly beautiful.
    God, I wish I could have another experience like that before I kick the bucket.
    I can't imagine how terrified you must have felt. It's too real.

  • @NaoPb
    @NaoPb 2 года назад +4

    I love this idea. I don't have hypnogoggia myself but I like LEDs so to my that's good enough an excuse to make some of these.
    And I really like the look of the diffused pink LEDs. Nearly every time I order from ebay I'll put some in my basket.
    I am curious about what LEDs you have there where only a circle on the top seems to emit light.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +2

      There's a wide range of LED styles. Lens-end either clear or diffused, concave lens Xmas style LEDs that emit in all directions, flat top and the straw hat dome LEDs with the bare chip visible for a sharp point of light.

  • @RFC-3514
    @RFC-3514 2 года назад +1

    I'll take spooky manifestations over not being able to sleep any day (or night).
    Last year, for about a week, my brain "forgot" how to fall asleep. It's a really weird feeling, lying in the dark with your eyes closed for hours, realising that you never really knew _how_ to fall asleep, it was just something that happened... until it stopped happening. And not knowing if you'll ever be able to do it again.
    I wasn't sleepy, as such (as with normal insomnia); I'd feel tired at the end of the day, I'd feel rested after lying down for 5 or 6 hours, but there would never be a break in consciousness.
    Then one day I managed to sleep for a few minutes, then a couple of hours, and now I can generally sleep at least 4 hours a night (or a day), which feels a bit short, but I've always liked to a) go to bed late, b) wake up early, and c) sleep a lot, so at least one of those is always going to fail. Anyway, the real transition was from "none" to "some". Even just a couple of minutes make all the difference. It's like reaching a save checkpoint in a game, versus having to play it all the way to the end in a single session.

  • @hughaskew6550
    @hughaskew6550 2 года назад +4

    Do they make "D" cells a lot smaller on the Isle of Man?

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  2 года назад +3

      Yes. They're tiny because we have nuclear batteries.

    • @hughaskew6550
      @hughaskew6550 2 года назад

      @@bigclivedotcom Envy level = 10

    • @The.Plague
      @The.Plague 2 года назад

      He's called BIG Clive for a reason. I thought I was a big guy but apparently his hands are huge. He makes those D cells look like A cells.

  • @numeristatech
    @numeristatech 2 года назад

    Thank you for the hyponogogia explanation. When I was very young I gave memories of seeing shadows of people racing up outside past the closed curtains. I definitely saw people shapes but my parents wrote it off as car headlights or dreaming. But it only happened in that room in that house. Never anywhere else. It wore off but nice to have a name to put against it!

  • @ravneiv
    @ravneiv 2 года назад +4

    I had hypnagogia when combined with a mold problem in the house. I saw bugs, though. Beetles, stinkbugs, spiders, etc. on my pillow, nightstand, or wall next to my bed. Happened when falling asleep or waking up. When I learned they weren't real I could concentrate and they'd fade out like a bad 1980s movie effect, which I found comical.
    Anyway when I remodeled the bathroom with the leaking shower and got rid of the mold hiding in the walls the hallucinations stopped. My layman theory is that they're made by a primitive part of your brain\subconscious trying to tell you something isn't quite safe in the area.

  • @carlubambi5541
    @carlubambi5541 2 года назад +1

    I have a similar problem with retinal memory .If I'm in a brightly lit room I can still see the images of the bright reflective surfaces like doors that are painted white .I can go into a dark environment I can still see the white doors in different parts of my field of views even with my eye lids closed .And once my eyes get adjusted to the darkness I'm good to go .As a sparky having to work in dark places or very low light levels it's a bit of a nuisance at times .

  • @Ghost_Of_SAS
    @Ghost_Of_SAS 2 года назад +3

    I do find that pretty repulsive.

  • @tncorgi92
    @tncorgi92 2 года назад +2

    Once when I was staying at my grandparents' house the bedroom was nearly dark but I could see shapes of furniture, etc. As I was looking at the closet door a shadow started to grow on one side of the doorframe where it looked like the door was slowly opening. It scared the living hell out of me. It must have been some effect like you describe but I have never forgotten it.

    • @av3ng3r-49
      @av3ng3r-49 2 года назад

      Was just ghosts and shadow people..

  • @hamjudo
    @hamjudo 2 года назад

    The thumbnail wasn't clickbait. The device actually reduces one kind of ghostly apparitions.

  • @Reddotzebra
    @Reddotzebra 2 года назад +2

    I don't have the same issue, the closest thing I've got is a sea of gently glowing yellow, red and blue dots in pitch darkness, and when I get a bout of insomnia, the merest suggestion of motion.
    I have pretty good night vision so it's both a blessing and a curse because even the merest outline of something in the darkness can appear to start moving, and it's quite easy to freak yourself out when you're almost asleep.
    Now, sleep paralysis I do have experience with, thankfully not much, but it's horrifying.

  • @LazerBear42
    @LazerBear42 2 года назад +1

    Usually during hypnogogia, I experience either the Tetris Effect or semi-lucid dreams, which is generally quite pleasant. But when I was younger, I often experienced depersonalization/derealization during hypnogogia, which was extremely distressing. Fortunately that's become uncommon in my adulthood.

  • @rootpotato
    @rootpotato 2 года назад +1

    That transition between wake and sleep states is quite an interesting subject that warrants more (if any) research . . . Personally, I often perceive really loud and sudden noises, both waking and falling asleep, kind of like my ability to hear being suddenly activated and a massive amount of sound/volume flooding in!

  • @abs_nobody
    @abs_nobody 2 года назад +2

    it's always interesting learning about others' sleep shenanigans, because I sleep so soundly that I would sleep right through a 6.0 earthquake. It's a great reminder that you can find diversity everywhere

    • @Lemon_Inspector
      @Lemon_Inspector 2 года назад

      You call it diversity, I call it poor manufacturing repeatability. Clearly, God has no production standards!

    • @abs_nobody
      @abs_nobody 2 года назад

      @@Lemon_Inspector clearly, we must construct a superior chassis to progress beyond our imperfect flesh and body

  • @foogod4237
    @foogod4237 2 года назад +1

    It occurs to me this would also potentially be very useful just as a safety device if you live anywhere which does get completely dark at night. If your house catches fire in the middle of the night, sure, you've got a smoke detector to wake you up, but then you could find yourself bumbling about and disoriented in a completely dark (smoky) room, which is not necessarily that much better. Regular nightlights may not help in that situation either, because in many cases when a fire happens you may have lost power as well.
    Having something providing a minimal amount of light to navigate around with (and get out of the house) which isn't dependent on AC wall power could really improve your likelihood of getting out of that sort of situation safely.

    • @plainedgedsaw1694
      @plainedgedsaw1694 2 года назад +1

      That's what emergency battery backed up exit signs are for. Having source of light in your hand will probably be much less useful as it will get swamped out by smoke.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 2 года назад +1

      @@plainedgedsaw1694 Sure, but most houses don't have emergency battery backed exit signs installed, and doing that yourself can be a significant endeavor, or possibly not even allowed, depending on your situation.
      And the device in this video isn't intended to be hand-held (though, sure, it could be if desired). It's basically just a night-light that doesn't require wall power. Smoke or no, any kind of light in the room is still much better than pitch-black darkness if you're panicked and need to get out of the house in a hurry...

  • @Kinnikinnick
    @Kinnikinnick 2 года назад +1

    Wish every clickbait title on RUclips was remade so it was like this one's.
    Wholesome Clive as always, that's probably why there's 1k likes at 1.3k views mark.

  • @alpha.wintermute
    @alpha.wintermute 2 года назад +1

    I used to have it more but it pops up occasionally. For a while I used it to "enter" a lucid dream or rarely what some would call out of body experiences. Basically the hypnagogia would occur then a dream would form in my vision and I'd soon be walking around in the dream fully aware I'm dreaming. Occasionally I'd have hypnopompic visions like the room coverted in plants, spiders, geometric patterns etc. I think usually people have less awareness of near sleep and those with sleep issues, migraines, apnea, insomnia, or high stress etc notice it

  • @paulphillips3783
    @paulphillips3783 2 года назад +1

    BigClive, the man, the legend. Happy New Year! Thanks for another fascinating video. A bit of reconfig and you could have a lighty up pen (think sonic screwdriver) - take it anywhere :) Not sure if you could wrap solar panels around it - but that would be a bonus.

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention 2 года назад +1

    I figured this out accidentally a few years ago in an experiment: I had hooked an old power pack that came from a solar backpack (2- 18650 batteries inside) to an old LED car headlight. It ran for 28 days straight with a usable light you could read by. So I made a video called "Emergency Backup Light" or something similar. It was a little brighter than this, and on a side note after it ran for nearly a month it charged back up just fine, I was worried it may start on fire.

  • @tomaszprzetacznik7802
    @tomaszprzetacznik7802 2 года назад +1

    Funny thing I really thought those sleep disorders are normal and happens from time to time to everyone - as I had some, never with visual hallucinations but with loud noises during waking up or falling asleep, or feeling of being immobilized for few minutes after being suddenly woken up by nightmares and those nightmares are so intense, often I try scream but I can't.
    It's hard to explain, sometimes I know that I am dreaming during those events and I try to wake up but I can't, I try to scream to wake myself up but I feel it's so hard to push my sleeping body to do that, in those moments it is like being half-awake and dreaming at the same time, usually comes with with fear, nightmares and those nightmares are hmnm specific.

  • @mikescott58
    @mikescott58 2 года назад +1

    I've experienced hypnagogic hallucinations a few times and it was the strangest thing ever.
    Another bizarre thing is when your brain wakes from deep sleep before your body and you experience momentary paralysis.

  • @charlesflecknell8550
    @charlesflecknell8550 2 года назад +1

    I made a night light for my cockatiel. Used a single lithium 18650 and one of the wide angle warm white LEDs off the Xmas light strings. The resistor I used was a lot higher, can't remember off hand but the LED runs at 2ma. I fitted it into an old 1970s Eveready front bike lamp. 👍🥰

  • @snowysnowdon5584
    @snowysnowdon5584 2 года назад +1

    I never knew about Hypnagogia until you mentioned it, I don't see ghòsts but I do see the vivid colourful patterns since childhood. I just put it down to my optic nerves being stimulated when I woke.

  • @heyarno
    @heyarno 2 года назад +1

    While I don't suffer from that condition, I'm quite aware of noises around me. For example when the glazing on a piece of pottery in my kitchen develops a stress induced crack, it makes a pling noise that wakes me up, or keeps me from finding sleep. So I like to look around in order to make sure that what I think to have heard, is what I have heard. My solution was to take image intensifier goggles to bed. But your solution seems much more affordable.

  • @beefaroni4733
    @beefaroni4733 2 года назад

    i'm both relieved and a little annoyed it wasn't suggested beforehand that the wild colours and patterns i see as i fall asleep was just this. i attempted to bring it up with my optometrist/doctor a few times and they couldn't find any indication of something being wrong.
    wild. learned something new.