Worked with a mason foreman somewhere in circa 2015-2017. He was a Vietnam Vet, and would shudder at even the thought of war. One day during lunch, him and i actually got to talking about his time spent over there. You could see how much bent up angst he had, and he went on to explain how he was affected by Agent Orange..and had been fighting in court for a long time over the apparent effects it has had on his body. He then took off his shirt and showed me and my buddy the damage it had done to his upper torso, mostly on his arm. The best i can do to explain what it looked like was raised and malformed looking skin, that looked as though he was seriously burned. Something I had never seen anything like it in my life. Poor dude passed away a few years ago, without settlement from those injuries. RIP papa smurf, you were the man.
As a Gulf War veteran trying to get the VA to deal with ANY of my problems, I ask you to write your federal representatives (email thru their websites) to get the fuckin VA to quit screwing veterans over and just handle their medical problems. The assholes at the VA act like it's their own goddamn money or something.
Support our troops! Wait, no, support weapons manufacturers and military contractors getting rich and politicians getting more power via war on the backs and lives of our troops! There, fixed it!
How I wish more military resources could be refocused to things like building schools in impoverished areas all over the world, medical missions to far flung areas that doctors and dentists can't easily visit, rescue operations for dangerous disaster-wrecked communities (flooding, earthquakes, etc). I feel like so many more people would see it as an honor to serve if instead of being paranoid about war they could become beacons of goodwill and peace.
@@noonynoonynoo To some extent we have to keep up the arms race to protect ourselves from foreign threats (which unfortunately also protects domestic threats, aka our political and corporate overlords). It would be nice if, during times of peace, we had more soldiers working to fix the problems that usually lead to wars in the first place. Of course you know our governments (any government) would find a way to screw it up, kill more innocent people, make tons of money, and blame everyone but themselves for the problems they cause.
I used to have the opposite of “sleep paralysis”, “night terrors”. When having a nightmare, occasionally I would leap out of bed and literally run for my life, not great in a house at night in the dark. This led to minor injuries from running into walls or doors, but nothing serious. Until this happened to me when staying at a friend’s house, sleeping in a spare room. I ran out the door and unfortunately turned right, straight onto the top step of the stairs. This was about 2 AM on a winter night. I woke up lying on the floor halfway through a large window at the side of the front door. I must have smashed into the glass with my left arm which was seriously broken. The only good thing was there had been a heavy curtain in front of the window, I would have been ripped to pieces if not for that. The postscript is that after two days in hospital I came back to retrieve my car and noticed the smoke alarm above the stairs was hanging from it’s wiring. I stood on the step under the alarm and I was unable to touch it with my good arm. I must have been literally flying through the air into that window. Thankfully I never had another incident of night terrors again, that was thirty years ago.
No offense, I really hope you don't take this too seriously, but if I watched you do that, I would laugh my ass off so much I might have passed out of hipoxia lol
Very well done Joe! As someone who's first generation Hmong American, I grew listening to these exact stories from my parents and older family members . The atrocities they face impacts them to this day. I appreciate you bringing attention to this topic
My stepfather was a Marine veteran with 2 tours in Vietnam. He died in 1999 at the age of 52 from a severe nightmare/ flashback. We found him a couple days later. Official cause of death was listed as adrenaline overdose likely brought on by a nightmare as he was found screaming in a crouching pose in his bedroom with his hands raised defensively. PTSD is a terrible affliction and even though he sought and received treatment, the demons still got him. No drugs in his system, btw.
What's great about Freddy Kruger is just how much fun he's having while he's wreaking all kinds of havoc. Its always nice to see someone that loves their job and is good at it. He's a real inspiration that no matter how bad you have it, its what you make of it that controls your reality.
You hit that nail on its head; I'm not a horror movie fan AT ALL, but those movies are just damned funny, even WITH all the jump scares and gore. My favorite was the one that ended with that hockey mask on the ground, and of course the next was Freddie Meets Jason. They're just engaging and clever, if you can handle the creepier/grosser aspects. That's also why I was a HUGE fan of Penny Dreadful, which I'm currently re-watching/streaming/binging, thx to my recent subscription to the premium version of paramount+, which comes with Showtime. That show has some of the funniest, cleverest lines in the history of TV -- Dr. Frankenstein professing a real enjoyment of Shelley -- I about fell over laughing at that one! 🤣 My husband thought I'd lost my mind, till I explained it to him. 🤣🤣
@@Ricky_Cullen Heh. No, just appreciating having something to watch for a change. Mainly I wanted to watch that silly comedy "Ghosts," and was impatiently waiting for the damn strike to be over, and the entertainment biz getting back to work. I had a free year of the lower-tier Paramount+, with my t-mobile account, but once that year was over, I was gonna have to pay, and I figured if I have to pay, I might as well pay just a little more and get zero commercials AND Showtime. Then I recalled that Penny Dreadful had been on Showtime, but when we switched our cable provider, we lost Showtime, and never got to see the last season of Penny Dreadful. And now I'm caught up in the new season of Ghosts. 🤣
@@Ricky_Cullen 😂😂😂 Ikr? Sounds like a commercial! I have Penny Dreadful on DVD... DVD... DVD... So I can watch it as many times as I want without subscription or even internet service. But I only watched it once and didn't really like it. (cheap on ebay)
Americans who think a second civil war would be glorious should look into the history of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. It wouldn't be your 19th century civil war, which was America's deadliest war and horrific enough. It would be beyond your wildest dreams of horror.
americans are actually way more united than most people think. if someone were to attack the country, we'd immediately close ranks. we just bicker because we live in relative comfort and don't know what to do with the genetic trauma from deep time that carries in our collective psyche
@@Thurgosh_OG What is wrong with you? You're just trying to find excuses to force war to happen over nothing and what you're saying is beyond idiotic. There's not some correlation about 'either we have to get attacked or we'll end up having a civil war'. That's a bonehead thing to assert and it's scary that anybody would be so stupid as to believe that.
My first experience with sleep paralysis was very positive. My step mother's pet dog was the one who came up and layed on my chest. It made me happy and I felt loved.
My friend, that is not the definition of sleep paralysis by most people. Sleep paralysis is terrifying to the point I have thrown up after I finally have woken up.
@@radiofreejenn0b They're literally describing sleep paralysis. There's no need to gatekeep. Sleep paralysis is a state of partially awake cataplexy, often accompanied by hallucinations. I've experienced it in many different degrees of "severity". I've never had an experience this positive, but I've had some neutral-positive experiences. It happens
You might want to specify that Indira Ghandi was assassinated in 1984. By just saying "Ghandi was assassinated," the first thing people think is that you mean Mohandas K (Mahatma) Ghandi, who was assassinated in 1948... which is when Orwell wrote 1984.
@@proph7543 While that would be perceptive, I think his script team just went too fast and did not check to see the first name, nor thought that there was a second Gandhi to be assassinated. Though, it is interesting that they were assassinated in reverse years.
I am an army veteran, and I have generations of military service members prior to me, and I can personally attest that PTSD lasts long-term, and can indeed kill you if it’s left untreated, or treated improperly, including in your sleep from severe sleep terrors and paralysis and nightmares. I am of course alive, but I had to seek medical treatment for a couple of sleep paralysis episodes that were that terrifying. The condition discussed in this video is living proof that it’s never just “all in your head“ and unfortunately has taken lives. Maybe your video and other research done will help the medical community understand how to better help those who suffer from any preceding conditions that can cause this to happen.
A friend of mine's father died of a stress induced heart attack, the stress of which was induced by PTSD from a botched anesthesia during surgery. The surgery healed one ailment, but gave him that trauma. People generally aren't aware of how your mind can directly affect you physically, the two are inextricably linked.
I was diagnosed with a panic disorder and while what I experience during panic attacks feels a lot less serious to me than what you and other people describe, I can absolutely confirm that it puts a toll on the physical body. Oh boy. When I had regular attacks I was so used to constantly being tired, having aching muscles and tension headaches, digestive problems etc that I thought that's just what its like for me. Now I only get those symptoms when shit hits the fan again which confirmed for me that they are related to the psychological stress. Thankfully I am slowly but surely working through. I hope you and your family find recovery as well
This is what my mom most likely died of ... She died in her sleep with an undiagnosed whole in the heart. My dad said, she was moving, and seemed to try to wake up but did not make it. The scary thing is that the evening before that she said she will not wake up... She was unfortunately spot on 😢 So this sounds very familiar.
Possibly the most startling thing for me in this great video is Joe having to explain what Agent Orange was for people who've never heard of it. I missed the Vietnam war twice, being born in 1960 & female, but even at my relatively young age during it, it had a huge impact. Plus my ex was a veteran. We really see the world thru the lens of our own experience.
Joe’s audience isn’t just American. I’m French and I live in the UK. Of course I know about agent Orange, but I bet you remote populations who didn’t have the opportunities for further education, access to foreign languages, travel, etc. Those people might not know about it. They have their own history to worry about
It affected me a lot too. If it hadn't ended when it did, I would surely have had to go. I'm not the soldier type and was filled with fear and dread. My brother, who was a lot like me, got drafted but Truman died the day before he was supposed to be inducted. The Federal offices were shut down in honor of the former President.
I missed it by not being born until after it and being born in a country not involved in the war, but much of the cultural zeitgeist of America in the 80s and 90s kept it fresh in people's minds. I think that had gone by the early 2000s when 9/11 changed the outlook of the US so much. It's both understandable that today's under 30s are less aware, but also makes me feel really old.
I completely get younger viewers not being familiar with Agent Orange or the rest of the Viet Nam war. I was born in 1969, and while I certainly heard the phrase Agent Orange I had only a very hazy idea what it was or what effects it had. For someone born 10 - 20 years after me I imagine it would be much like the stories our generation heard about the use of gas warfare in WWI -- something abstract that happened "long ago".
I've seen the enduring effect of agent Orange on site. Even decades after it was sprayed. I can't believe it's not considered a war crime. They must have known it was toxic
@@LordOfElysium all birth defects are nearly impossible to detect before birth, unless a doctor of some kind happens to see it in an ultrasound. Which of course wasn't an option decades ago. So it's just a gamble as with all pregnancy in general. As vinny184 said there's also a huge range of defects that can happen.
I've suffered from sleep paralysis all my life. When I was a child it would happen once every couple of months. Now, in my mid-sixties, it happens once every couple of years. When it first started happening it was terrifying, the worst part being that I couldn't open my eyes. Eventually I learned that the one bodily function I could still control was my breathing. I would start hyperventilating and then after a minute or two my eyes would pop open and the spell would be broken. I don't really know if the hyperventilation helps to dispel the paralysis or if it just keeps my mind occupied while my body wakes up normally, but having that tiny bit of control really helped reduce my fear.
I learned to become conscious that it was happening, which kept the fear under a bit of control, and to focus all of my attention on my index finger. When I moved the finger, it broke the paralysis and all senses returned to normal. I’ve never heard of anyone having it into older age. I stopped getting it in my late 20s and am glad it never returned.
It's scary to realise that something in your brain which is supposed to work subconsciously is misfiring. Essential functions like falling asleep, regulating heartbeat, breathing... That's the truly horrifying part. Unbeknownst to you, one of these switches could just flip the other way or not turn on at all one day, and that'd be it.
@@PsycordeYeah omg that's absolutely terrifying... Imagine being left in a "coma" for years in that state, as that's all it would appear as to medical professionals. As someone who has had sleep paralysis that would be hell.
I work with a man who was exposed to Agent Orange (he calls it White Rain) while he was a young man in Laos. The damage to his mind, body, and nervous system is unforgivable! He is in constant pain, and his body is deteriorating! I’m ashamed of what the U.S.
Same exposure happened to my next door neighbor. He recently passed away from the all of the terrible symptoms. I don't know if he called it white rain because he couldn't speak anymore. His poor wife never left his side and had to do absolutely everything. It was incredibly sad.
It wasn't developed as a weapon, it was developed to clear foliage and the latent unforseen effects of agent orange affected people in ways that weren't planned.
Joe, my childhood bestfriends family is from Laos. I'm glad you're bringing attention to this, especially the fact that the most bombed country in history was done to a country not even at war with us. Unexploded ordnance still claims victims to this day. Great video as always
I was on an apparently too high of a methadone dose for heroin addiction recovery. most nights i would die in my dreams, and my gf and i would swear the other was “stealing the others air” while sleeping/cuddling. i was not breathing enough, essentially having apneas because of the depressant activity of the drug and that manifested as legit dying in dreams before i would wake up because i was basically dying..i was suffocating.
When I had my first experience of sleep paralysis, nobody knew what the heck I was on about, even my doctor. Now, decades later, there’s information about it everywhere. Millions know about it. This is what I love about the Internet. ❤
As a first generation of Hmong American, I very appreciate you making this video. I had older relatives that had died from dab tsog (dab = hateful spirit, tsog = sit or squish) and some who survived it and have multiple of encounters. From the stories I heard, dab tsog are usually dead relatives who had unceremonious death due to the war. That is why Hmong funerals usually last 72 to 48 hours to honor their passing and guide them to the afterlife. Without a proper funeral, there is a high chance the spirit becomes hateful and haunt their love ones. It is a cocktail of superstition, depression, and shame.
I find the easiest way to wake up from sleep paralysis, is to attempt to open and close your hand, eventually it will move and you'll wake up. I also find laying on my side helps as I can rock my self over, like your falling, and this will wake you up as well, Remember you are in control of your dreams. hope this helps somebody
Rapidly, or trying to rapidly, move a finger works for me. It's like a hook on reality, get your finger to move and the hand will follow then you can fling your arm out to pull your body back out of the in between realm...
Btw the diaphragm doesn't get paralyzed, so easy to change how it moves by just breathing at an unnatural pace, which unlocks the rest of the body with no need to fight frozen muscles And yes once you're conscious of what's happening you can just will the hallucinations away so long as you stay calm
I have sleep paralysis going to sleep nearly every night. Over the past 10yrs of that Ive never once had trouble breathing. I sense the evil presence and pending doom, I even feel it get into my bed and lean against my arm hip leg back etc.
I experienced sleep paralysis when I was already afraid of the dark and my siblings weren’t letting me leave a night light on (I shared with 2 sisters), and I was only about 9 years old. It happened soon after my grandpa died, and it was my first experience with death on a personal level. My memory of my childhood is absolutely awful (undiagnosed adhd & autism will do that), but that incident I remember VERY vividly. Even now that thought makes my heart race. I still fight going to sleep, and I absolutely HATE that “falling” feeling you get sometimes when you’re about to go to sleep. I had insomnia before that happened, but it went to different levels. (I actually have a delayed sleep cycle rhythm-sun goes down and I start to wake up, no matter what time I got up and how much sleep I got the day before. 7-12pm is some of my most productive hours and it has been since I was very little.) I’ve experience sleep paralysis a few times since, and the last time I actually SAW someone dressed in black hovering over me and I was trying to lift myself up to fight the person off and to scream for my husband, but it took me about 30 sec to a minute for paralysis to release me and my vision. The person I saw was actually formed out of my bathrobe hanging on my closet door. If you’ve never experienced sleep paralysis, be glad. It is AWFUL.
The demonic spirits of the night are only one in a thousand actually bathrobes on a door! Hatman & his buddies are every bit as real & Extant as we humans are; VERY thankfully so is GOD !!!
Sleep paralysis is no joke the freakiest experience I've ever had in my life. If I'm exhausted and drink caffeine before trying to get to sleep, it WILL happen to me. It's terrifying
6:50 - Sleep paralysis is also a likely explanation for many stories of alien abduction. I've experienced sleep paralysis a few times, but never imagined it was a demon sitting on me or an extraterrestrial experiment. One time I thought I was underwater and could see a shark the distance, as an explanation for why I wasn't breathing or moving normally. It didn't necessarily make sense, but at least my semiconscious mind didn't resort to a _completely_ fictional explanation. Other times I realized what was happening and that I just had to wait it out.
Absolutely. Demonic attack, alien abduction, or psychic attack. It seems to be whatever your greatest fear is, when it comes to being unable to move. For me it was either demons or groups of men surrounding me, planning on abducting me and hurting me.
Yes. It’s whatever you feel most in a situation where you cannot move. For me, it’s groups of men planning to harm me. For some it’s aliens. For some it’s demons.
I wish I had someone like Joe as my teacher when I was in high school/college. Class would've been so much more fun and easy. He has an amazing way of explaining information that keeps you interested, listening, and makes you want to learn more. I have ADHD, and I lose attention pretty fast and easily, but when watching Joe's videos, I'm glued to the screen, listening to everything he is talking about. I think I've learned more watching this channel than I did at school. Thank you, Joe! Your channel is one of the greatest on RUclips! LET'S GET THIS CHANNEL TO 2 MILLION!!
A trick to get through sleep paralysis is actually to do the opposite of what might be first impulse. What you want to do is focus on trying to actively keep *still, and relax, that catches yer nerves up with your brain and soon you can move normally.
sometimes i just give into the fear (stop trying to wake up against your own body fighting to keep you paralyzed) and it immediately fades. but of course, you're out of your mind in those moments, so you won't always be able to recognize what is happening
Oh man. Serious tears watching this video. I grew up in Central California around Hmong folks and visited Laos as an adult. So much generational trauma.
Even if you suggest that someone died of fear, you still have to show evidence of how "the fear" precipitated a state of the body that kills the person. When people actually die of fright, this is usually accompanied by a heart attack or injury to the brain, an aneurysm, stroke, etc.
Before my brief four day visit to Saigon on a U.S. Navy ship in late 1962, I had known about where Laos was, but not that Viet-Nam was right alongside. The folk group The Kingston Trio in my high school days sang an old Southern song about a Tom Dooley whose name was the same as the then famous doctor working in Laos. It much later turned out that a sideline of his well recognized humanitarian efforts in South East Asia was to provide local information to the CIA. That diplomatically significant visit by the ship I was serving aboard also bore a connection to JFK's intelligence efforts in that region, though I was not aware as a young sailor back then. The visit also was overshadowed by another Kennedy administration crisis, as it was simultaneous to the peak of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October of that year. I remember discussions with shipmates as to whether we would have a port in the USA to sail home to. Interesting times,... as the old alleged Chinese curse "May you live in interesting times."goes.
A heart condition I have runs on my dad's side of the family. We often experience sleep paralysis. And it is always... ALWAYS a nightmare. So I find this fascinating! And I'm extremely thankful I didn't find this video at bedtime.
I think you've misunderstood that nighmare thing from scandinviam folklore. The "mara" isn't a female horse but a woman. It was thought that a girl, born under circumstances where the mother used magic to try to escape the pains of child birth, would become a mara. If the child was male, he became a warewolf. The mara was a sort of magic backfire, a cursed woman who after falling asleep herself, turned into a mara, got up and tormented men and animals while they slept. She would ride on a man's chest or she would ride the horses in the stable, leaving them all sweaty and worn out when the farmer came to take them out in the morning. This is why the word for nightmare in norwegian and danish is "mareritt", meaning mare ride. She could also take the form of a cat but to my knowledge, never a horse. The two words just look identical after it became a loanword in english.
My sleep paralysis problem cleared up from something a doctor said on a show about sleep I saw years ago. She said we have more power over our dreams than we think. She said you decide before you go to sleep that anyone coming after you you will fight back and defeat them. It totally worked. If I feel like someone is "standing over" me, I just lash out. It was actually addressing nightmares but I just applied it to my sleep paralysis. I never have unsettling dreams anymore.
Uh in 1:34 MK Gandhi(Also knows as Mahatma Gandhi) was assassinated in 1948, in 1984 Indira Gandhi(daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru) was assassinated. Its weird because you usually don't refer to Indira Gandhi as Gandhi, its usually Ms. Gandhi or her full name.
It’s crazy that this video focuses so heavily on Laos. I’ve been getting acquainted with Laos culture recently. A friend (who is Laotian) from work introduced me to his sister-in-law, who is currently living in Laos and considering moving over here. His family owns a Laotian restaurant that his wife operates and he’s been trying ingratiate me to the culture by giving me food, haha. I’m digging it, haha. I thankful to be learning more history about the culture, so thank you.
Not quite sure what Joe means by that but - Caprese salad is an Italian salad, made of sliced fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, and sweet basil, seasoned with salt, and olive oil. It is usually arranged on a plate in restaurant practice. Like pizza Margherita, it features the colours of the Italian flag: green, white, and red.
Why do soo many people experience the same thing during sleep paralysis? A feeling of a presence in the room, pending doom, evil, sometimes varying contact with you such as a weight on your chest or back (I often feel something get into my bed, and if I ignore it and don't pull myself out of paralysis I'll feel it begin to lean against me). I had no knowledge of sleep paralysis until it became regular in my sleeping routine so I started Googling my experience looking for spiritual meaning, then discovered the world of sleep paralysis...
Most likely explanation: The weight on your chest is because you want to breathe, but you cannot control it. The situation of not being able to move+darkness is very scary, so your brain probably gets in all sorts of alert levels including increased perception. And since humans excels at pattern recognition you see figures were are none (since you know, being scared too often is better for survival than being scared not often enough). But if you really want spiritual explanation: Evil demon wants to get you! Watch out! Luckily the demon is quite incompetent as it doesn't manage to do anything but scare you when you are not able to move an inch.
@@shadw4701 Thats bizarre considering I knew nothing about it until I researched it, it was only then I learned its nearly identical for everyone. I'm American, have no culture, Im not religious or spiritual, and my only superstition is when Im driving and street lights go out as I pass them.
@@soulife8383A lot of street lights have sensors on top to detect if it’s day or night. Sometimes your cars headlights will hit these sensors and boom, street light turns off as you’re driving past. I used to go outside with my buddy and use his dad’s super powerful flashlight and shine it at street lights to turn them off.
i've only experienced sleep paralysis a handful of times so far and some small part of me (despite being deep in the psychosis of whatever dream i was having) always knew what was happening. sometimes, i catch myself trying to wake up (kinda feels like breaking above water), but knowing how much worse that makes it, i just give in and tumble back into the deep dark water of sleep and nothing more comes of it 🤷♂
I really appreciate this video and can relate to many things mentioned. 1. I come from a military family, and most of my male relatives over the age of 65 are Vietnam veterans. All 4 of my dad’s brothers were there on the ground, as well as my mom’s brother and father. 6 of my great uncles as well. Not to mention many cousins. It’s crazy. 2. I have Brugada syndrome in my family, and it is horrible. My dad’s brother dropped dead at the age of 34 without warning. He was a perfectly healthy in shape fit guy in the Airforce. Had just gotten married 6 weeks before (I was his flower girl ❤), and one evening his new bride found him laying across the bed, deceased. She thought he was playing a joke on her, like usual. It stunned our whole family and was very traumatizing. At that time they called it the “widow makers” heart attack, as it wasn’t named Bugada syndrome til years later. When this happened, the doctors suggested my dad’s whole immediate family get tested. And sure enough my grandfather and 5 of his 6 children (one being deceased) carried it. Well they didn’t have the genetic testing we do today, but the tests they did run suggested they had the makings of it. It affected my dad over the years, many heart problems and his heart constantly going into AFib. This disease killed all of them except 2 eventually. I had to get the genetic testing done and luckily I do not have it. I worry still though and for my daughter and other relatives. 3. I have experienced sleep paralysis multiple times over the past 10 years or so and OMG it is literally one of the scariest experience I’ve ever had! I thought I was dying the first time it happened. And the demon/hag was the grim reaper in my mind at that time. I had no clue what was happening! Didn’t learn about it until a few years later and felt a little better about it. But while it’s happening is so freaking scary!!!
I wonder if sleep apnea could be involved? I had heard of the old hag before and it always made me think what could be the cause of it. When my dad got diagnosed with sleep apnea he would say that sometimes it would feel like someone crawled over him to get into the bed. Some people here in the comments have shared similar feelings. They attribute it to sleep paralysis but maybe they should get tested for sleep apnea as your brain tries to wake you when it occurs. If you are a person that is really susceptible to sleep paralysis those feelings of a person sitting on your chest or at least crawling into bed with you may be caused by sleep apnea in combination with sleep paralysis.
My husband was dropped in Laos on his 18th birthday and eventually died from his injuries and agent orange exposure at age 55. Thank you for educating others about what so many suffered - here and abroad as a result of many factors but one being the loss of jfk.
i was having episodes of sleep paralysis for years eventually i stopped having them but found i was having "waking" dreams, out of body experiences, deja vu..this would happen up to 20 times a day and would last a few minutes at a time. I resisted going to the doctors and wasnt until i had a tonic clonic seizure in my sleep breaking both shoulders in the process. I was finally diagnosed with epilepsy and although I have it under control with medication I do fear what they call SUDEP, where people with epilepsy just die in their sleep without any warning and no real signs of why the person has died...the brain is more than a powerful thing, its literally what makes up all of your individual reality. Its amazing how different reality can be from person to person.
@@semkovych Yes, to the point that I can induce it. I’m well versed. Sleep paralysis *is* the most likely explanation...for people lying in bed. I don’t think Betty and Barney Hill were asleep while driving. LOL There’s more to it, and it gets weird.
I had sleep paralysis on post operative pain killers. I kept seeing the neighbor's black dog in the corner of my room, but huge and malicious. It was so disturbing I asked the surgeon to dump my opioids and decided to rough it through the rest of the recovery. According to my veteran family, a lot of men in all sides of that war came home on a ton of drugs.
I've experienced sleep paralysis several times, and I believe that it's what people experience, when they are abducted by aliens. It does indeed get scary
Joe, great work on this video. Incredible how you connected all this and thanks for educating me on more of the Vietnam war era history. Learned some things didn't know from this. Keep up the good work
I’ve had sleep paralysis a few times. The worst was when I was about 10 years old. I woke up, couldn’t move, couldn’t scream, while a 17th century man looking a bit like Charles II, walked up to me whilst sharpening a knife, and started cutting strips of flesh from me 😱 Sweet dreams 😂
I had sleep paralysis a few times within a couple of days. The first time, I was lying in bed, and a shadow person was walking around me. It then started to move my legs up and down. I eventually came to, but it happened again in the same night. The second time I had sleep paralysis, I saw some kind of glowing object hanging from the ceiling like a chandelier. It vibrated in all sorts of colors. I believe it changed shapes as well. Weird stuff! That was many years ago and never happened since. Now I just see things floating all around me when I'm in a half asleep state of consciousness, right before dozing off into sleep.
@theophany150 good observation. It's more than likely as I was waking, but it's difficult to recall. My reasoning for that is that it usually happens early in the night, so I would have only been sleeping for a brief period. Therefore, it seems as if I just fell asleep.
We have a family friend who is a refugee from Laos during the wartime, she was about 13 at the time and the stories she tells about what it was like being a young girl in the refugee camps in Laos was pretty horrifying. Thankfully she has a comfortable life now in America
Yeah that seemed pretty silly the way he diced it up. I'm still looking for the thing about how 'the CIA made murder-dreams'. I've watched the whole thing, almost twice, and haven't found whatever the clickbait title was referring to.
This part of the video is odd to me because it’s pretty well documented that chemical warfare with nerve agents was used against the Hmong population as part of the genocide against them.
I had a bad motorcycle wreck a little over twenty years ago and they put me on a flight-for-life helicopter. They gave me some kind of drug that totally paralyzed me to the point that I couldn't speak but could still feel the pain in my leg. I was beyond scared that I couldn't tell them that I was awake and 'alert' and that they would chop my leg off while in this state! I'm actually still not sure if I was really drugged or not! I still remember the EMT guys in the helicopter doing EMT things during the flight and that I couldn't move or speak but was in a helluva lot of pain! P.S. The surgeons at Denver Health were geniuses who saved my leg and I'm forever grateful! Especially Wade Smith, my main orthopod! Salute!!!
Sleep paralysis is awesome lol. I mean when I get it, I get it in/off the entire night. Every time i wake up, and the first time it happens can be scary but after that you know what’s going on, it’s less frightening.
@springbloom5940 The scary stories are from people with superstition or the inexperienced. Sleep paralysis has an entire positive side that most people aren't aware of because the scary stories go more viral. The nonscary ones are usually within dreaming communities and such
Sleep paralysis isn't a bad thing. All these superstitions and scary stories are what make it seem so terrifying (and if course first time experiences). Truth is sleep paralysis isn't scary as long as you understand how it works. You can actually use it to your benefit. You can break out easily or even use it to lucid dream
I confirm this. I have on average 3-4 episodes of sleep paralysis per month. Most of the times I prefer to just wait for a couple of minutes and then you'll be able to move again. In some cases I go into lucid dreaming. However, in many cases you are too awake (and pissed off) to start dreaming. That being said, over maybe a hundred of episodes or more, you get used to it and learn to manage it but it is never pleasant. Also, have never seen any demon... Just immobilised in the bed with open eyes and see the bedroom. If you do not believe in demons, you pretty much know that even if you saw one you know that you are just dreaming.
The real truth is, sleep paralysis isn't scary if you can control it, and it CAN be scary if you CAN'T control it, and you're not speaking for anybody but yourself. It's very easy for YOU to "break out of it" apparently but that doesn't mean anything about anybody else. Go ahead and start teaching people how to do that instead of just acting like your experience is everybody's when it's not.
My father was in the Vietnam war but he was stationed in Thailand. He was a jet engine mechanic. He never saw the effects of the war other than sending pilots off never to return. This was enough to change him severely forever. When he came home, he was only a shell of the man he once was
When my wife had debilitating dreams, she would breathe really heavy where I would wake up and have to shake her to wake her out of the 'dream' She would say that she was paralyzed and couldn't move in her 'dream'
If it's sleep paralysis and not just a dream where she's paralyzed it's possible to break out. Wiggling fingers and toes, holding your breath and/or breathing sporadically
@@mmmmmmolly I don't know, it is what Joe is describing in his video. And she is Hmong (she escaped when she was a year old, her mother sneaking at night across the Mekong River to Thailand from Laos)
I visited Luang Prabang on two occasions. The local hospital had a pile of artificial limbs on hand because farmers are still blowing off arms and legs when they plow and plant rice. I've been in many of the world's countries. Laos is my favorite.
i get sleep paralysis pretty frequently. it started out really scary but now it's just annoying as fuck. half the time i get it while trying to fall asleep or go back to bed and the only real way to fix it is to get up and walk around. i can definitely understand how it would keep you up for days if it was combined with something like ptsd and you didn't know what it was or why it was happening (I still don't exactly know the triggers) if anyone else has similar frequent issues and doesn't know where to start i'll list some triggers for me that have correlated with incidents -dehydration -eating oily foods before bed -sleeping on your back -anxiety -attempting sleep directly after experiencing it (it will most likely loop multiple times, in my case usually 5-10 if I don't get up or grab water) -ssri withdrawal hopefully this can help anyone else dealing with it, even if it's just a little.
AIDS was first explained as an identifiable retrovirus in April 1984. At first, in 1981, it wasn't terrifying the general public and making huge news. It was homosexuals and drug users. Drugs weren't was widespread outside of cities are they are now. And people were getting weird things like Kaposi's Sarcoma. Only 337 people were identified with this unknown immune deficiency, usually of some other disease, at the end of 1981. The cause was unknown and only Gay communities had become activists to stop known homosexual transmission. So large sections of the US were away from it, to their knowledge. At the end of 1982 blood product recipients were getting Immune deficiencies to a noticeable extent. This was when the big panic started. When the general public started to understand that you couldn't catch it without blood or other body fluid transmission the fear and panic calmed down some. The time period between about 1982 and 1985 there was a huge stigma, as bad as medieval leprosy attached to having or being related a person to having aids. It was a 3 plus year COVID fear level with no lockdowns. One of the reasons it was so bad was because it first became known in the homosexual community. So a bunch of wingnuts were sure God was punishing the sinners. I think Congress would have funded research sooner if the young hemophiliac and other blood product patients had been first. @@randalalansmith9883
Joe, since discovering you I've binge watched you numerous times while you've described disturbing stuff. I find dark trivia fascinating. I also find spirituality and psychology fascinating. So this episode at the very start I was like "oh this will be fun," Ya know, I should have figured based on the title that this one may get to me. I have an alphabet soup of conditions in my brain. But two of those things are PTSD and CPTSD. I dealt with nightly night terrors, like the wake up punching and screaming kind, for 5 years straight. Nearly every night, if not nightmares (though the last year or so the ratio was higher in regular nightmares to night terrors). Watching this video, I did this to me. But maaaaaaaan the chill down my back. The amount of times if dealt with sleep paralysis. Ps folks, if you struggle with night terrors, ask your doctor about prazosin, haven't had a night terror since I started taking it. You wanna know a surreal sleepy experience that'll fuck your entire perception of reality for life? Once I had a nesting night terror where I woke up from that punching and screaming, into another night terror in my abusive ex's bed. Screamed myself out of that night terror into what I assume is waking life? Idk, after that specific experience, and with how to hell life has gotten since then (this happened January before COVID lockdowns started), I'm not really sure I believe this is based reality. This is just samsara, and we're a soul in an eternal torture machine. Cheers.
Hey Scott, interesting video, but I do see a slight problem with it. The gentlemen who you included in your cover photo can be easily identified. I knew who one of them was right away, and realized who the other was shortly after. They had nothing to do with the title of your video. I think it'd be a good idea and respectful to these gentleman to change the photo, as I don't think they'd appreciate the title being attached to their service.
I have experienced most of the weird sleep phenomena since I was a child. Night terrors, nightmares, sleep walking, sleep talking, positional sleep apnea (which causes crazy nightmares) and sleep paralysis to name the ones right off the top of my head. So, I've done a *ton* of research about sleep phenomena. One of the weirdest experiences that I've ever had are the times where I get sleep paralysis and I'm lucid and aware of what's happening but I can't do anything to stop it. There was this one time where I was trying to take a nap and got sleep paralysis on the way out of the nap and I was dreaming about being poked and prodded by doctors (a very common occurrence with sleep paralysis) and I knew exactly what was happening - that I was dreaming with my eyes opened and couldnt move bc of the chemicals in my brain preparing my body for sleep. Anyway, so, my husband walked through the room and I could see him walk straight through the dream-doctors and I followed him with my eyes trying to say "help. wake me up" but I couldn't say anything. He giggled at me because he thought I was just watching him walk through the room, but then he noticed something was weird. I *think* I may have been gasping instead of saying "help me" but i don't really know. Either way, he came and woke me up and I was scared but laughing and telling him what happened. It was the strangest thing. I think it's even stranger than having the dreams without being lucid.
I've experienced sleep paralysis many times before. It usually happens when I sleep in an awkward position, like when one of my arms is pinned beneath my body's weight. It was a terrifying experience of not being able to move or feeling like you're screaming for help when you're not. There were times, though, that it also felt euphoric. It felt like I was floating, and my surroundings felt warm and cozy.
Fun fact: "night hags" are the European version. Indeed, the expression "I was hagridden last night" is an old world euphemism meaning "I suffered nightmares last night" or "I was visited by a terror in the late hours." The "fun" part of this fact is that the half-giant terror that visited Harry Potter in the middle of the night (terrifying to the Dursleys, at least) was named for being hagridden: Hagrid.
@@JerryShunk-h8s I dunno how "stark" I'd assert their differences to be... neither actually exist, as a for-instance. Or, in a similar vein, despite the copious evidence and scientific comprehension our species has spent thousands of years accruing that explain much - if not most - of the effects and outcomes we once attributed to mystical, magical critters and deities, a shocking number continue to believe in each, too. From where I sit, they're practically interchangeable.
I had an experience like this. I was asleep and awoke to gunshots outside, when I went to sit up I realized that I couldn’t move my body. I glanced out the window and there was a heavy fog (it resembled movies about the civil war). Then my attention went to the corner of my bed where a dark demon like figure was crouched down slowly creeping its arm up to me. I was in absolute panic because I couldn’t move. Then, right before the demons hand reached my leg, I suddenly could move and everything was gone. No gunshots, no fog, no demon. I ran out of the room as fast as I could. That was 20 years ago and I’ll never forget it. Hasn’t happened since.
my grandfather was drafted for the Vietnam War and he has heart disease from exposure to agent orange. i cant even imagine how horrible it must be for the people of Vietnam and SE Asia who are living with the aftermath. agent orange is some fucked up stuff. this is a really great video, i love the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and you approached the subjects of the video with a lot of care. love your channel!!
I had nightmares for quite a while, they got so bad I didn't sleep for days or i wouldn't sleep at night for the longest time and only a few hrs during the day. I still have them just not as frequent
Hey. As a man with Brugada syndrome, I can attest to what you say. The nightmares, sleep paralysis, labored breathing, etc, is something I go through on the regular. You didn’t mention that Brugada is not only rare, but also exceedingly rare outside Asia. As a Scandinavian man I’ve been subjected to all kinds of curious cardiologists looking to publish a paper.
I recently watched your video on the victorian era. And it is so true, there are crazy things people do and believe these days. Especially renowned scientists who actually believe in simulation theory, alternate/parallel universes, evolution, etc especially when the so called "proof" or "evidence" is non existing or shotty at best. keep up the videos, i used to hate history but you make it fun.
Joe. I've watched your videos for years. You have a way of breaking things down and explaining so everyone can understand. Thanks for the great videos!
Sleep paralysis is terrifying. I was a psych major in college, so I had studied the phenomenon, but when it happened to me it was still extremely disturbing. It used to happen to me often, and it never got any easier to bear.
I once got sleep paralysis so bad that I knew I was dreaming and could hear my alarm going off, and even managed to force my eyes open a crack, but I couldn't get myself to wake up until I tried to scream as loud as possible, and my body actually managed to squeak out a modest groan. The sound and reverberation in my chest startled me awake. Ever since then I seem to move a lot more in my sleep. My hypothesis is that my brain no longer paralyses my body while I sleep as much as it used to, due to the terror and helplessness I felt during that sleep paralysis. Then again, they could be comorbidities of something else entirely.
Worked with a mason foreman somewhere in circa 2015-2017. He was a Vietnam Vet, and would shudder at even the thought of war. One day during lunch, him and i actually got to talking about his time spent over there. You could see how much bent up angst he had, and he went on to explain how he was affected by Agent Orange..and had been fighting in court for a long time over the apparent effects it has had on his body. He then took off his shirt and showed me and my buddy the damage it had done to his upper torso, mostly on his arm. The best i can do to explain what it looked like was raised and malformed looking skin, that looked as though he was seriously burned. Something I had never seen anything like it in my life.
Poor dude passed away a few years ago, without settlement from those injuries. RIP papa smurf, you were the man.
As a Gulf War veteran trying to get the VA to deal with ANY of my problems, I ask you to write your federal representatives (email thru their websites) to get the fuckin VA to quit screwing veterans over and just handle their medical problems. The assholes at the VA act like it's their own goddamn money or something.
Support our troops! Wait, no, support weapons manufacturers and military contractors getting rich and politicians getting more power via war on the backs and lives of our troops! There, fixed it!
How I wish more military resources could be refocused to things like building schools in impoverished areas all over the world, medical missions to far flung areas that doctors and dentists can't easily visit, rescue operations for dangerous disaster-wrecked communities (flooding, earthquakes, etc). I feel like so many more people would see it as an honor to serve if instead of being paranoid about war they could become beacons of goodwill and peace.
@@noonynoonynoo To some extent we have to keep up the arms race to protect ourselves from foreign threats (which unfortunately also protects domestic threats, aka our political and corporate overlords). It would be nice if, during times of peace, we had more soldiers working to fix the problems that usually lead to wars in the first place. Of course you know our governments (any government) would find a way to screw it up, kill more innocent people, make tons of money, and blame everyone but themselves for the problems they cause.
@@noonynoonynooThe late Bill Hicks (comedian) used to say that we had the ability to turn it completely around. He passed at the age of 32.
I used to have the opposite of “sleep paralysis”, “night terrors”. When having a nightmare, occasionally I would leap out of bed and literally run for my life, not great in a house at night in the dark. This led to minor injuries from running into walls or doors, but nothing serious. Until this happened to me when staying at a friend’s house, sleeping in a spare room. I ran out the door and unfortunately turned right, straight onto the top step of the stairs. This was about 2 AM on a winter night. I woke up lying on the floor halfway through a large window at the side of the front door. I must have smashed into the glass with my left arm which was seriously broken. The only good thing was there had been a heavy curtain in front of the window, I would have been ripped to pieces if not for that. The postscript is that after two days in hospital I came back to retrieve my car and noticed the smoke alarm above the stairs was hanging from it’s wiring. I stood on the step under the alarm and I was unable to touch it with my good arm. I must have been literally flying through the air into that window. Thankfully I never had another incident of night terrors again, that was thirty years ago.
Yo thats crazy story lol thank you for sharing that for real
so you need real danger to teach your body to ignore the imagined danger.... we done found the cure, boys
Sometimes we have to learn the hard way. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
No offense, I really hope you don't take this too seriously, but if I watched you do that, I would laugh my ass off so much I might have passed out of hipoxia lol
@@projectdeveloper9311 Agreed, that's pretty funny image sans the injury.
Very well done Joe! As someone who's first generation Hmong American, I grew listening to these exact stories from my parents and older family members . The atrocities they face impacts them to this day. I appreciate you bringing attention to this topic
I hope you don't fall victim to the syndrome. 😔🙏
My stepfather was a Marine veteran with 2 tours in Vietnam. He died in 1999 at the age of 52 from a severe nightmare/ flashback. We found him a couple days later. Official cause of death was listed as adrenaline overdose likely brought on by a nightmare as he was found screaming in a crouching pose in his bedroom with his hands raised defensively. PTSD is a terrible affliction and even though he sought and received treatment, the demons still got him. No drugs in his system, btw.
Jesus.
Im sorry for both your loss and his passing its must of been terrible.
Im very fortunate to have had the privilege of never having to fight.
I'm sorry for your loss. Some guys just can't turn it off. S/F.
Sorry to hear that man. My wife's grandfather was a WW2 vet who screamed in his sleep until the day he died about 5 years ago.
Lost my husband to PTSD and Agent Orange he was 55. Prayers
@@michelebeuttel3289 I'm truly sorry for your loss, and for what he went through.
What's great about Freddy Kruger is just how much fun he's having while he's wreaking all kinds of havoc. Its always nice to see someone that loves their job and is good at it. He's a real inspiration that no matter how bad you have it, its what you make of it that controls your reality.
Hahahaha! I love this!
You hit that nail on its head; I'm not a horror movie fan AT ALL, but those movies are just damned funny, even WITH all the jump scares and gore. My favorite was the one that ended with that hockey mask on the ground, and of course the next was Freddie Meets Jason. They're just engaging and clever, if you can handle the creepier/grosser aspects.
That's also why I was a HUGE fan of Penny Dreadful, which I'm currently re-watching/streaming/binging, thx to my recent subscription to the premium version of paramount+, which comes with Showtime. That show has some of the funniest, cleverest lines in the history of TV -- Dr. Frankenstein professing a real enjoyment of Shelley -- I about fell over laughing at that one! 🤣 My husband thought I'd lost my mind, till I explained it to him. 🤣🤣
@@andriaduncan5032 Are you being held hostage by Paramount and Showtime? Blink twice for yes.
@@Ricky_Cullen Heh. No, just appreciating having something to watch for a change. Mainly I wanted to watch that silly comedy "Ghosts," and was impatiently waiting for the damn strike to be over, and the entertainment biz getting back to work. I had a free year of the lower-tier Paramount+, with my t-mobile account, but once that year was over, I was gonna have to pay, and I figured if I have to pay, I might as well pay just a little more and get zero commercials AND Showtime. Then I recalled that Penny Dreadful had been on Showtime, but when we switched our cable provider, we lost Showtime, and never got to see the last season of Penny Dreadful. And now I'm caught up in the new season of Ghosts. 🤣
@@Ricky_Cullen 😂😂😂
Ikr? Sounds like a commercial! I have Penny Dreadful on DVD... DVD... DVD... So I can watch it as many times as I want without subscription or even internet service. But I only watched it once and didn't really like it. (cheap on ebay)
Americans who think a second civil war would be glorious should look into the history of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. It wouldn't be your 19th century civil war, which was America's deadliest war and horrific enough. It would be beyond your wildest dreams of horror.
Absolutely
americans are actually way more united than most people think. if someone were to attack the country, we'd immediately close ranks. we just bicker because we live in relative comfort and don't know what to do with the genetic trauma from deep time that carries in our collective psyche
@@360.Tapestry However, of no one attacks the US, the pressure to go to civil war could grow to the point where it's 'pick a side' time.
@@Thurgosh_OG lol yeah everybody pick a side between texas and the entirety of the u.s. stop the fear mongering
@@Thurgosh_OG What is wrong with you? You're just trying to find excuses to force war to happen over nothing and what you're saying is beyond idiotic. There's not some correlation about 'either we have to get attacked or we'll end up having a civil war'. That's a bonehead thing to assert and it's scary that anybody would be so stupid as to believe that.
My first experience with sleep paralysis was very positive. My step mother's pet dog was the one who came up and layed on my chest. It made me happy and I felt loved.
Lmao
My friend, that is not the definition of sleep paralysis by most people. Sleep paralysis is terrifying to the point I have thrown up after I finally have woken up.
@@radiofreejenn0b They're literally describing sleep paralysis. There's no need to gatekeep. Sleep paralysis is a state of partially awake cataplexy, often accompanied by hallucinations. I've experienced it in many different degrees of "severity". I've never had an experience this positive, but I've had some neutral-positive experiences. It happens
We gatekeeping sleep paralysis now?
@@1337Adabed Sleep paralysis is not a happy thing so….
You might want to specify that Indira Ghandi was assassinated in 1984. By just saying "Ghandi was assassinated," the first thing people think is that you mean Mohandas K (Mahatma) Ghandi, who was assassinated in 1948... which is when Orwell wrote 1984.
Fairly certain it's a reference to 1948 by llewrO egroeG. Sorry, 1984 by George Orwell.
@@proph7543 While that would be perceptive, I think his script team just went too fast and did not check to see the first name, nor thought that there was a second Gandhi to be assassinated. Though, it is interesting that they were assassinated in reverse years.
Ooohhh, an Easter egg😲
Not sure many millennials will think of the OG Ghandi.
@@swiftflight7927My thoughts exactly
I am an army veteran, and I have generations of military service members prior to me, and I can personally attest that PTSD lasts long-term, and can indeed kill you if it’s left untreated, or treated improperly, including in your sleep from severe sleep terrors and paralysis and nightmares. I am of course alive, but I had to seek medical treatment for a couple of sleep paralysis episodes that were that terrifying. The condition discussed in this video is living proof that it’s never just “all in your head“ and unfortunately has taken lives. Maybe your video and other research done will help the medical community understand how to better help those who suffer from any preceding conditions that can cause this to happen.
A friend of mine's father died of a stress induced heart attack, the stress of which was induced by PTSD from a botched anesthesia during surgery. The surgery healed one ailment, but gave him that trauma.
People generally aren't aware of how your mind can directly affect you physically, the two are inextricably linked.
I was diagnosed with a panic disorder and while what I experience during panic attacks feels a lot less serious to me than what you and other people describe, I can absolutely confirm that it puts a toll on the physical body. Oh boy. When I had regular attacks I was so used to constantly being tired, having aching muscles and tension headaches, digestive problems etc that I thought that's just what its like for me. Now I only get those symptoms when shit hits the fan again which confirmed for me that they are related to the psychological stress.
Thankfully I am slowly but surely working through. I hope you and your family find recovery as well
If you die in the Matrix...
This is what my mom most likely died of ... She died in her sleep with an undiagnosed whole in the heart. My dad said, she was moving, and seemed to try to wake up but did not make it. The scary thing is that the evening before that she said she will not wake up... She was unfortunately spot on 😢 So this sounds very familiar.
Possibly the most startling thing for me in this great video is Joe having to explain what Agent Orange was for people who've never heard of it. I missed the Vietnam war twice, being born in 1960 & female, but even at my relatively young age during it, it had a huge impact. Plus my ex was a veteran. We really see the world thru the lens of our own experience.
US is still doing cleanup in Vietnam because of it, I've heard.
Joe’s audience isn’t just American. I’m French and I live in the UK. Of course I know about agent Orange, but I bet you remote populations who didn’t have the opportunities for further education, access to foreign languages, travel, etc. Those people might not know about it. They have their own history to worry about
It affected me a lot too. If it hadn't ended when it did, I would surely have had to go. I'm not the soldier type and was filled with fear and dread. My brother, who was a lot like me, got drafted but Truman died the day before he was supposed to be inducted. The Federal offices were shut down in honor of the former President.
I missed it by not being born until after it and being born in a country not involved in the war, but much of the cultural zeitgeist of America in the 80s and 90s kept it fresh in people's minds. I think that had gone by the early 2000s when 9/11 changed the outlook of the US so much. It's both understandable that today's under 30s are less aware, but also makes me feel really old.
I completely get younger viewers not being familiar with Agent Orange or the rest of the Viet Nam war. I was born in 1969, and while I certainly heard the phrase Agent Orange I had only a very hazy idea what it was or what effects it had. For someone born 10 - 20 years after me I imagine it would be much like the stories our generation heard about the use of gas warfare in WWI -- something abstract that happened "long ago".
My husband was born with agent orange birth defects, and his son was also. His dad was a Vietnam Vet, passed away from cancer a few years ago.
Hugs from Scotland ❤
I've seen the enduring effect of agent Orange on site. Even decades after it was sprayed. I can't believe it's not considered a war crime. They must have known it was toxic
Not to be that person, but… if I had agent orange defects I wouldn’t have a kid, I would adopt. Why didn’t he? Is that not like a jerk move?
@@LordOfElysium they range from relatively mild to very severe so
@@LordOfElysium all birth defects are nearly impossible to detect before birth, unless a doctor of some kind happens to see it in an ultrasound. Which of course wasn't an option decades ago. So it's just a gamble as with all pregnancy in general. As vinny184 said there's also a huge range of defects that can happen.
I've suffered from sleep paralysis all my life. When I was a child it would happen once every couple of months. Now, in my mid-sixties, it happens once every couple of years. When it first started happening it was terrifying, the worst part being that I couldn't open my eyes. Eventually I learned that the one bodily function I could still control was my breathing. I would start hyperventilating and then after a minute or two my eyes would pop open and the spell would be broken. I don't really know if the hyperventilation helps to dispel the paralysis or if it just keeps my mind occupied while my body wakes up normally, but having that tiny bit of control really helped reduce my fear.
I learned to become conscious that it was happening, which kept the fear under a bit of control, and to focus all of my attention on my index finger. When I moved the finger, it broke the paralysis and all senses returned to normal. I’ve never heard of anyone having it into older age. I stopped getting it in my late 20s and am glad it never returned.
It's scary to realise that something in your brain which is supposed to work subconsciously is misfiring. Essential functions like falling asleep, regulating heartbeat, breathing... That's the truly horrifying part. Unbeknownst to you, one of these switches could just flip the other way or not turn on at all one day, and that'd be it.
@@PsycordeYeah omg that's absolutely terrifying... Imagine being left in a "coma" for years in that state, as that's all it would appear as to medical professionals. As someone who has had sleep paralysis that would be hell.
The hyperventilation is causing a change in your carbon dioxide saturation which will arouse you out of sleep is likely what was happening
Hyperventilation does work for me too. If this happens to you, it is worth a try
Thanks!
I work with a man who was exposed to Agent Orange (he calls it White Rain) while he was a young man in Laos. The damage to his mind, body, and nervous system is unforgivable! He is in constant pain, and his body is deteriorating! I’m ashamed of what the U.S.
Same exposure happened to my next door neighbor. He recently passed away from the all of the terrible symptoms. I don't know if he called it white rain because he couldn't speak anymore. His poor wife never left his side and had to do absolutely everything. It was incredibly sad.
If you lot aren't very careful over there in the US, we're all going to be exposed to Agent Orange again!
It wasn't developed as a weapon, it was developed to clear foliage and the latent unforseen effects of agent orange affected people in ways that weren't planned.
Git gud😢
@@hollister2320what?
Error correction - Hmong populations are in Minnesota and WISCONSIN (not Michigan). It's even dark red on the map that was shown.
Joe, my childhood bestfriends family is from Laos. I'm glad you're bringing attention to this, especially the fact that the most bombed country in history was done to a country not even at war with us. Unexploded ordnance still claims victims to this day.
Great video as always
I was on an apparently too high of a methadone dose for heroin addiction recovery. most nights i would die in my dreams, and my gf and i would swear the other was “stealing the others air” while sleeping/cuddling.
i was not breathing enough, essentially having apneas because of the depressant activity of the drug and that manifested as legit dying in dreams before i would wake up because i was basically dying..i was suffocating.
Ouch. Hope you've moved beyond that part of your life now.
Jesus. I could see that methadone is no joke
Been there too. Side Sleeping helps me ! Apnea ~ NO BUENO!
It's unbelievable how much atrocities humans waged against each other 😥🤦♂️
Especially those countries that claim to be descendants of the roman empire, i'm looking at you US and Germany.
And we still are, right now.
it's easier not to believe - maybe even healthy in some instances
Between nightmare on elm street and Inception and the other evidence Ive seen of sci-fi secretly being real im giving this theory my seal of approval.
Always seems to be the same nations doing the atrocities too.
When I had my first experience of sleep paralysis, nobody knew what the heck I was on about, even my doctor.
Now, decades later, there’s information about it everywhere. Millions know about it.
This is what I love about the Internet. ❤
Dab Tsog is pronounced "Dah Jaw". The B is a tone marker for a high tone and the G is a marker for a mid-low breathy tone.
And it is just a coincidence that backwards it is "bad ghost?"
@@EinsteinsHair It took me a minute but I see what you did there.
@@EinsteinsHairMaybe Not ~ The devils are always in it for a twisted laugh ! They love to do things in language backwards ~
i dont think he or his team look up correct pronunciations for anything :(
I always thought it was actually just a cat. I know from experience.
As a first generation of Hmong American, I very appreciate you making this video. I had older relatives that had died from dab tsog (dab = hateful spirit, tsog = sit or squish) and some who survived it and have multiple of encounters. From the stories I heard, dab tsog are usually dead relatives who had unceremonious death due to the war. That is why Hmong funerals usually last 72 to 48 hours to honor their passing and guide them to the afterlife. Without a proper funeral, there is a high chance the spirit becomes hateful and haunt their love ones. It is a cocktail of superstition, depression, and shame.
I find the easiest way to wake up from sleep paralysis, is to attempt to open and close your hand, eventually it will move and you'll wake up. I also find laying on my side helps as I can rock my self over, like your falling, and this will wake you up as well, Remember you are in control of your dreams. hope this helps somebody
Rapidly, or trying to rapidly, move a finger works for me. It's like a hook on reality, get your finger to move and the hand will follow then you can fling your arm out to pull your body back out of the in between realm...
Yea was a bout to comment the same
It's a horrible feeling specially when u try so hard but your hand refuses to move
Btw the diaphragm doesn't get paralyzed, so easy to change how it moves by just breathing at an unnatural pace, which unlocks the rest of the body with no need to fight frozen muscles
And yes once you're conscious of what's happening you can just will the hallucinations away so long as you stay calm
I have sleep paralysis going to sleep nearly every night. Over the past 10yrs of that Ive never once had trouble breathing. I sense the evil presence and pending doom, I even feel it get into my bed and lean against my arm hip leg back etc.
@@soulife8383 Evil is a real thing and it actively seeks to kill, steal, and destroy. Asking for covering over you.
I experienced sleep paralysis when I was already afraid of the dark and my siblings weren’t letting me leave a night light on (I shared with 2 sisters), and I was only about 9 years old. It happened soon after my grandpa died, and it was my first experience with death on a personal level.
My memory of my childhood is absolutely awful (undiagnosed adhd & autism will do that), but that incident I remember VERY vividly. Even now that thought makes my heart race. I still fight going to sleep, and I absolutely HATE that “falling” feeling you get sometimes when you’re about to go to sleep. I had insomnia before that happened, but it went to different levels. (I actually have a delayed sleep cycle rhythm-sun goes down and I start to wake up, no matter what time I got up and how much sleep I got the day before. 7-12pm is some of my most productive hours and it has been since I was very little.) I’ve experience sleep paralysis a few times since, and the last time I actually SAW someone dressed in black hovering over me and I was trying to lift myself up to fight the person off and to scream for my husband, but it took me about 30 sec to a minute for paralysis to release me and my vision. The person I saw was actually formed out of my bathrobe hanging on my closet door.
If you’ve never experienced sleep paralysis, be glad. It is AWFUL.
The demonic spirits of the night are only one in a thousand actually bathrobes on a door! Hatman & his buddies are every bit as real & Extant as we humans are; VERY thankfully so is GOD !!!
Joe: "Attacks you when you're most vulnerable"
Me: "When you're sh1tting"
Im...I'm shitting now tho
Hey quit that, I'm shitting rn for real 😅
Or taking a shower a la Psycho.
In jail, dudes have another inmate stand near them so they don't get attacked with their pants down and poo half way out their butt 😂😂
Like that scene in ghoulies II
Sleep paralysis is no joke the freakiest experience I've ever had in my life. If I'm exhausted and drink caffeine before trying to get to sleep, it WILL happen to me. It's terrifying
it seems that you know how to mitigate it!
My wife is Hmong and she has had debilitating dreams.
Dab Tsog said 'Da jo'
The last letter is the tone of the word
B: spoken high
G spoken breathy
Give her a hug from Scotland ❤
@@weegiewarbler are you Hmong?
I sure will!
@@EricStott no, but everyone needs a hug.
it's a fairly common phenomena among hmong men and has led a lot of them to accept christianity
@@360.Tapestry a fate worse than death. I hope they maintain their own values and customs and don't become polluted by that.
I started having a reoccurring nightmare after some stuff happened. At one time it got so bad I would stay up for 3-4 days in a row.
Nightmares I had in the late 90s keep coming true systematically. Ask me what a mininilator is
"after some stuff happened"
I, too, have been to twitter
Stay strong
6:50 - Sleep paralysis is also a likely explanation for many stories of alien abduction. I've experienced sleep paralysis a few times, but never imagined it was a demon sitting on me or an extraterrestrial experiment. One time I thought I was underwater and could see a shark the distance, as an explanation for why I wasn't breathing or moving normally. It didn't necessarily make sense, but at least my semiconscious mind didn't resort to a _completely_ fictional explanation. Other times I realized what was happening and that I just had to wait it out.
Absolutely. Demonic attack, alien abduction, or psychic attack. It seems to be whatever your greatest fear is, when it comes to being unable to move. For me it was either demons or groups of men surrounding me, planning on abducting me and hurting me.
Yes. It’s whatever you feel most in a situation where you cannot move. For me, it’s groups of men planning to harm me. For some it’s aliens. For some it’s demons.
I wish I had someone like Joe as my teacher when I was in high school/college. Class would've been so much more fun and easy. He has an amazing way of explaining information that keeps you interested, listening, and makes you want to learn more. I have ADHD, and I lose attention pretty fast and easily, but when watching Joe's videos, I'm glued to the screen, listening to everything he is talking about. I think I've learned more watching this channel than I did at school. Thank you, Joe! Your channel is one of the greatest on RUclips! LET'S GET THIS CHANNEL TO 2 MILLION!!
I've been through college and law school and never had a professor that was as pleasant to learn from as you. Well done, Sir.
Yeah, he doesn't have to deal with students and it makes his job a lot more pleasant.
My god. If i had a time machine, I'd use it to go back a minute and tell myself to not google agent orange birth defects.
my rational ignorance immediately kicked in and i didn't have the slightest curiosity to search it
Thanks for the heads-up.
Having seen Thalidomide birth defects is enough for me, for this lifetime.
Would you listen to yourself, though? You were kind of warned already by this video lol. Curiosity killed the cat!
A trick to get through sleep paralysis is actually to do the opposite of what might be first impulse. What you want to do is focus on trying to actively keep *still, and relax, that catches yer nerves up with your brain and soon you can move normally.
sometimes i just give into the fear (stop trying to wake up against your own body fighting to keep you paralyzed) and it immediately fades. but of course, you're out of your mind in those moments, so you won't always be able to recognize what is happening
Oh man. Serious tears watching this video. I grew up in Central California around Hmong folks and visited Laos as an adult. So much generational trauma.
Even if you suggest that someone died of fear, you still have to show evidence of how "the fear" precipitated a state of the body that kills the person. When people actually die of fright, this is usually accompanied by a heart attack or injury to the brain, an aneurysm, stroke, etc.
Been watching you for years and you come across so likeable. Keeps me coming back ;)
"weird dream shit starts to happen" yep. as someone who's experienced it twice, its truly terrifying
This was super interesting. Good job Joe.
Before my brief four day visit to Saigon on a U.S. Navy ship in late 1962, I had known about where Laos was, but not that Viet-Nam was right alongside. The folk group The Kingston Trio in my high school days sang an old Southern song about a Tom Dooley whose name was the same as the then famous doctor working in Laos. It much later turned out that a sideline of his well recognized humanitarian efforts in South East Asia was to provide local information to the CIA.
That diplomatically significant visit by the ship I was serving aboard also bore a connection to JFK's intelligence efforts in that region, though I was not aware as a young sailor back then. The visit also was overshadowed by another Kennedy administration crisis, as it was simultaneous to the peak of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October of that year. I remember discussions with shipmates as to whether we would have a port in the USA to sail home to. Interesting times,... as the old alleged Chinese curse "May you live in interesting times."goes.
A heart condition I have runs on my dad's side of the family. We often experience sleep paralysis. And it is always... ALWAYS a nightmare. So I find this fascinating! And I'm extremely thankful I didn't find this video at bedtime.
I think you've misunderstood that nighmare thing from scandinviam folklore. The "mara" isn't a female horse but a woman. It was thought that a girl, born under circumstances where the mother used magic to try to escape the pains of child birth, would become a mara. If the child was male, he became a warewolf. The mara was a sort of magic backfire, a cursed woman who after falling asleep herself, turned into a mara, got up and tormented men and animals while they slept. She would ride on a man's chest or she would ride the horses in the stable, leaving them all sweaty and worn out when the farmer came to take them out in the morning. This is why the word for nightmare in norwegian and danish is "mareritt", meaning mare ride. She could also take the form of a cat but to my knowledge, never a horse. The two words just look identical after it became a loanword in english.
Apropriate username. Cudos
Vaush cries in disappointment
The ' mara, ' ( Biblical Bitter ) is merely Northern culture's explanation of a demon, ( aka fallen angel ) that goof around humans as they sleep.!
My sleep paralysis problem cleared up from something a doctor said on a show about sleep I saw years ago. She said we have more power over our dreams than we think. She said you decide before you go to sleep that anyone coming after you you will fight back and defeat them. It totally worked. If I feel like someone is "standing over" me, I just lash out. It was actually addressing nightmares but I just applied it to my sleep paralysis. I never have unsettling dreams anymore.
The ALMIGHTY appreciates those that fight back !
Uh in 1:34 MK Gandhi(Also knows as Mahatma Gandhi) was assassinated in 1948, in 1984 Indira Gandhi(daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru) was assassinated. Its weird because you usually don't refer to Indira Gandhi as Gandhi, its usually Ms. Gandhi or her full name.
It’s crazy that this video focuses so heavily on Laos. I’ve been getting acquainted with Laos culture recently.
A friend (who is Laotian) from work introduced me to his sister-in-law, who is currently living in Laos and considering moving over here. His family owns a Laotian restaurant that his wife operates and he’s been trying ingratiate me to the culture by giving me food, haha. I’m digging it, haha.
I thankful to be learning more history about the culture, so thank you.
I like Joe's "Earth is a caprese salad" shirt. I don't know what it means, but I like it.
Not quite sure what Joe means by that but - Caprese salad is an Italian salad, made of sliced fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, and sweet basil, seasoned with salt, and olive oil. It is usually arranged on a plate in restaurant practice. Like pizza Margherita, it features the colours of the Italian flag: green, white, and red.
This video is now in my TOP 5 Joe Scott Video’s. Engaging, informative and I really liked all little connections. Great job.
Why do soo many people experience the same thing during sleep paralysis? A feeling of a presence in the room, pending doom, evil, sometimes varying contact with you such as a weight on your chest or back (I often feel something get into my bed, and if I ignore it and don't pull myself out of paralysis I'll feel it begin to lean against me).
I had no knowledge of sleep paralysis until it became regular in my sleeping routine so I started Googling my experience looking for spiritual meaning, then discovered the world of sleep paralysis...
Most likely explanation: The weight on your chest is because you want to breathe, but you cannot control it. The situation of not being able to move+darkness is very scary, so your brain probably gets in all sorts of alert levels including increased perception. And since humans excels at pattern recognition you see figures were are none (since you know, being scared too often is better for survival than being scared not often enough).
But if you really want spiritual explanation: Evil demon wants to get you! Watch out! Luckily the demon is quite incompetent as it doesn't manage to do anything but scare you when you are not able to move an inch.
Mostly fear and superstition. The more you understand sleep paralysis the less scary it becomes
@@shadw4701 Thats bizarre considering I knew nothing about it until I researched it, it was only then I learned its nearly identical for everyone. I'm American, have no culture, Im not religious or spiritual, and my only superstition is when Im driving and street lights go out as I pass them.
@@soulife8383A lot of street lights have sensors on top to detect if it’s day or night. Sometimes your cars headlights will hit these sensors and boom, street light turns off as you’re driving past. I used to go outside with my buddy and use his dad’s super powerful flashlight and shine it at street lights to turn them off.
i've only experienced sleep paralysis a handful of times so far and some small part of me (despite being deep in the psychosis of whatever dream i was having) always knew what was happening. sometimes, i catch myself trying to wake up (kinda feels like breaking above water), but knowing how much worse that makes it, i just give in and tumble back into the deep dark water of sleep and nothing more comes of it 🤷♂
I really appreciate this video and can relate to many things mentioned. 1. I come from a military family, and most of my male relatives over the age of 65 are Vietnam veterans. All 4 of my dad’s brothers were there on the ground, as well as my mom’s brother and father. 6 of my great uncles as well. Not to mention many cousins. It’s crazy. 2. I have Brugada syndrome in my family, and it is horrible. My dad’s brother dropped dead at the age of 34 without warning. He was a perfectly healthy in shape fit guy in the Airforce. Had just gotten married 6 weeks before (I was his flower girl ❤), and one evening his new bride found him laying across the bed, deceased. She thought he was playing a joke on her, like usual. It stunned our whole family and was very traumatizing. At that time they called it the “widow makers” heart attack, as it wasn’t named Bugada syndrome til years later. When this happened, the doctors suggested my dad’s whole immediate family get tested. And sure enough my grandfather and 5 of his 6 children (one being deceased) carried it. Well they didn’t have the genetic testing we do today, but the tests they did run suggested they had the makings of it. It affected my dad over the years, many heart problems and his heart constantly going into AFib. This disease killed all of them except 2 eventually. I had to get the genetic testing done and luckily I do not have it. I worry still though and for my daughter and other relatives. 3. I have experienced sleep paralysis multiple times over the past 10 years or so and OMG it is literally one of the scariest experience I’ve ever had! I thought I was dying the first time it happened. And the demon/hag was the grim reaper in my mind at that time. I had no clue what was happening! Didn’t learn about it until a few years later and felt a little better about it. But while it’s happening is so freaking scary!!!
I wonder if sleep apnea could be involved? I had heard of the old hag before and it always made me think what could be the cause of it. When my dad got diagnosed with sleep apnea he would say that sometimes it would feel like someone crawled over him to get into the bed. Some people here in the comments have shared similar feelings. They attribute it to sleep paralysis but maybe they should get tested for sleep apnea as your brain tries to wake you when it occurs. If you are a person that is really susceptible to sleep paralysis those feelings of a person sitting on your chest or at least crawling into bed with you may be caused by sleep apnea in combination with sleep paralysis.
My husband was dropped in Laos on his 18th birthday and eventually died from his injuries and agent orange exposure at age 55. Thank you for educating others about what so many suffered - here and abroad as a result of many factors but one being the loss of jfk.
MLK Jr: I have a dream...
CIA planning his assasination: Hear me out...
you're waiting for a train
@@360.Tapestry inception!
i was having episodes of sleep paralysis for years eventually i stopped having them but found i was having "waking" dreams, out of body experiences, deja vu..this would happen up to 20 times a day and would last a few minutes at a time. I resisted going to the doctors and wasnt until i had a tonic clonic seizure in my sleep breaking both shoulders in the process. I was finally diagnosed with epilepsy and although I have it under control with medication I do fear what they call SUDEP, where people with epilepsy just die in their sleep without any warning and no real signs of why the person has died...the brain is more than a powerful thing, its literally what makes up all of your individual reality. Its amazing how different reality can be from person to person.
Sleep paralyses and repressed trauma is the most logical explanation for the alien abduction phenomenon.
Sure, except for cases where the reporting person was wide awake.
@@DemoDick1Have you ever experienced sleep paralysis? You feel pretty damn awake.
*CITATIONS NEEDED*
@@semkovych Yes, to the point that I can induce it. I’m well versed.
Sleep paralysis *is* the most likely explanation...for people lying in bed. I don’t think Betty and Barney Hill were asleep while driving. LOL
There’s more to it, and it gets weird.
@@DemoDick1- there certainly is more to it, but nothing that can't be explained. There isn't any extra terrestrial evidence for alien abductions.
I had sleep paralysis on post operative pain killers. I kept seeing the neighbor's black dog in the corner of my room, but huge and malicious. It was so disturbing I asked the surgeon to dump my opioids and decided to rough it through the rest of the recovery.
According to my veteran family, a lot of men in all sides of that war came home on a ton of drugs.
I've experienced sleep paralysis several times, and I believe that it's what people experience, when they are abducted by aliens.
It does indeed get scary
Joe, great work on this video. Incredible how you connected all this and thanks for educating me on more of the Vietnam war era history. Learned some things didn't know from this. Keep up the good work
its monday already?!/ stayed up too late. doh"
Whoever wrote this episode deserves a raise. Amazing work.
I’ve had sleep paralysis a few times. The worst was when I was about 10 years old. I woke up, couldn’t move, couldn’t scream, while a 17th century man looking a bit like Charles II, walked up to me whilst sharpening a knife, and started cutting strips of flesh from
me 😱
Sweet dreams 😂
I have it often .
Sounds like a glitch in the reincarnation program.
Bart Simpson 😂😂😂😂😂😂 and Showpop
I had sleep paralysis a few times within a couple of days. The first time, I was lying in bed, and a shadow person was walking around me. It then started to move my legs up and down. I eventually came to, but it happened again in the same night.
The second time I had sleep paralysis, I saw some kind of glowing object hanging from the ceiling like a chandelier. It vibrated in all sorts of colors. I believe it changed shapes as well.
Weird stuff!
That was many years ago and never happened since.
Now I just see things floating all around me when I'm in a half asleep state of consciousness, right before dozing off into sleep.
@theophany150 good observation. It's more than likely as I was waking, but it's difficult to recall. My reasoning for that is that it usually happens early in the night, so I would have only been sleeping for a brief period. Therefore, it seems as if I just fell asleep.
We have a family friend who is a refugee from Laos during the wartime, she was about 13 at the time and the stories she tells about what it was like being a young girl in the refugee camps in Laos was pretty horrifying. Thankfully she has a comfortable life now in America
"it wasnt a nerve gas.... but it did affect peoples nervous systems" lol
Yeah that seemed pretty silly the way he diced it up. I'm still looking for the thing about how 'the CIA made murder-dreams'. I've watched the whole thing, almost twice, and haven't found whatever the clickbait title was referring to.
It wasn't _intended_ as a nerve agent. I think that's the most charitable thing one can say about it.
This part of the video is odd to me because it’s pretty well documented that chemical warfare with nerve agents was used against the Hmong population as part of the genocide against them.
Glad to see you back Dan!! Your running channel was one of the first I started watching and inspired me to do the same
Wasn't there a film called Dreamscape with Dennis Quaid. This is where people could enter your dreams and kill you??
Yeah, that was a killer movie. Awesome ideas in that one.
I had a bad motorcycle wreck a little over twenty years ago and they put me on a flight-for-life helicopter.
They gave me some kind of drug that totally paralyzed me to the point that I couldn't speak but could still feel the pain in my leg.
I was beyond scared that I couldn't tell them that I was awake and 'alert' and that they would chop my leg off while in this state!
I'm actually still not sure if I was really drugged or not! I still remember the EMT guys in the helicopter doing EMT things during the flight and that I couldn't move or speak but was in a helluva lot of pain!
P.S. The surgeons at Denver Health were geniuses who saved my leg and I'm forever grateful!
Especially Wade Smith, my main orthopod! Salute!!!
Sleep paralysis is awesome lol. I mean when I get it, I get it in/off the entire night. Every time i wake up, and the first time it happens can be scary but after that you know what’s going on, it’s less frightening.
You haven't had sleep paralysis
@springbloom5940 The scary stories are from people with superstition or the inexperienced. Sleep paralysis has an entire positive side that most people aren't aware of because the scary stories go more viral. The nonscary ones are usually within dreaming communities and such
@@shadw4701
*CITATIONS NEEDED*
Joe the new background music is fire I love it
Sleep paralysis isn't a bad thing. All these superstitions and scary stories are what make it seem so terrifying (and if course first time experiences).
Truth is sleep paralysis isn't scary as long as you understand how it works. You can actually use it to your benefit. You can break out easily or even use it to lucid dream
I confirm this. I have on average 3-4 episodes of sleep paralysis per month. Most of the times I prefer to just wait for a couple of minutes and then you'll be able to move again. In some cases I go into lucid dreaming. However, in many cases you are too awake (and pissed off) to start dreaming.
That being said, over maybe a hundred of episodes or more, you get used to it and learn to manage it but it is never pleasant.
Also, have never seen any demon... Just immobilised in the bed with open eyes and see the bedroom. If you do not believe in demons, you pretty much know that even if you saw one you know that you are just dreaming.
well... you know... ignorance is like an invisible disease
@@360.Tapestry Yeah, and you're setting a great example by blurting out something meaningless when you think you're making a point.
The real truth is, sleep paralysis isn't scary if you can control it, and it CAN be scary if you CAN'T control it, and you're not speaking for anybody but yourself. It's very easy for YOU to "break out of it" apparently but that doesn't mean anything about anybody else. Go ahead and start teaching people how to do that instead of just acting like your experience is everybody's when it's not.
@@jamescarter3196 I already do teach people. I never said my experience was like everyone's, didn't even make that implication
My father was in the Vietnam war but he was stationed in Thailand. He was a jet engine mechanic. He never saw the effects of the war other than sending pilots off never to return. This was enough to change him severely forever. When he came home, he was only a shell of the man he once was
When my wife had debilitating dreams, she would breathe really heavy where I would wake up and have to shake her to wake her out of the 'dream'
She would say that she was paralyzed and couldn't move in her 'dream'
Isn't that sleep paralysis
Sounds like she has sleep paralysis.
Same but I’m the dreamer. Glad we have folks to wake us up
If it's sleep paralysis and not just a dream where she's paralyzed it's possible to break out.
Wiggling fingers and toes, holding your breath and/or breathing sporadically
@@mmmmmmolly I don't know, it is what Joe is describing in his video. And she is Hmong (she escaped when she was a year old, her mother sneaking at night across the Mekong River to Thailand from Laos)
I visited Luang Prabang on two occasions. The local hospital had a pile of artificial limbs on hand because farmers are still blowing off arms and legs when they plow and plant rice. I've been in many of the world's countries. Laos is my favorite.
Anyone else hearing an odd echo for the audio on this video?
that's just your sleep paralysis demon hiding
i get sleep paralysis pretty frequently. it started out really scary but now it's just annoying as fuck. half the time i get it while trying to fall asleep or go back to bed and the only real way to fix it is to get up and walk around. i can definitely understand how it would keep you up for days if it was combined with something like ptsd and you didn't know what it was or why it was happening (I still don't exactly know the triggers)
if anyone else has similar frequent issues and doesn't know where to start i'll list some triggers for me that have correlated with incidents
-dehydration
-eating oily foods before bed
-sleeping on your back
-anxiety
-attempting sleep directly after experiencing it (it will most likely loop multiple times, in my case usually 5-10 if I don't get up or grab water)
-ssri withdrawal
hopefully this can help anyone else dealing with it, even if it's just a little.
Either he's talking about Indira Gandhi or he switched 1948 with 1984 for Mahatma Gandhi. Moments when your brain screeches to a halt lol
Thank you, I had a similar brain screech experience, wondering (twice) if I'd lost my mind & my knowledge of history.
And the first ᴀɪᴅs cases were reported in '81.
AIDS was first explained as an identifiable retrovirus in April 1984.
At first, in 1981, it wasn't terrifying the general public and making huge news. It was homosexuals and drug users. Drugs weren't was widespread outside of cities are they are now. And people were getting weird things like Kaposi's Sarcoma. Only 337 people were identified with this unknown immune deficiency, usually of some other disease, at the end of 1981. The cause was unknown and only Gay communities had become activists to stop known homosexual transmission. So large sections of the US were away from it, to their knowledge.
At the end of 1982 blood product recipients were getting Immune deficiencies to a noticeable extent. This was when the big panic started. When the general public started to understand that you couldn't catch it without blood or other body fluid transmission the fear and panic calmed down some. The time period between about 1982 and 1985 there was a huge stigma, as bad as medieval leprosy attached to having or being related a person to having aids.
It was a 3 plus year COVID fear level with no lockdowns. One of the reasons it was so bad was because it first became known in the homosexual community. So a bunch of wingnuts were sure God was punishing the sinners. I think Congress would have funded research sooner if the young hemophiliac and other blood product patients had been first.
@@randalalansmith9883
Joe, since discovering you I've binge watched you numerous times while you've described disturbing stuff.
I find dark trivia fascinating.
I also find spirituality and psychology fascinating. So this episode at the very start I was like "oh this will be fun,"
Ya know, I should have figured based on the title that this one may get to me.
I have an alphabet soup of conditions in my brain. But two of those things are PTSD and CPTSD. I dealt with nightly night terrors, like the wake up punching and screaming kind, for 5 years straight. Nearly every night, if not nightmares (though the last year or so the ratio was higher in regular nightmares to night terrors).
Watching this video, I did this to me. But maaaaaaaan the chill down my back. The amount of times if dealt with sleep paralysis.
Ps folks, if you struggle with night terrors, ask your doctor about prazosin, haven't had a night terror since I started taking it.
You wanna know a surreal sleepy experience that'll fuck your entire perception of reality for life? Once I had a nesting night terror where I woke up from that punching and screaming, into another night terror in my abusive ex's bed. Screamed myself out of that night terror into what I assume is waking life? Idk, after that specific experience, and with how to hell life has gotten since then (this happened January before COVID lockdowns started), I'm not really sure I believe this is based reality.
This is just samsara, and we're a soul in an eternal torture machine. Cheers.
Brought to you by Dreamscape…
this feels like an old and gold joe video
and i love that
Gandhi was assassinated in 1948 and not 1984, Joe.
Says you. It's all a conspiracy!
No no open your eyes sheeple
And the movie was released in 82
Indira Gandhi, first and thus far only female Prime Minister of India, was assassinated in 1984.
Multiple gandhis have been assassinated, 1948 (Mahatma) and then also 1984 and 1991, mother-and-son prime ministers
Wow, well done video and topic Joe! Thank you!
Hey Scott, interesting video, but I do see a slight problem with it. The gentlemen who you included in your cover photo can be easily identified. I knew who one of them was right away, and realized who the other was shortly after. They had nothing to do with the title of your video. I think it'd be a good idea and respectful to these gentleman to change the photo, as I don't think they'd appreciate the title being attached to their service.
I have experienced most of the weird sleep phenomena since I was a child. Night terrors, nightmares, sleep walking, sleep talking, positional sleep apnea (which causes crazy nightmares) and sleep paralysis to name the ones right off the top of my head. So, I've done a *ton* of research about sleep phenomena.
One of the weirdest experiences that I've ever had are the times where I get sleep paralysis and I'm lucid and aware of what's happening but I can't do anything to stop it.
There was this one time where I was trying to take a nap and got sleep paralysis on the way out of the nap and I was dreaming about being poked and prodded by doctors (a very common occurrence with sleep paralysis) and I knew exactly what was happening - that I was dreaming with my eyes opened and couldnt move bc of the chemicals in my brain preparing my body for sleep. Anyway, so, my husband walked through the room and I could see him walk straight through the dream-doctors and I followed him with my eyes trying to say "help. wake me up" but I couldn't say anything. He giggled at me because he thought I was just watching him walk through the room, but then he noticed something was weird. I *think* I may have been gasping instead of saying "help me" but i don't really know. Either way, he came and woke me up and I was scared but laughing and telling him what happened. It was the strangest thing. I think it's even stranger than having the dreams without being lucid.
Dab Tsog...Bad Gost...that's...not looking very coincidental.
And Quite, I might state ~ Accurate !!!
I've experienced sleep paralysis many times before. It usually happens when I sleep in an awkward position, like when one of my arms is pinned beneath my body's weight. It was a terrifying experience of not being able to move or feeling like you're screaming for help when you're not. There were times, though, that it also felt euphoric. It felt like I was floating, and my surroundings felt warm and cozy.
Fun fact: "night hags" are the European version. Indeed, the expression "I was hagridden last night" is an old world euphemism meaning "I suffered nightmares last night" or "I was visited by a terror in the late hours."
The "fun" part of this fact is that the half-giant terror that visited Harry Potter in the middle of the night (terrifying to the Dursleys, at least) was named for being hagridden: Hagrid.
They can get you to ride them too ! They are quite mad & in stark opposition to the ALMIGHTY JEHOVAH our Creator !!!
@@JerryShunk-h8s I dunno how "stark" I'd assert their differences to be... neither actually exist, as a for-instance. Or, in a similar vein, despite the copious evidence and scientific comprehension our species has spent thousands of years accruing that explain much - if not most - of the effects and outcomes we once attributed to mystical, magical critters and deities, a shocking number continue to believe in each, too. From where I sit, they're practically interchangeable.
@@grumblycurmudgeon Oh YES my Friend, they ARE INDEED Extant !!!
Way to bring it full circle Joe!👏👏👏👏👏
I had an experience like this. I was asleep and awoke to gunshots outside, when I went to sit up I realized that I couldn’t move my body. I glanced out the window and there was a heavy fog (it resembled movies about the civil war). Then my attention went to the corner of my bed where a dark demon like figure was crouched down slowly creeping its arm up to me. I was in absolute panic because I couldn’t move. Then, right before the demons hand reached my leg, I suddenly could move and everything was gone. No gunshots, no fog, no demon. I ran out of the room as fast as I could. That was 20 years ago and I’ll never forget it. Hasn’t happened since.
Good episode you covered it well. Thank you.
my grandfather was drafted for the Vietnam War and he has heart disease from exposure to agent orange. i cant even imagine how horrible it must be for the people of Vietnam and SE Asia who are living with the aftermath. agent orange is some fucked up stuff. this is a really great video, i love the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and you approached the subjects of the video with a lot of care. love your channel!!
I had nightmares for quite a while, they got so bad I didn't sleep for days or i wouldn't sleep at night for the longest time and only a few hrs during the day.
I still have them just not as frequent
Hey. As a man with Brugada syndrome, I can attest to what you say. The nightmares, sleep paralysis, labored breathing, etc, is something I go through on the regular. You didn’t mention that Brugada is not only rare, but also exceedingly rare outside Asia. As a Scandinavian man I’ve been subjected to all kinds of curious cardiologists looking to publish a paper.
Well done. My youngest daughter used to have sleep paralysis regularly but it went away years ago. Thank God.
I recently watched your video on the victorian era. And it is so true, there are crazy things people do and believe these days. Especially renowned scientists who actually believe in simulation theory, alternate/parallel universes, evolution, etc especially when the so called "proof" or "evidence" is non existing or shotty at best.
keep up the videos, i used to hate history but you make it fun.
This was a particularly excellent series of segues from start to finish.
Sort of a circular railway or puzzle. Nicely done.
I feel like a darkest dungeon character when i watch joe scott videos, always a new fear unlocked
Joe. I've watched your videos for years. You have a way of breaking things down and explaining so everyone can understand. Thanks for the great videos!
I have narcolepsy and I experience sleep paralysis a lot. You described sleep paralysis very well along with the hypnagogic hallucinations.
This was fantastic
Sleep paralysis is terrifying. I was a psych major in college, so I had studied the phenomenon, but when it happened to me it was still extremely disturbing. It used to happen to me often, and it never got any easier to bear.
Thanks for talking about Laos
Thank you for your storytelling and narration style(s)
I once got sleep paralysis so bad that I knew I was dreaming and could hear my alarm going off, and even managed to force my eyes open a crack, but I couldn't get myself to wake up until I tried to scream as loud as possible, and my body actually managed to squeak out a modest groan. The sound and reverberation in my chest startled me awake. Ever since then I seem to move a lot more in my sleep. My hypothesis is that my brain no longer paralyses my body while I sleep as much as it used to, due to the terror and helplessness I felt during that sleep paralysis. Then again, they could be comorbidities of something else entirely.