To deny yourself of sleep.
Person 1: I was sleeping out for like 8 hours!
Person 2: Isn't that all the time you had to sleep??? Did you stay up the entire night???
The nap you take after eating a bunch of pancakes. Preferably from IHOP.
After IHOP I'm gonna get my pancake sleep on.
Like sleep-walking but more gropey, usually when the sleep-perver pretends to be asleep so they can be near to grope you.
Did you see Tommy last night? He was totally sleep-perving on her!
when putting on some comfy clothes and wash my face and brush my teeth and watch some good ass satisfying shit 🤝
Jonathan i’m going to my sleep mode.
Trying to commit suicide by taking loads of pills/drugs.
Person A: I think I'm going to try for the good sleep tonight.
Person B: Shit bro, are you okay?
A state of sleep between REM and being conscious. It feels similar to epileptic seizures (because I have had epileptic seizures AND sleep paralysis). Some people hallucinate, seeing monsters who are called "Sleep paralysis demons" and often depicted at the foot of your bed or sitting on your chest. Please note that not EVERYONE witnesses 'demons.' During Sleep Paralysis, you are fully conscious and can think clearly, but find EXTREME DIFFICULTY in breathing (even though your real body is still breathing) and you are paralyzed (you can't move any muscles). Sometimes, you may see yourself from a 3rd person's POV, and different individuals may experience the sensations of falling, being dragged off of the bed, or a heavy weight on their chest. During this time, your body is tensed up and your eyes are wide open, from a viewer witnessing the event. Normally, when a person wakes up after having sleep paralysis, it is a very memorable incident, unlike a dream. Treat sleep paralysis as a scary lucid dream. Sleep paralysis can occur as one is falling asleep OR as one is waking up. If a witness sees your body shaking violently during sleep paralysis, you may have had an epileptic seizure. Other than that, sleep paralysis is relatively harmless but can be scary for even someone who has had it multiple times. Personally, I think it's a load of BS when people say that laying on your back makes it more likely to have sleep paralysis.
James: "Dude, I had sleep paralysis last night."
John: "I was seriously worried when your body stiffened and you wouldn't answer me."
Something that cultivates intensifying fear.
" I had sleep paralysis last night
"Sleep paralysis?"
"The most frightening thing I have experienced in my life"