Why Your Body Suddenly Jolts As You’re Falling Asleep

That violent jolt right before sleep isn’t random. It feels like falling into a void, your heart racing, your whole body snapping awake in raw panic. For a split second, you wonder if something is terribly wrong.

But buried inside that shock is an ancient survival system, misfiring in the dark. Scientists call it the hypn…

As you slip toward sleep, your brain runs a rapid systems check. When you’re utterly exhausted, it rushes this process, misreading the natural relaxation of your muscles as a dangerous shutdown. In a flash of primitive fear, your nervous system surges with chemicals, yanking you awake.

Sometimes your mind stitches this into a falling dream, a last‑second rescue narrative that ends in a full‑body jerk.

Far from being a glitch, this reaction is your brain’s overprotective alarm, honed long before soft mattresses and phone alarms existed. Yet modern life makes it fire more often: caffeine, nicotine, stimulating medications, and relentless fatigue all prime your body for these night shocks.

Cutting stimulants before bed, unwinding gently, and respecting your exhaustion can quiet the false alarms—so that, instead of bracing for an invisible fall, you finally get to surrender to sleep.

Вам також може сподобатися

Більше від автора