It was the car crash to end all car crashes. Or so it sounded when it woke me in the early morning hours, wide-eyed, heart pounding. I lay curled up in bed, straining to hear other sounds outside my ...
A high percentage of young people experience a psychological phenomenon known as “exploding head syndrome,” according to Washington State University researchers. According to a WSU news release, those ...
Slow and steady breathing. Eyes heavy and gritty. The resting mind drifts off to the floating, semi-conscious state between wakefulness and sleep. All of a sudden, you're awake. A sound — something ...
If you’ve experienced loud crashing noises as you sleep, you could be experiencing exploding head syndrome. This unsettling phenomenon is a type of sleep disturbance that, while harmless, can feel ...
Nearly one in five college students may suffer from “exploding head syndrome,” a psychological condition in which people are abruptly awakened from sleep by imaginary loud noises or blasts. That’s ...
Exploding head syndrome may sound like something out of a science fiction movie—but in fact it’s a very real sleep disorder. People with this sleep phenomenon are prone to experiencing loud and sudden ...
Bang! The sound, like a gun firing or a metal case crashing to the floor, wakes me up. My heart is pounding. I frantically look around my room, my head spinning. Am I being robbed? Is my cat trying to ...