Disarray - a sleep paralysis horror film

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Published 2017-09-16
A young man finds himself in a state of panic as he tries to stay awake through the night while suffering from sleep paralysis.

All Comments (21)
  • The worst is when you wake up from it after struggling for what feels like an hour when it is only seconds or a minute or so and you start to drift off again back into the paralysis. That's really scary. I have to fight to wake up again then go for a walk around the house.
  • @joshmaclean3179
    I suffered from this a lot in my teenage years and early 20s. The ringing noise at the end gave me goosebumps. I would always describe it as "the sound of silence was ringing so loud it was deafening". I am in my 40s now and still have it occasionally, but not like I did in the late 80s and into the 90s. I use to see things and swear I was awake. I am still inconclusive of what I experienced .
  • @JohnnysCafe_
    That is terrifying when you know your having a nightmare and can't wake up, one night I actually managed to mutter "wake me" but most times you are stuck there , trapped inside your own horror show đŸ˜”
  • @userwww379
    It's so horrible when you don't know it's sleep paralysis.
  • @Scooter3616
    GET OUT OF THE COMMENTS AND GET BACK UP THERE SOLDIER đŸŽ–ïž
  • @larryyoakum3
    I’ve gone through similar things in my sleep paralysis. Never saw a full on shadow man but have heard footsteps, doors slamming, muffled voices from the other room, laughing, and knocks on the wall behind my headboard. Once I even heard my name being called from within my pillow
  • @emilyterry4843
    I had sleep paralysis only once. I was quitting smoking and was wearing the 24hour nicotine patch and I hadn’t slept in five days. It can cause insomnia. I had constant vivid dreams and nightmares being awake till 4am finally sleeping for 20mins at a time. Then one morning I woke up and felt ok, the blanket was over my head and I went to move my leg but couldn’t, I wanted to reach my leg and move it but couldn’t move my arm then I tried to speak and could only let my breath leave my lungs but couldn’t use my voice box or move my tongue, I got scared and it must of only been seconds and then I jumped in the bed moving my whole body at once. I didn’t see or hear anything unusual. I stopped wearing the patch at night. I quit smoking. It hasn’t happened since 🙏
  • @mattstark7480
    Great short. As someone who suffers from sleep paralysis, I can honestly say this is one of the most accurate representations of it. At least when it comes to my experiences. Even down to the wiggling of the fingers... Which is something I warned my husband about - Telling him to shake me awake if he ever notices me doing that. While watching I also kept saying "This kid is so screwed" For me, if I ever stay awake longer than a day it is almost guaranteed that I will be having sleep paralysis when I do eventually fall asleep. Seems to be the longer you stay awake, the more likely it is to happen.
  • @vidz6458
    I've had it happen to me about 4 or 5 times now. I'm 28 now and it's been a couple of years since it happened last, first time when I was 15. It's absolutely terrifying.
  • @pulcinopio9071
    the sleep paralysis is 100% like this video, i remember i was awake, totally paralyzed, with strong tingling throughout the body, suddenly a little black bat with two huge white eyes, making weird voices, approached me, crushing my chest with so much force that I thought he would kill me
  • @that.ethanguy
    Jesus this was good, jump scares don’t usually get me but WOW I jumped when the thing first showed up
  • @chynnacruz6727
    This is great, i relate heavily to that list. I have nightmares everynight no exaggeration unfortunately, even naps. And its really exhausting, and sleep paralysis is the absolute worst💜 Make alot more filmz
  • @D_Mick_
    I'm 20 years old, my first sleep paralysis experience happened when I was 17. The weird thing is I've never seen anything in my room, like I look around every single time and theres never nothing, no sound, no talking, no figures nothing. I literally fight my absolute hardest to wake up every single time
  • The last part gave me chills, because its so accurate. I have been through countless of these, and the worst one I have ever had was very similar to this video. We had just moved into a new home, and I had my very first night there when I woke up, staring into the roof, unable to move. I moved my eyes to my left and there was a dark entity with bright white eyes, leaning over me, saying only one sentence with a dark male voice before I was "released" from its grip over me. - "Do you think you can hide from me?" I will never forget it. I was really shaken, even though I have been through so many others. Before I even knew what sleep paralysis was, I thought I was haunted or something for a long time. I know now what it is, and I have had several "encounters" after the one above after I had that one, but that one really sticks out to me because it felt like I truly am being haunted by something I cant hide from (which wasnt even my intention of moving in the first place). Sleep paralysis is the worst shit to endure when you are sleeping, because it really fucks up your sleep and your mind. You never know what will happen or what you will encounter. You are all alone, all left out, no defense, cant move or scream. Just watch and let whatever happens happen. I must say though that I have never experienced the ringing before going into one. Sometimes I do experience like a swooshing sound in my ears though, almost like "woom woom woom..." but like you hear the sound under water.
  • @battletrip
    It sure is a helpless feeling when u are stuck in sleep paralysis. Been battling this sense I was a kid. Now I'm 35 and developed awareness before it happens and can pull myself out and wake up most of the time. Medication and starving yourself from sleep only makes this worse. The only thing that worked for me over the years is exercise and keeping a consistent sleep schedule.
  • @ethanjewell2593
    I personally get sleep paralysis a lot. Luckily, it isn't so severe that I lose sleep. I also don't live alone so if it does happen, someone can help me get through it. It is truly a terrifying experience. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy
  • This looks actually real to me as I had a sleep paralysis just as close to similar to this.. that shadow comes from different angle every night, sometimes from the window and other times from under the bed. Great film btw
  • @wakelogger8357
    Imagine,he falls asleep and some demon wakes him up and says: Wake the f*ck up samurai,we have a film to make!