Something attacks me before I fall asleep

Something attacks me before I fall asleep
26 October 2025 J.W.H

Lin the evening the situation repeated itself. Goshhh, that's terrible! I was staying at my boyfriend's house. We fell asleep around 24:00. It happened around 1:30 a.m. Something woke me up and I lay in bed, frustrated at waking up. As I started to fall asleep in Wonderland, I heard a uninteresting, deafening sound in my ears. I was forced to lie down on the bed, I couldn't move, I couldn't even make a sound. Then after about 30 seconds it disappeared. I was terrified, then I tried to go back to sleep, but it happened again, this time it was really bad. I lie in bed and try to fight off whatever is attacking me, knowing I'm awake, but I feel like I'm in a deep sleep, a sort of coma. I saw demons/spirits dragging me across the bed, taking me away from my boyfriend. I couldn't breathe, my heart was beating so brisk and goosebumps appeared all over my body. In my mind I try to fight it and pray to God to take it all away. Then I managed to make a airy noise that woke my boyfriend up. We stayed up all night and he told me that he was having bad dreams. The room we slept in was just scary and murky, it wasn't a ghost feeling, it was more like devils or demons or I don't know. I had the impression that something or someone was hiding.

I'm afraid I won't sleep tonight, I'm so afraid it will happen again. The entertaining thing is that when I pray to God, after praying, this is what usually happens. It's as if something wanted to prevent my contact with God. This is not fun, people. If anyone has any advice, please, I would be grateful.

  • J.W.H

    John Williams is a blogger and independent writer focused on consciousness, perception, and human awareness, exploring topics such as dreams, intuition, and non-ordinary states of experience. Driven by a lifelong curiosity about the nature of reality and subjective experience, his perspective was shaped in part by structured study, including the Gateway Voyage program at the Monroe Institute. His writing avoids dogma and sensationalism, instead emphasizing critical thinking, personal insight, and grounded exploration. Through his work, John examines complex and often misunderstood subjects with clarity, openness, and an emphasis on awareness, choice, and personal responsibility.