Hey Grini (and others asking questions about their experiences)...
Waking up at the wrong end of your bed
could possibly have been some kind of abduction experience. I understand that is disturbing to hear, but you could perhaps temper that with the fact t
he C's have said abductions are rare. I have experienced something similar to what you and others have experienced, as well as sleep paralysis which I personally found incredibly distressing.
You are right, in terms of ending up the wrong way around in your bed, it is a struggle to get into that position... unless you sat up and tried to sleep crawl / move across the bed and have then just laid down, but if you have managed to pull out sheets/blankets and get in between then I would think it's pretty hard to do that. If you just have a duvet, that would be a lot easier to get under it.
I have just searched online to see if there is any kind of variety of explanations but there isn't much except government websites and 'health sites' that will be government funded that all say the same thing and talk about 'waking up on the wrong side of the bed' - ie grumpy. I have searched using different terms and different browsers. Probably there's people who talk about it on social media but I don't have any of that.
Whenever anyone talks about this stuff, it always reminds me of Laura's experience that she recounts in
Amazing Grace: Chapter 29 - The Dream. (The experience she discusses is about half way through the chapter)
This is what the C's said when Laura talked about it with them:
@3DStudent mentioned TDARM - this is discussed in this session -
17 June 1995.
This is a small extract:
When I read this, it reminded me of a scene in a film called 'The Adjustment Bureau' starring Matt Damon where it seems in some scenes that 'time is frozen' and people's memory is being partially wiped or 'reset'.
Laura also mentions in a Session: 14 October 1995:
It is my understanding that
abductions don't just happen at night when you are asleep. They can happen when you suddenly realise you have 'zoned out' (for example, you don't know how you just got from work to home in the car) or if you suddenly realise that a period of time has elapsed and you have some vague (or no) memory of what happened (ie: I just looked at the clock and it said 10.15 about 10 minutes ago and now it says 10.40!! What the heck is going on?! Where did that time go...?).
Maybe other members of the forum can offer something more helpful?
I am still very much a 'beginner' here in terms of my learning...
I'm not sure if there is ever a day I am not creeped out by what I learn here. But I would rather know than not know, though some days the 'knowing' is very hard to take.
Still... Knowledge Protects.