I agree. When I’ve experienced sleep paralysis, I’ve rarely seen anything much at all other than distortions of the appearance of the room. What I get instead is a buzzing noise and a sense of vibration through my body, and then my body feels as if it’s being tossed around the bed in impossibly rapid circles by some kind of evil force. I’ve never culturally heard of any experience like it. It certainly has the sense of oppression and evil, but there’s nothing about it that sounds like any kind of mythology I’ve ever heard in my culture or another.
According to this article a sense of vibration and rapid acceleration of the body are fairly commonly reported (I don’t recall experiencing these symptoms myself). That article and the Wikipedia entry both mention some of the mythology and folklore surrounding the experience from different cultures.
I agree. When I’ve experienced sleep paralysis, I’ve rarely seen anything much at all other than distortions of the appearance of the room. What I get instead is a buzzing noise and a sense of vibration through my body, and then my body feels as if it’s being tossed around the bed in impossibly rapid circles by some kind of evil force. I’ve never culturally heard of any experience like it. It certainly has the sense of oppression and evil, but there’s nothing about it that sounds like any kind of mythology I’ve ever heard in my culture or another.
According to this article a sense of vibration and rapid acceleration of the body are fairly commonly reported (I don’t recall experiencing these symptoms myself). That article and the Wikipedia entry both mention some of the mythology and folklore surrounding the experience from different cultures.