Hannah Brown.Photo: Hannah brown/ instagramHannah Brownis having an off-kilter morning.The formerBachelorette, 27, woke up and immediately went onher Instagram Storyto detailher experience with sleep paralysis, a common condition where a person is between wakefulness and sleep and are conscious, but unable to move.“Do any of you experience sleep paralysis, because I’ve already had an alternate morning in my sleep paralysis state,” Brown asked her followers. “It’s the weirdest thing, I am like, ‘Hannah, open your eyes,’ in my head while I’m sleeping; like ‘move your body,’ and I can’t.“Brown said that she then went into a dream “and then it felt like I had woken up and done a whole morning but I couldn’t move.““It’s the weirdest thing. So I’m still just recuperating from that.“TheDancing with the Starschamp was glad, though, that her dream was relatively low-key this time.“It wasn’t like nightmare-ish but more like I couldn’t establish what was real or not, if I had woken up…while also being aware I wasn’t moving?” she said.“Anybody that has any type of abnormal sleep stuff, I feel your pain,” she added. “Also, you just wake up really confused.“Brown said that sleep paralysis is something she’s dealt with before, and she finds it “super scary.““It feels [like] you’re unable to move or speak for a bit.“RELATED VIDEO: Hannah Brown Opens Up About Her Body Image Issues Over the Years: ‘I Had Disordered Eating’Brown isn’t the only celeb to talk about their issues with sleep paralysis — in November,Spider-ManstarTom Hollandsaid thathe started having the same problemas he grew in fame.The Marvel star frequently has a nightmare where he wakes up in sleep paralysis and finds his room covered in paparazzi snapping photos.“They’re all there, and I’m looking for my publicist, like, ‘Where is the person who’s supposed to be protecting me? What’s going on?’ And then when I am able to move again, I turn the lights on, and it’s over,” he said in an interview withGQ. “And I think, Oh, my God, I’m in my room, I’m fine. There’s no one here. But then I will get up and look for a recording device or something that someone has put in my room.”

Hannah Brown.Photo: Hannah brown/ instagram

Hannah brown

Hannah Brownis having an off-kilter morning.The formerBachelorette, 27, woke up and immediately went onher Instagram Storyto detailher experience with sleep paralysis, a common condition where a person is between wakefulness and sleep and are conscious, but unable to move.“Do any of you experience sleep paralysis, because I’ve already had an alternate morning in my sleep paralysis state,” Brown asked her followers. “It’s the weirdest thing, I am like, ‘Hannah, open your eyes,’ in my head while I’m sleeping; like ‘move your body,’ and I can’t.“Brown said that she then went into a dream “and then it felt like I had woken up and done a whole morning but I couldn’t move.““It’s the weirdest thing. So I’m still just recuperating from that.“TheDancing with the Starschamp was glad, though, that her dream was relatively low-key this time.“It wasn’t like nightmare-ish but more like I couldn’t establish what was real or not, if I had woken up…while also being aware I wasn’t moving?” she said.“Anybody that has any type of abnormal sleep stuff, I feel your pain,” she added. “Also, you just wake up really confused.“Brown said that sleep paralysis is something she’s dealt with before, and she finds it “super scary.““It feels [like] you’re unable to move or speak for a bit.“RELATED VIDEO: Hannah Brown Opens Up About Her Body Image Issues Over the Years: ‘I Had Disordered Eating’Brown isn’t the only celeb to talk about their issues with sleep paralysis — in November,Spider-ManstarTom Hollandsaid thathe started having the same problemas he grew in fame.The Marvel star frequently has a nightmare where he wakes up in sleep paralysis and finds his room covered in paparazzi snapping photos.“They’re all there, and I’m looking for my publicist, like, ‘Where is the person who’s supposed to be protecting me? What’s going on?’ And then when I am able to move again, I turn the lights on, and it’s over,” he said in an interview withGQ. “And I think, Oh, my God, I’m in my room, I’m fine. There’s no one here. But then I will get up and look for a recording device or something that someone has put in my room.”

Hannah Brownis having an off-kilter morning.

The formerBachelorette, 27, woke up and immediately went onher Instagram Storyto detailher experience with sleep paralysis, a common condition where a person is between wakefulness and sleep and are conscious, but unable to move.

“Do any of you experience sleep paralysis, because I’ve already had an alternate morning in my sleep paralysis state,” Brown asked her followers. “It’s the weirdest thing, I am like, ‘Hannah, open your eyes,’ in my head while I’m sleeping; like ‘move your body,’ and I can’t.”

Brown said that she then went into a dream “and then it felt like I had woken up and done a whole morning but I couldn’t move.”

“It’s the weirdest thing. So I’m still just recuperating from that.”

TheDancing with the Starschamp was glad, though, that her dream was relatively low-key this time.

“It wasn’t like nightmare-ish but more like I couldn’t establish what was real or not, if I had woken up…while also being aware I wasn’t moving?” she said.

“Anybody that has any type of abnormal sleep stuff, I feel your pain,” she added. “Also, you just wake up really confused.”

Brown said that sleep paralysis is something she’s dealt with before, and she finds it “super scary.”

“It feels [like] you’re unable to move or speak for a bit.”

RELATED VIDEO: Hannah Brown Opens Up About Her Body Image Issues Over the Years: ‘I Had Disordered Eating’

Brown isn’t the only celeb to talk about their issues with sleep paralysis — in November,Spider-ManstarTom Hollandsaid thathe started having the same problemas he grew in fame.

The Marvel star frequently has a nightmare where he wakes up in sleep paralysis and finds his room covered in paparazzi snapping photos.

“They’re all there, and I’m looking for my publicist, like, ‘Where is the person who’s supposed to be protecting me? What’s going on?’ And then when I am able to move again, I turn the lights on, and it’s over,” he said in an interview withGQ. “And I think, Oh, my God, I’m in my room, I’m fine. There’s no one here. But then I will get up and look for a recording device or something that someone has put in my room.”

source: people.com