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Talk About A Rude Awakening

Talk About A Rude Awakening

My older brother was always the one who would wander the halls at night and was once found sleeping at the edge of the loft outside his bedroom; a ten foot fall my father had tried to prevent by shoving furniture in front of the precipice like a barricade. But my brother had just pushed this away, then curled up against the edge with his hands tucked under his chin like a child.

Railings were put up the next afternoon.

In comparison to my brother’s nocturnal misadventures, a few sentences mumbled in my sleep were really quite mild. Oh, I did have a few bouts here and there that revealed my proclivity towards drama even in dreams. When I was fifteen, during our family’s trip out West, I was sleeping against the side of the ’70s popup camper when a zipper brushed my cheek and I thought I was trapped inside a suitcase. I sat up and started frantically unzipping everything, trying to claw my way out of the camper, until my best friend put a hand on my shoulder and gently rocked me awake.

In college my roommates were often entertained by my one-sided conversations in the dark that revealed more than what I confided to them during the day, and if my roommates tried to hold a conversation with me that unveiled even more, I — uninhibited — would let them enter my dreams, and we would chat with each other like were discussing the weather over a pot of tea.

After I married, my sleep talking increased quite substantially. I don’t know if my bare leg kept brushing my husband’s furry one or what exactly occurred, but he and I hadn’t been hitched two months when I leapt straight up out of the covers like I had strings attached to my back and screamed, “MOUSE!”

My husband jolted upright. Blindly smacking his hands against the dresser, he finally found the lamp and pulled the string. That is when he saw his newly wedded bride with hair all over her head, a la Mr. Rochester’s mad wife, prancing in place and screaming, “Mouse! There’s a mouse!”

Not knowing any better because I hadn’t warned him that I could be dramatic in my sleep, my poor husband believed me. Plus, I seemed so awake. I was talking coherently (okay, screaming coherently), and even as a minute passed, the panicked glaze would not leave my eyes.

“Where is it?” he calmly asked.

I pointed to a clump in the bed.

Taking a deep breath, my husband charged across the covers. He pounced like Tom on Jerry, trying to trap the pesky little varmint beneath his hands, but there was nothing there.

He looked up at me. I looked down at him. “Don’t move,” I whispered. “There’s a whole nest of them!”

Groaning, my husband staggered to the top of the bed and climbed beneath the covers. “There’s no mouse,” he mumbled, pulling the pillow up around his ears. “Go to sleep.”

The next four months, although nothing could compare to the mouse incident, I did have dreams that there were puppies in our bed, spiders, and I would have fluent conversations in English or Spanish (I don’t really speak Spanish) until my husband shook my shoulder and told me I was sleep talking again. But once I became accustomed to having someone share my bed (and my covers!), the talking in my sleep settled down. If I ate late or watched or read something that disturbed me, I would often solve the world’s problems in my dreams, yet these episodes over two and a half years of marriage were really quite rare.

Then I got pregnant.

During the first trimester, when I could still sleep on my stomach and Baby Girl wasn’t thrashing around like a fish, I could sleep undisturbed. But the bigger she grew and the more active she became (think Thing One and Thing Two trapped in the space the size of a soccer ball), the more difficult it was to tumble into slumberland. I dreamt that Baby Girl was born as slippery as a butterball turkey, and I would keep trying to bathe her in the sink and she would shoot across the room. I dreamt that my husband and I were riding in a car that veered off the interstate and sailed across the sky. I dreamt of spiders again and after watching something on snakes, I dreamt about them, too. The more active my baby became in my womb, the more active my dreams until I awoke as tired as when my head hit the pillow.

My husband started sleeping with one eye open, his arms poised to grab even when he was half-awake, for often these dreams of bathing our child and riding in a car that could also fly were acted out until my husband feared I would lunge off the stage of our bed and hurt myself.

I had no idea how deeply my husband’s paranoia about my sleep situation ran until the other night when I stayed up late reading. I will often do this as it helps me to unwind and replenish the imaginative juices I have drained throughout the day. I love to pull the covers over my head in a creative cocoon and angle the flashlight so that the beam floods the page and splashes across the sheets, then read until my frequent yawns keep me from being able to discern the words.

I don’t know if my husband heard me clap my book closed and this awoke him, but when I started hauling my body out of bed, he bolted upright and wrapped his arms around me.

“Honey?” he rasped, thinking I was going to take a swan dive off the bed into an imaginary sea or something. “You okay?”

Laughing a little, I said, “I’m fine.”

But my husband wouldn’t let go. “You’re sure you’re awake?” he asked, somewhat skeptically.

“Yes,” I said, untwining myself from his arms. “I’ve gotta go the bathroom.”

He said, “Okay,” but he still kept one hand on my back while I got off the bed.

The next morning, when my husband and I awoke, I looked over at him and patted my stomach. “Ugh. I don’t think I’m going to sleep sound until after this baby’s born.”

He laughed. “I don’t think you’re going to sleep very sound then either.”

Groaning, I pulled the covers back over my head. Talk about a rude awakening.

Comments

  • Loved this post! 🙂 I'm a fellow sleep talker though not as dramatic as you! Pregnancy dreams are absolutely crazy & I'm sorry to tell you they will get more insane as the big day approaches 🙂 but your hubby's right…sleep now bc there will be very little once that bundle of joy arrives! 🙂

    November 7, 2011
  • I'm from a family of sleep walkers/talkers so I can really relate to this! (My husband and I frequently have full — and very funny — conversations while he's sound asleep! His conversations often run to outer space travel, rarely mice, though) So I can truly relate to your husband's worries… me too! As for sleep, I'm a lucky one that can function on low hours, which is a good thing because I don't think I've slept soundly since my kids were born (a LONG time ago 🙂 However, the elementary school years are a good respite between baby/toddler and teenage driving… A very entertaining post as always!

    November 7, 2011
  • Wonderful storytelling 🙂 You might be able to count on having a baby that sleep talks as well. Maybe you need a tall crib in case it sleep walks! Somehow I think it does run in the family. I used to see spiders on my pillow when I was young and would thrash around like crazy trying to get them. Pretty glad that doesn't happen anymore. I think I just mumble incoherent sentences from time to time.

    November 7, 2011
  • Oh, I can't imagine my dreams getting any wilder, Carey! Perhaps I'm going to have to start sleeping in a straight jacket. 😉

    November 7, 2011
  • Your MEH must keep engineering on his mind, Julia, even while he's sleeping! Perhaps he'll come up with an affordable solution to space travel. One never knows. I wish I could function on little sleep, but I get as grouchy as a bed bug. I'm hoping my body will adjust once the little one comes.

    November 7, 2011
  • I never thought of passing this down, Sarah–that's a scary thought! My husband doesn't sleep very sound (wonder why), so he doesn't do anything very exciting in his sleep. Perhaps our child will take after him. Glad to hear that you aren't smashing spiders in your sleep anymore. Perhaps I'll grow out of it someday, too. 🙂

    November 7, 2011
  • Dreams can certainly make our lives interesting. Thankfully, I don't act mine out! Entertaining post, as always, Jolina. It will be fascinating to see who your child takes after!

    November 8, 2011
  • It will be interesting indeed, Cecilia! I was watching my husband eat breakfast this morning while trying to figure it out.

    By the way, I'm glad you're not a sleep talker/walker, too. It can be tiring! 😉

    November 8, 2011
  • I think I've given away a few Christmas surprises over the years, but no one has complained lately about my sleep-talking. Our youngest son got up one night when he was about three, and came back downstairs where the last stragglers of a party were still gathered around our kitchen table. The little guy walked up to our garbage can in the corner and proceeded to pull his pants down to go to the bathroom. Totally sound asleep. My husband jumped up, grabbed him, and got him to the actual bathroom in time.

    Yes. You might be in for a rude awakening.

    November 8, 2011
  • Oh my, Christine! That is priceless–too bad you didn't catch that on America's Funniest Home Videos! 🙂

    November 9, 2011
  • What a great post! I used to have the occasional middle of the night freak out where I'm still in a dream, but yelling and fighting off the “villains” with my body. My husband loves this and is quick to quiet me down. Sophie has always been a pretty good sound sleeper. So luckily I don't have to wake much with her throughout the evening. Here's hoping your little one is like that too.

    November 10, 2011
  • I'm sure your husband is highly entertained by your fighting off evil “villains” in your sleep, Leah. My husband seems to think that my nighttime antics are pretty entertaining, too. Well, as long as they don't involve rodents! 😉

    November 10, 2011
  • Oh, I just love this! So vivid, and tons of personality coming out! While I don't talk in my sleep, I'm also victim to VERY vivid dreams. I totally can stay mad at someone for something they did in a dream…but I've noticed that since I've been writing seriously it's not quite as graphic. Maybe I'm getting some of my subconscious drama out in my stories…

    And yes, there will be no sleep for the weary soon…but you'll be used to it. xo

    November 22, 2011
  • It is amazing how powerful dreams are, Stephanie! Sometimes I want to wallop my husband if he's “done me wrong” in my sleep. Poor man, hopefully everything will simmer down once the baby's born. 🙂

    November 22, 2011
  • Oh, I love the way you write! I've had crazy dreams, but lucky for me, they stay inside my head 😉 The week before a solo weekend trip to Seattle I dreamed repeatedly about losing my luggage or getting lost or getting mugged.

    My sister was a sleep-talker. She was always telling me about the boys she liked and then never believed me when I told her the next day.

    November 27, 2011
  • I usually dream before going on trips, too, Joanna. Stress can mess with our minds! Of course, most of my dreams now center around my baby, my baby belly, or my belly button. Who can figure? 🙂 Thank you for stopping by!

    November 28, 2011

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