At one time, believe it or not, I thought I had an encounter with an Unidentified creature, whilst bow-hunting in the Michigan woods outside of Detroit. Since then I have decided that getting to my spot in the very early morning, as I did that day, is also the best way to trick a whitetail deer. The problem with getting up that early is that you are sleep deprived, and have the tendency to nod-off, while waiting for daylight. Numerous times I have seen 'deer' moving through the woods near me, and as light approaches, realized that it was simply a branch shaped like a deer, or a stump that was the same color as a deer. I have also thought I saw a Black bear standing up on it's hind legs looking at me sitting in my tree stand, and turned out it was just a burned out stump.
This is the personal experience that caused me to research this as the cause for some bigfoot sightings. (not all sightings) however, when someone says they collapsed on the floor, that really pushes the cataplexy angle. Therefore, knowing how underdiagnosed and misdiagnosed Narcolepsy is, from my research, I am concerned that John hasn't had it properly ruled out. And the fact that he has not responded to the question of whether he had an MSLT (nap test) leads me to beleive it hasn't been properly ruled out.
Public experiences can be found in other ways. Ask a police officer if he has ever responded to a person in a ditch early in the morning, and if the driver has ever given odd explanations as to why they ended up that way. Perhaps a tire in the road, which was never located, a baby carriage, a shopping cart etc... These are common examples of normal people experiencing a hallucination.
Now ask a truck driver if he has ever seen odd things while driving at night. You won't believe the things you will hear. I did a poll at BFF, which I can not access, due to my illicit banning, called 'Hallucinations while Driving' or something like that. A large percentage of people at BFF responded that they had hallucinated while driving. There are many examples of the things I am referring to in that thread. So either a large percentage of people interested in Bigfoot have jobs or lives which deprive them of sleep, or a large percentage of Bigfoot Forum readers have sleep disorders or other Hallucination inducing factors, such as those you listed above. Mercury, Bad Water, Paint Fumes, Prescription Drug use, Non-Prescription Drug use... etc...
ETA: if someone could link to the poll at BFF, I'd appreciate it.
Here is your link to the
BFF Poll you don't have to be a member to access it, simply cut and pasted your thread name into google.
After you ran that poll Drew did you correlate the data from the responses and if you did, what was the consensus on the type of hallucination? How many saw Bigfoot or any creepy unreal creature?
I appreciate your explanation about why your interested in Sleep Paralysis and hallucination, yet from your description of seeing shapes in the dark of inanimate objects that are truly there and the brain is trying to put them into a recognizable pattern is a common phenomena and not hallucinatory related.
I have this happen on a regular basis while in the forest, day or night, seeing something from a distance whether straight on or peripheral and that brain moment where I'm trying to figure out what I'm seeing. I don't consider that sleep deprivation related.
I do not disagree with fatigued driver's, statistically it's up there with teen age driver's and cell phones as some of the highest reasons for motor vehicle accidents yet are you saying from your research that the fatigued driver has been proven to have a higher percentage of hallucination attributes contributing to driver error or do most fatigued drivers simply fall asleep at the wheel?
The BFF poll does not provide a proper data set to make any quantifiable determination.
I'm a retired EMT, I have responded to many calls of folks who have collapsed and in all my years have not met a single one with a patient history of Narcolepsy, of course many do have sleep apnea and are very overweight with other associated health problems. I don't feel John has any reason to demand a test for a condition he doesn't feel he had at 17 years old. It's not a condition where it's a one time occurance.
Tube gave an excellent example and a link to his website about how the brain perceives something as simple as a bag moving in the wind on the ground while a person is in a moving vehicle and how the brain interpreted this object. It didn't relate to fatigue or to a history of undiagnosed narcolepsy or cataplexy, it simply was an object with a shape and color and movement that the brain did not immediately recognize.
I feel you are placing a great deal of emphasis on a condition that worries You specifically Drew. Do you have Narcolepsy, have you experienced Cataplexy? Do you have sleep apnea and have had it since your teens?
You mention hallucinatory states of people that have had accidents and made claims of objects that don't exist. Yes, I have treated folks at numerous accident scenes where they believed something and in the end Drew, there were generally always a medical reason for their beliefs about their incident, drugs and alcohol, diabetes, blood pressure related issues from heart conditions, stress, and of course severe fatigue. Yet, in my experience, fatigue was low on the list compared to other medical conditions or use of drugs and alcohol.
Hallucinating Bigfoot, now that's a very subjective hallucination. Most people as you pointed out will hallucinate known objects. Can hallucination be attributed to Bigfoot sightings? I'm sure it can and if one were to dig very deep into a witness sighting and asked the proper questions without going against HIPAA legal requirements, I'm sure there will be a few folks out there with disorders that can be attributed to medical conditions creating delusion. I feel that would be fairly rare considering the number of reports.
Did SugarB hallucinate and share it with her husband? Did you hallucinate or did you experience the common phenomena of the brain trying to put into perspective an object not seen clearly under less than optimal visual conditions?
In John's experience he relates what he sees from the deer stand, he sees a small bear, he thinks it might be a cub, perhaps Mama bear wasn't far behind. Bears stink. John's experience in the forest from his statements is "none" before this.
Why would John's suspect hallucination in my opinion act like a bear, stop and eat like a bear, have a large mass like a bear (earlier he witnessed a bear) and possibly stink like a bear? I'm much more inclined to believe that with John's lack of experience, being left alone in a strange environment to kill an animal without knowledge of hunting that he simply was overcome by more pressure and anxiety than he could withstand. I do not truly enjoy encounters with bear and it's a yearly encounter for me more than once on several occasions, and I sure wouldn't want to have my first one as a young person alone far from people that have knowledge and understanding of the environment, the animals in that environment and how to properly defend oneself with a firearm that I've never used. Only John can really explain his real state of mind concerning his experience, he's given some helpful clues in his story.
John has listed his physical symptoms that day several times. He does not claim sleep apnea and I really have to wonder how many healthy and athletically fit non drug or alcohol using 17 years old suffer from sleep apnea. He did not complain of fatigue, he did not complain of symptoms related specifically to a sleep apnea disorder because it doesn't occur only once. He would have been suffering the effects of a sleep apnea condition before and after his experience.
John has claimed over and over this only happened once. The conditions you suggest are medical issues that occur more than once and require treatment. At 17 I'm going to go by John's own health assessment that he was in good shape. At his present age and health I would say sleep apnea would be a concern.
I'm not an expert, I'm trying to correlate where your coming from and why you feel based on the information John has given multiple times that his health at age 17 would have been conducive to a singular occurance of a condition that most people have consistently.
I look forward to perhaps John discussing his reasoning why this doesn't fit his experience without going into a full disclosure of his personal health. John are you willing to discuss the points I brought up concerning your state of mind and any anxieties you had about this trip and the expected killing of an animal, also being left alone out there.
I also look forward to further discussion with you Drew on your research findings and how they apply to "some" Bigfoot sightings. I do not discount that sleep related disorders can be attributed to a small number of witness reports. I just don't feel from John's explanation that it fits his experience.