In addition to 1) unexpected screen sleeping during live feed watching in the Wyze app, the unexpected screen dimming also occurs during 2) extended playback of video from the SD card, and 3) when manually recording long clips from the SD card, and even 4) when playing back those saved clips from the Album using the Wyze app. These manually saved clips play back normally using VLC, etc with no screen sleep.

Our modern world is a scary place too. Uncertainty and fear about the future cause stress, anxiety, exhaustion, doubt, and depression. But God, the Creator of heaven and earth, constantly guards us and never lets us out of His sight. God never sleeps on the job.


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I can only provide my opinion and (so far) experience about that. I have son (almost 4) and a daughter (15 months), and both sleep fine. I can't say how much depends on their characters, genetics, etc. But nevertheless, one advice that I have read, that we followed, and turned out quite successful for us:

The physiological effects of sleep-sharing are finally being studied in sleep laboratories that are set up to mimic, as much as possible, the home bedroom. Over the past few years, nearly a million dollars of government research money has been devoted to sleep-sharing research. These studies have all been done on mothers and infants ranging from two to five months in age. Here are the preliminary findings based on mother-infant pairs studied in the sleep-sharing arrangement versus the solitary-sleeping arrangement:

I wake up at night (this has happened quite a few times now) and see someone standing over the bed, or in the doorway. I have read online about sleep paralysis and understand I am possibly still dreaming but what is different is, I can move. I know normally you can't, but I can, I turn my head away from the person and turn my head back to see them still there. I even grab my phone and shine my light, they go but when I turn my phone off and it is dark again they are there. I don't know if this is another type of sleep paralysis but it is freaky as hell!

I always found - and still find now - that one of the main triggers for these hallucinations, apart from the headaches, is getting overheated while sleeping. This is also my main trigger for SP incidentally.

Apart from those early episodes, when I hadn't a clue what was going on, the only one that's ever spooked me was when I appeared to have woken up in a visually entirely different room from the one I'd gone to sleep in. That was more than 40 years ago, and has never been repeated. I'm fairly sure it was down to the combination of being overheated - which will trigger most SP-related effects in me - and sleeping in total blackout conditions.

I have been having this issue for awhile. But the past few weeks it has happened almost every night. I wake up, see someone standing over me or beside my bed. I scream, sit up, blink my eyes and it slowly fades away. Sometimes I jump out of the bed, waking my husband up. I feel like it's eventually going to give me a heart attack, as it takes a long time for me to calm down, and usually a long time to fall back asleep. Mostly because I am scared it will happen again. It mostly happens within the first hour of falling asleep, but there has been times were it happens more then once per night. I question is it real, and my husband just can't see it or do I scare it off before my husband wakes up and realizes what is going on. It has gotten so bad that my boys upstairs have heard my screams and came running down. I feel like I am going crazy, or that I am loosing my mind. I realize that these have been posted awhile ago, but because it has been happening so frequently lately, I am desperate for answers.

Hi there, I have the exact same issue. I fall asleep and within an hour I wake up screaming seeing somebody standing over me. One time I was scared, I screamed, I ran out of bed and accidentally hit my head on some kind of furniture in my room. That's when I decided it was time to see a doctor as this could get dangerous.

I went to a doctor than a psychologist and a psychiatrist and I was diagnosed with "night terrors" (also known as "sleep terrors"). Normally this is common when you had it as a child, or sleep walking, but I've never had either before. I'm 39 now and it started about 10 years ago.

When I was about 18 and visiting home while at uni, I was sleeping in my old bedroom, I thought I'd woke up after hearing foot steps, when I opened my eyes there was a young man's face looming over me on the left of my bed. What freaked me out the most was that the face was surrounded by a halo of bright light. I was so scared that I moved to the spare bedroom and refused to sleep in that room ever again. Strangely, next door, an attached house, the ten year old boy sleeping in the room that was the other side of the wall to mine, was scared stiff after seeing a man at the end of his bed saying ' come with me '. they brought in the vicar.

I'm a former neuro nurse, and have also had sleep paralysis and related phenomena for over 50 years. I've researched the whole area, especially over the past 25 years, when internet access became freely available.

This might explain why your neighbour's son sleeping on the other side of the wall experienced something similar. There could have been some anomaly of the wiring running in the wall. In my own case, I always had my most severe SP-related episodes when sleeping in my parents' house, which was about 50ft away from overhead high-tension cables.

Re the bedroom next door similarities, when we moved to that house as a new build, mum said that back room had a bad smell in it. Just that young man's head was so ghostly being surround by a bright halo of light, I'll never forget how it curiously looked over me.

However, since these episodes arise from REM sleep, the unconscious is still fully on the loose - which it never is in our normal waking state. This means there's a communication between our conscious and unconscious minds, which almost invariably results in the production of terrifying images. These often relate to ghost stories, horror movies or alien abduction accounts in the West, as these tie in with our culture. In cultures where there's a strong belief in the world of spirits and demons, the hallucinations can be even more terrifying. (Another reason to set aside your fears about the "spirit world".) Unfortunately, that's how the unconscious operates in most people. Very few SP sufferers report pleasant hallucinations.

I can accept that it's my own brain conjuring up these images from where ever they are manifested, but accepting won't stop the the terrifying fear I get when I see a face looking over me. OK like you I could think to myself, its just chemistry, but the fear seems to last some time after the event and I can't shake it off. At some point I will say to myself don't be silly and sleep in the dark again.

I've achieved over 90 one time since it was implemented. For reference, I don't set any alarm, so my wake up is "natural". The single 91 I scored was after a night where I got 8 hours 19 minutes restful sleep (9 hours and 8 minutes total sleep).

My actual average restful is between 6h30m and 7h15m. I generally score between 80 and 84. I'm totally fine with that, but the stupid scoring implies I could sleep 15-20% better each night, which doesn't seem possible, as the score seems to value time spent restful sleeping the most, and no way will I ever be able to achieve over 8 hours restful regularly (meaning likely over 9 total) - nor would I want to.

However, I've given up on the score being useful just today. I've been working on my poor posture lately, and may have overdid it a bit on Sunday - as yesterday I had a bit more back pain that usual (it's gradually going down, but some days I maybe exercise a bit too much or sit poorly a bit too much, still). My restful sleep when I woke up this morning checked in at 4h51m (I was up later than usual as I was just uncomfortable) and my total was only 5h13m. I felt like hot trash, and needed a 90 minute nap about 4 hours later. However I was scored at an 80 - which is simply laughable.

I don't see the point of the Sleep Score at all. In my 48 years I've never slept as much as it seems to indicate I need to in order to get an excellent night's sleep, and have no need nor desire to start now. And when it scores bad nights as "good", it's number becomes useless.

"Because of the data from my sleep score analysis, I discovered by lowering my resting heart rate and my sleeping heart rate naturally through interval training and breathing exercises, I improved my sleep restoration."

FOLLOW UP: I am in awe how our bodies adapt and respond to changes. Due only to persistence and my sleep research, I offer this progress update to those interested in the science of healthy sleep habits. My restoration sleep score continues to improve (21 to 23 out of 25) which in turn affects the overall sleep score with daily averages now in the 90 to 95 range. I am committed more than ever to adapt everything I have gleaned so far into a lifetime of healthy habits towards restful sleep. Thank you Fitbit for participating and being a vital part of my overall healthy lifestyle.

The highest I've managed to score is an 89, and the lowest I've scored was a 51. My average tends to rest around 87. I do have premium, so I can see the breakdown. As long as I hit my sleep goal (6 hours), my scores seems to stay above 85. The next important piece seems to be how much time is spent with my heart rate below my average resting heart rate for that day. After that seems to be how much time I spent awake. I'm unsure how to raise the third category because it's based on how much deep and REM sleep you get. I always seem to score 20-22 out of 25 on a normal night. I pretty much always hit the "benchmark" for the percentage of time spent in each category, but my deep and REM tend to be at the bottom end. My light sleep is practically always at the very top of its benchmark, so it may be that it values deep and REM sleep over light sleep. How much you toss and turn at night also seems to be a factor, but I don't see a significant difference caused by it. The app does talk about its breakdown, and what it says is pretty similar to what I've noticed. I think, to have a 'perfect' score, you have to score 0% on their restlessness, get a LOT of deep and REM sleep, hit your sleep goal, and wake up very very little. Possibly not at all. I wish I had my Fitbit on when I went into my coma in January. It lasted 27 hours, and I would've loved to see how they broke down my sleep score for that. ff782bc1db

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