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difficult child Hallucinated
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<blockquote data-quote="WSM" data-source="post: 289793" data-attributes="member: 5169"><p>I think it might end up being passed off as sleep related, but this was 8 pm, and difficult child has never slept more than 5 hours a night since forever. He was sitting in a well lit room and when I knocked he got up and cross a few feet of floor and turned off the interior alarm (did I mention difficult child requested one last week because he thought people might come in his room at night and 'do things' to get him in trouble, and yesterday he made husband walk down the street and around the corner to talk to him, and he's taken to checking his lunch before going to day camp to make sure people haven't 'put stuff' in it. husband makes the lunches about 10 minutes before he hands it to difficult child).</p><p> </p><p>Anyways...it was early evening, difficult child was sitting up in a well lit room, he was appropriately responsive to the knock on the door when he turned off the alarm so I could open the door, and he looked wide awake. He wasn't mumbling. He doesn't have a habit of sleep walking or heavy sleep. We have alarms also on the outside of his door so that if he sleepwalks, or leaves his room at anytime we know. He wasn't sick, he hadn't had any strenuous or unusual activity, 8 pm is not a typical time for him to sleep, I don't think I've ever seen him sleep at that time. </p><p> </p><p>Also the other time in Feb 2005 when I saw him hallucinate, I'd gone to his room to get him for dinner. The time in early April when he mumbled conversationally and said 'sister' and 'door' was after school.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WSM, post: 289793, member: 5169"] I think it might end up being passed off as sleep related, but this was 8 pm, and difficult child has never slept more than 5 hours a night since forever. He was sitting in a well lit room and when I knocked he got up and cross a few feet of floor and turned off the interior alarm (did I mention difficult child requested one last week because he thought people might come in his room at night and 'do things' to get him in trouble, and yesterday he made husband walk down the street and around the corner to talk to him, and he's taken to checking his lunch before going to day camp to make sure people haven't 'put stuff' in it. husband makes the lunches about 10 minutes before he hands it to difficult child). Anyways...it was early evening, difficult child was sitting up in a well lit room, he was appropriately responsive to the knock on the door when he turned off the alarm so I could open the door, and he looked wide awake. He wasn't mumbling. He doesn't have a habit of sleep walking or heavy sleep. We have alarms also on the outside of his door so that if he sleepwalks, or leaves his room at anytime we know. He wasn't sick, he hadn't had any strenuous or unusual activity, 8 pm is not a typical time for him to sleep, I don't think I've ever seen him sleep at that time. Also the other time in Feb 2005 when I saw him hallucinate, I'd gone to his room to get him for dinner. The time in early April when he mumbled conversationally and said 'sister' and 'door' was after school. [/QUOTE]
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