this is actually why i am here, i searched it after it happened.
my eyes blacked out an i saw red statioc and then it looked like a staticy horizontally lined television screen till it went away lasted about 3 - 5 seconds.. then i hadda hold my head in my hands for a minute
Although some people don't like the feeling, I always enjoyed it. Kind of like a high, but every time it happened I would feel refreshed with a new level of energy afterwards. I never passed out and the worst thing that ever happened was one time it happened while I was standing in the living room and I began to shake a bit and fell over and landed on top of a laundry basket which broke.
Happy stretching!
Hello my daughter read your post and she just had an EEG done today we're still waiting for the results. She is 11 years old and pretty much explains what happens exactly the way you did. This is what she says-
Okay, sometimes when I stretch, well, most of the time, I get a little light-headed, and a tingly feeling, sometimes I feel like I'm shaking, but I know I'm not because sometimes I'm around someone when I do it, and they don't make a comment on shaking. I've passed out about three times in the last week in a half. I feel as if I zone out for awhile, and I kinda of hear funny. Yes, my heart does feel a little fluttery when I do. I saw a doctor, and at first she said it was because a put my head back and it was cutting off the circulation to my brain, and I tried stretching without putting my head back when I stretch, and I still did it. Well, then I had to get an EEG, wich isn't scary at all.
This sounds like what I suffer; POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome). I’m 20 years old and I’ve been a sufferer for 3 years, but have only recently been diagnosed. I look normal, I mainly act normal, but I don’t feel normal. I have a wide mixture of the symptoms listed in most of these posts. For 3 years it was the opinion of friends, family members and countless specialists that my symptoms were fabricated as a method of gaining sympathy and attention. All my 27 tests came back normal except one - it’s called a tilt table test (TTT). Thankfully it is a simple and non-evasive test to be diagnosed. POTS is common in females (80%) 10-50 years old. It can vary in severity and symptoms, and since it can be so sporadic in nature it is often misdiagnosed.
If these symptoms aren’t common for you or only happen (for example) around twice a year or only when you stretch, you could simply have low blood pressure and perhaps you were a little dehydrated (too much coffee or alcohol?) the days you showed symptoms. However POTS is worth researching so ask for a referral at your GP for the TTT. It’s nice to finally have a diagnosis.
But it was only just now that I was about to go upstairs and I just fell down on the first step... normally I have to stretch and yawn and it just happens, but this time it happened straight away and caused me to actually fall, it may have just been delayed from when I stood up about 7 seconds earlier.
It's good to no it's not just me who is experiencing this weird feeling.
all i can do before its onset is try to grab something before i kind of "pass out"
Ill stretch and then ill feel kinda funny and detached then my vision kinds goes black and i get dizzy and fall over (I and sometimes twitch). During this time, I am aware but not aware-ish...?
Blood drains away from the brain and it starts shutting down but quickly recovers once the blood pressure returns to normal.
It often does bring a sense of euphoria and in fact, teenagers have begun to induce syncope themselves to get that high in a game called "The Pass Out Game".
Depriving the brain of oxygen is very dangerous and syncope should be avoided. The best way to avoid it is to try and make yourself stretch only one muscle group at a time, or stand up slowly if you've been sitting for a long time.
Once this happened when I went to hug my husband. The stretch of reaching my arms around him alone made me pass out. I was feeling very weak and tired that morning, so perhaps more vulnerable to it. ?
I have wondered if it could have something to do with the spine. For me, it almost seems like it happens when I stretch my back in certain ways. Could there be something building up around the spine that gets released in a stretch?
Thank you all for some reference points to do some more research.
Have a great day and happy yawning.
The "fix" that I was prescribed was a medicine called Fludrocortisone. Apparently it thickens the blood enough so that when I stand, I don't have that insane drop in blood pressure. I think the worst I have ever had recorded on me was I went from 130/70 to 100/ 60 or so. My doctor also suggested increasing my sodium intake to help with the thickening of my blood, so far it has worked really well! I am happy to say that my passing out experiences are down from once or twice daily to maybe once or twice a week! I hope this helps!