Post-anesthesia babbling is a normal phenomenon. Post-anesthesia babbling occurs frequently during anesthesia or after medication. Some patients may be given appropriate sedation because the patient may be more fearful of unfamiliar surroundings, surgery, and anxiety in those with poor psychological profile. The physician will communicate or other non-pharmacological methods of reassurance, but sedative medications may also be used. Patients may talk nonsense after the use of some sedative drugs. The anesthesiologist will protect the patient’s privacy and will not disclose the privacy issues. Unlike after general anesthesia with intubation, patients may also babble after sedative medication, but this babbling is basically short-lived because the patient will not communicate verbally or physically move after a certain level of anesthesia is reached. It is a normal process for patients to babble when they are not fully awake and subconscious during awakening because of the anesthetic drugs. There are different stages in the depth of anesthesia and the degree of anesthesia recovery, and gibberish can occur in different stages.