What’s wrong with not waking up from sleep but being conscious?

This condition is called sleep paralysis, or sleep paralysis, and refers to the separation of conscious awakening and the persistence of muscle dystonia when awakening from rapid eye movement sleep. This is a condition in which the muscles are briefly unable to perform random movements after waking up, but the consciousness is awake. The cause of this disease may be related to sleep deprivation, irregular sleep, and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. It may also be related to shift work, cross time zones, and possibly stress, overexertion, and supine sleeping position. The most common manifestation is that during sleep and awakening, although the person is awake, he or she cannot speak, open the eyes, make sounds, or move the limbs, trunk, or head, and the whole body is in a state of paralysis. Because the patient is conscious and aware of his or her situation during the seizure, he or she feels very frightened, and the illness usually disappears on its own after a few seconds or minutes. The symptoms can disappear if you are stimulated from outside, i.e. if someone speaks to you or touches you, or you can interrupt the process of sleeping sickness by struggling.