When the Body Wakes Before the Mind
Adult sleepwalking, clinically known as somnambulism, is often misunderstood as a quirky or dramatic sleep behavior. In reality, it reflects a deeper neurological misalignment in how the brain transitions between sleep stages. It is not dreaming acted out, nor is it a psychological issue. What is happening is a breakdown in coordination between parts of the brain that are meant to stay asleep and parts that unintentionally wake up. Sleepwalking occurs almost entirely during deep non REM sleep, particularly slow wave sleep, the phase when the brain is supposed to be most offline. In adults who sleepwalk, the brain does not move cleanly from sleep to wakefulness. Instead, motor and sensory regions partially activate while areas responsible for reasoning, judgment, insight, and memory remain deeply asleep. The result is a strange neurological middle ground where the body can move but the mind never fully arrives. This phenomenon is best explained by what researchers call partial arousal...