![]() They can also change from hallucination to hallucination.Īll the above combinations and variations are common. They can also range in intensity from slightly noticeable to blatantly obvious. They can also precede, accompany, or follow a period of nervousness, anxiety, fear, and stress, or occur "out of the blue" and for no apparent reason. ![]() Hallucinations can occur rarely, occasionally, or frequently.Īnxiety hallucinations can occur at any time, including with other anxiety symptoms or by themselves. Sometimes, two or more senses are affected at the same time. Hallucinations can affect any of our senses. Smelling a strong smell when nothing is causing it.Feeling a cool breeze on your face when there is no breeze.Feel like someone touched your arm when there is no one around.You have a specific taste in your mouth, yet you have nothing in your mouth to cause that taste.Having what can seem like real experiences when drifting off to or waking up from sleep.Having experiences you firmly believe occurred, but no one else with you experienced them.Hearing sounds that no one else can hear.Seeing something out of the corner of your eye, yet there is nothing there.Seeing something that didn’t occur, but it was so real you firmly believe you saw it.Seeing someone or something pass behind or to the side of you when no one or nothing did.Hearing someone call your name when no one did.You hear voices in your head, but you know they aren’t yours or concepts you’d normally think to yourself.You feel a strong physical sensation, but there isn’t anything around you to cause it.You have a strong smell of something, but nothing around you created that smell.You have a taste of a particular food, yet you didn’t eat anything that would cause that taste.You were initially convinced you saw or heard something, but upon closer investigation, what you saw or heard didn’t occur. ![]()
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