Russian sleep

  1. How the Russian Sleep Experiment became a global phenomenon
  2. спать/поспать
  3. The Truth About the Russian Sleep Experiment
  4. The Cold War Russian Sleep Machine
  5. Russian Sleep Experiment
  6. The Russian Sleep Experiment by Holly Ice


Download: Russian sleep
Size: 2.53 MB

How the Russian Sleep Experiment became a global phenomenon

In the 1940s, a group of Russian researchers sealed five prison inmates in an airtight chamber. The prisoners were dosed with an experimental gas that would prevent them from sleeping. Their conversations were electronically monitored, and their behaviour was observed through secret two-way mirrors. Source: Waffles at Noon In the 1940s, a group of Russian researchers sealed five prison inmates in an airtight chamber. The prisoners were dosed with an experimental gas that would prevent them from sleeping. Their conversations were electronically monitored, and their behaviour was observed through secret two-way mirrors. For the first few days, everything seemed fine. But after the fifth day, they slowly began to exhibit signs of stress. They became paranoid and stopped talking to one another, whispering about each other into the microphones. Nine days in, the screaming began. Two of the sleepless prisoners just started running around the chamber, yelling so hard their vocal chords nearly broke. Suddenly, however, the voices stopped, and the chamber became dead quiet. Fearing the worst, the researchers announced that they were opening the chamber. But a voice from inside answered: "We no longer want to be freed." On the 15th day, the stimulant gas was replaced by fresh air. The results were chaotic. One inmate was dead. The inmates had been severely mutilated, flesh torn off their bodies and stuffed into the floor drain. They seemed to have ripped open their own abdomens, and...

спать/поспать

Russian Verb Conjugations спать / поспать [spaht' / pah-SPAHT'] (to sleep; to be asleep; [pf.] to get some sleep) Russian verb pair спать-поспать conjugated into all of the tenses and aspects. Simple reference on moods and participles. IMPERFECTIVE ASPECT PERFECTIVE ASPECT Infinitive (initial form) спать поспать Present Tense 1st Person Singular - я сплю́ - 2nd Person Singular - ты спи́шь - 3rd Person Singular - он/она/оно спи́т - 1st Person Plural - мы спи́м - 2nd Person Plural - вы спи́те - 3rd Person Plural - они спя́т - Past Tense Masculine - я/он спа́л поспа́л Feminine- я/она спала́ поспала́ Neuter- оно спа́ло поспа́ло Plural- мы спа́ли masterrussian.com поспа́ли Future Tense 1st Person Singular - я буду спа́ть посплю́ m 2nd Person Singular- ты будешь спа́ть поспи́шь a 3rd Person Singular- он/она/оно будет спа́ть поспи́т s 1st Person Plural- мы будем спа́ть поспи́м t 2nd Person Plural- вы будете спа́ть поспи́те e 3rd Person Plural- они будут спа́ть masterrussian dot com поспя́т r Subjunctive mood Masculine - я/он спа́л бы поспа́л бы Feminine- я/она спала́ бы поспала́ бы Neuter- оно спа́ло бы поспа́ло бы Plural- мы спа́ли бы поспа́ли бы Imperative Mood (Command Form) Informal- ты спи́ поспи́ Formal or Plural - вы спи́те поспи́те Derivatives Pres. Active Participle спя́щий - Past Active Participle спа́вший поспа́вший Pres. Passive Participle - - Past Passive Participle - - Verbal Adverb (Gerund) спя́ (limited use) поспа́в Related Perfective Verbs Shades of meaning: досп...

The Truth About the Russian Sleep Experiment

Especially if you haven't been getting a lot of sleep lately, you might wonder just how long you can go on like that. Exactly how long could you stay awake without cracking as a result of sleep deprivation? Some people say there was an over-the-top experiment for that. Experts are quick to debunk it. The Russian Sleep Experiment is a popular urban myth which began to circulate online in "creepypasta" forums (so-named for the ease with which you could copy-paste spooky content) in the early 2010s. But could this deeply unsettling legend have had some roots in fact? The story goes that Soviet-era scientists created a stimulant which they believed would enable soldiers to not require sleep for up to 30 days. They decided to test their new gas on five prisoners, promising them their freedom upon completion of the experiment. They locked the five men in a hermetically sealed chamber and began pumping in the gas. Within a few days, the men were exhibiting the kind of paranoia and psychosis that is a typical symptom of sleep deprivation. But as time went on, they began to act even more strangely. play icon The triangle icon that indicates to play 15 days into the experiment, when scientists could no longer see the men through the thick glass of the chamber, or hear them through the microphones, they filled the room with fresh air and unlocked it. There, they discovered that one of the men was dead, and the four surviving test subjects were all sporting horrendously violent injuri...

The Cold War Russian Sleep Machine

Maybe this was just old Soviet propaganda, but I’ve heard rumors about a machine that you hook up to your temples at night, and it makes four hours of sleep feel like eight. Did this thing ever exist? Were there any negative side effects, like, say, creeping insanity? Because if it did, and there weren’t, I totally want one. Website with some info about sleeping devices from the USA and Russia: (from the museum of quack medical devices mentioned by Mr. Scene.) This site talks about induced sleep as a potential non-lethal weapon during the Cold War. The Quack Medicine page implies that the devices are still sold and used in Russia. I’d be interested in what Cecil could tell us about these machines. Does this come with a Tesla coil? I won’t buy anything from Russia unless I’m guaranteed a Tesla coil along with it… How would something like this work? Does it deepen sleep somehow? Me, I prefer sleeping eight hours to four - there’s nothing to do in the wee hours but be quiet, so as not to wake the family. What better use of this time is there than sleeping? Daowajan: That looks rather lethal, but perhaps if we redesigned them and worked out all the kinks they’d sell like hotcakes. I mean, here we’ve got a thread about an appliance with four replies, and three of the posters want one. Who wants to capitalize on one hell of a business venture? Well there are quite a few pharmas in the pipeline that promise drastically shorter sleep times and feeling more refreshed than a regular...

Russian Sleep Experiment

Internet urban legend The Russian Sleep Experiment is a Story The story recounts an experiment set in 1947 at a On the 15th day, the researchers decided to turn off the stimulating gas and reopen the chamber. The subjects did not want the gas to turn off, fearing they would fall asleep. Upon looking inside, they discovered that the four surviving subjects had performed lethal and severe After being somewhat treated for their severe injuries, the surviving three subjects were prepared to return to the gas chamber with the stimulant by the orders of the military officials (though against the will of the researchers), with Popularity and reception The Russian Sleep Experiment became immensely popular upon its original publication. It is considered by some to be the greatest and most shared creepypasta story ever made and The creepypasta is often shared alongside an image of a grotesque, demonic figure, which is implied to be one of the test subjects. The image is actually of a life-size animatronic Halloween prop called "Spazm". Literary criticism In the chapter "Horror Memes and Digital Culture" in The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary Gothic, Tosha R. Taylor wrote that the creepypasta "reflects residual political anxieties as it purports to reveal a top-secret effort by Russian scientists in World WarII." Sonali Srivastav and Shikha Rai drew comparisons between "Russian Sleep Experiment" and the 2018 miniseries Adaptations The Russian Sleep Experiment's popularity has led t...

The Russian Sleep Experiment by Holly Ice

Four political prisoners living in a 1940s Siberian POW camp volunteer to be Subjects in a Soviet Military experiment. They are promised freedom in exchange for completing the exercise. In return they must endure 30 days without sleep, fuelled by Gas 76-IA. The longer the experimentees endure insomnia, the more they deteriorate. Words and pleasantries break down until they turn on each other. Researchers look on, neutral, and take notes for the super soldier applications possible with this new, wonder drug. One researcher, Luka, stands alone in believing the experiment needs to be stopped before irreversible damage is done but is he too late? The Subjects no longer want the Gas switched off... Illustrations by award-winning graphic artist Daniel Tyka. Holly Ice loves the unusual and the unexpected, and that extends to her fantasy and science fiction. She loves to read and write about myths, new worlds, new creatures, and old creatures that are relatively unknown or re-imagined. She lives in the countryside not far from Bristol, England with two adopted, part maine coon cats, a boyfriend of many years, and an overactive imagination. Synopsis: Four political prisoners living in a 1940s Siberian POW camp volunteer to be Subjects in a Soviet Military experiment. They are promised freedom in exchange for completing the exercise. In return they must endure 30 days without sleep, fueled by Gas 76-IA. The longer the experimentees endure insomnia, the more they deteriorate. Words a...