Sleepwalking woman shares eerie video talking with ghosts

What goes bump in the night? This woman, apparently. Shes gone viral online for sharing hilariously creepy videos of her nightly sleepwalking, caught by night vision surveillance cameras in her home.

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What goes bump in the night?

This woman, apparently. She’s gone viral online for sharing hilariously creepy videos of her nightly sleepwalking, caught by night vision surveillance cameras in her home.

But this time was a bit different. Just in time for spooky season, Celina Myers, known as @CelinaSpookyBoo on TikTok, might have had a run-in with a spirit.

“I was recently in Salem, and a psychic told me I’m clairvoyant,” she said in the clip, which has 1 million views. “And when I’m sleepwalking, I’m not actually talking in my dreams. I’m talking to ghosts. Keep that in mind.”

The video shows Myers, who touts over 26 million followers, spinning around in a chair with her arms and hands raised.

Myers claims she’s “talking to ghosts” when she’s sleepwalking. TikTok/Celina Myers

“Were the ’70s sick?” the 28-year-old asks in the clip, supposedly talking to a ghost. “Would you like a beverage?”

Along with other miscellaneous sounds and words — including pointing finger guns and shouting “pew, pew, pew” — she ambles around the dark house. At one point, she clutches her chest and whispers the word “boobs.”

“Well I’m not telling her, you tell her,” she stated suddenly, followed by her flipping the bird. “To live is to suffer.”

Sleepwalking, also called somnambulism, often occurs only a few hours after falling asleep, and while it’s typically not serious, it can be a symptom of an underlying sleep disorder.

Affecting about 4 percent of adults, it could also be a result of stress, sleep deprivation, fever or sleep schedule disruption, according to Mayo Clinic, or even the consumption of alcohol and certain medications. Rarely a concern, sleepwalking can turn into a problem when it becomes dangerous, disturbs others or leads to further sleep disruption.

She can be heard asking if the 1970s were “sick” in the clip. TikTok/Celina Myers

Treatment can include identifying underlying conditions and adjusting medications and therapy, but can even go so far as to force the person awake prior to when they would typically sleepwalk or participate in self-hypnosis.

But for Myers, posting online seems to be her therapy. Her viewers get a kick out of her sleepwalking series, with some even claiming they saw “orbs” in the clip, which signal ghostly presences.

“Celina is it me or were there orbs in this video,” wrote one user. “I saw at least 3.”

As she parades around her home, she makes random noises. TikTok/Celina Myers

“I love this for you. My brother slept walked as a child and had very ethereal but horrifying experiences he actually still remembers as an adult,” chimed in another.

“So all those times you’ve prepared meals for people in your dreams you were being a good ghost host,” quipped someone else.

Like any good host, Myers offers the spirits a drink. TikTok/Celina Myers

“I wonder what the ghosts think about all this,” commented another.

The author, who is from London, Ontario, and specializes in books about the paranormal, has previously claimed that her house is haunted and even believes she might be cursed — although she remains in good spirits despite her startling reality.

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