Alyson Bair was having a nightmare that she was drowning. When she woke up, she was actually drowning.
"I thought I was dreaming, but then I realized I wasn't and I was scared," Bair told ABCNews.com, recalling the night she woke up in the river outside her home in early August. "It was deep and I couldn't touch anywhere and I was getting tired. I had to keep turning around and floating on my back."
She was eventually able to crawl onto a river bank and take cover until someone found her in the morning.
Bair, 31, is a wife and mother of two who lives in Burley, Idaho. She loves photographing her family, camping, reading and bowling. But she is also battling a mysterious nightmare and sleep walking problem that has terrified her and her family.
"It's definitely scary and it worries me," she said. "I haven't tried to drive or anything yet, but it just scares me what I could do. We've locked up all my medicines and made sure that our guns are locked up. Everything I could harm myself with is put away because I don't know what I'm going to do when I'm sleeping."
Two weeks after the near-drowning, Bair suffered a similar episode.
On Aug. 20, her husband Cody Bair, 34, woke up around 1 a.m. to use the bathroom and everything was normal. At 2 a.m., one of the couple's two children woke him up and needed attention. At that point, he noticed that his wife was not in bed and that the sliding glass door that leads outside was open, according to a police report.
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Watch Video The door is usually barricaded so that Alyson Bair cannot get out, but the couple had left the door and windows open that night because of the heat.
After searching the house, Cody Bair woke up his wife's parents and they all began searching the area around the home. The family called the Cassia County Sheriff's Office for help. A neighbor got on a jet ski to search for Alyson Bair and her husband took his canoe up the river to search for her.
Around 7:30 a.m., Bair was found on the riverbank about a quarter of a mile from home, according to police. She was wet and suffering from hypothermia. She was taken to the hospital and subsequently released.
Alyson Bair does not recall leaving her house or getting in the water, but she has cuts and bruises on her feet from the episode.
"I felt like I had nightmares, but I don't remember what it is and then I ended up sleepwalking and going back down to the river," she said. "I haven't been injured seriously besides the hypothermia, thank goodnessâ¦I'm just worried about what could happen."
In the past few months, Bair has woken up in various places in her home and in the street near her home.
"I just get up and go barefoot in my pajamas and I don't bring my glasses or I don't get anything," she said.
Her husband has installed a bar on the sliding glass door that prevents it from opening and put alarms on two other doors in the house for which Alyson Bair does not know the password so that if she breaches the alarm, it will ring until someone else in the house gets up.
"It's been really scary for me and my family," she said. "I don't want to sleep walk and I don't want to worry people. It's got to be scary waking up and not finding your spouse in bed with you and wondering where they are and are they okay. It's scary for me when I think about it."
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