**COPYRIGHT MUSIC**
A woman has a rare 'Sleeping Beauty' condition which sees her snooze every four hours - forcing her to nap in nightclubs and even during her grandma's funeral.
Justice Collins, 28, has to take up to six naps a day due to the rare disorder called narcolepsy - which causes periods of involuntary sleep.
She was diagnosed aged 18 after years of struggling to stay awake in school and nodding off during class.
Justice would try everything to stay awake including "eating" or "pinching herself" but says nothing could fight off the tiredness.
The chronic sleep condition has seen Justice fall asleep in some unusual places including courtside at basketball games and while on a school trip to the former prison Alcatraz Island, San Francisco.
Over the years she has learnt to deal with her condition and said the "secret" to living with it is rigorous planning and making time for naps.
Justice, a communications coordinator at Heartland Coca Cola, from Kansas City, Missouri, US, said: “Virtually any place you can think of, I’ve fallen asleep there.
“At the club, courtside at the basketball game, and even at my grandma’s funeral.
"I ask my friends to record whenever I pass out randomly - the compilations are hilarious.
"Loud blaring music and the fog horn from the ferry wouldn't stir me.
“Once I’m asleep there’s no point in waking me up.”
Although she had always shown signs of her condition, it only first became noticeable when she was 17, and she was regularly nodding off during classes in high school.
But her excessive sleepiness started to become a problem when teachers began taking points off her grade for participation.
Justice said: “At first, I thought I was just a typical teenager that enjoyed a nap.
"I tried eating, pinching myself, but nothing would work."
Her concerned parents, Nancy Collins, 59, a family reunification supervisor and Michael Collins, 67, a retired teacher, took Justice to an overnight sleep study in 2013. At NKCH Diagnostic Sleep Center, doctors performed a multiple sleep latency test (MSLT), which measures excessive daytime sleepiness.
The tests concluded that Justice had narcolepsy - which means her brain can’t regulate her sleep cycles, preventing a her from choosing when to wake or sleep.
Justice can’t remember the last time she slept through the night and never knows how long she's nodded off for when she wakes up.
“I was happy when I was diagnosed, because it finally explained what was happening," she said.
“Google tells you what it is, but not how to deal with it.
“People asked me how I’d keep a job, so there were lots of difficult unknown things to consider.
“But I could finally properly adapt to my condition and take control over my life.”
Growing-up, Justice never let the sleep disorder hold her back, and she takes part in all the same activities her friends do.
But she does have to plan her days around having naps or accept that she might randomly pass out.
A woman has a rare 'Sleeping Beauty' condition which sees her snooze every four hours - forcing her to nap in nightclubs and even during her grandma's funeral.
Justice Collins, 28, has to take up to six naps a day due to the rare disorder called narcolepsy - which causes periods of involuntary sleep.
She was diagnosed aged 18 after years of struggling to stay awake in school and nodding off during class.
Justice would try everything to stay awake including "eating" or "pinching herself" but says nothing could fight off the tiredness.
The chronic sleep condition has seen Justice fall asleep in some unusual places including courtside at basketball games and while on a school trip to the former prison Alcatraz Island, San Francisco.
Over the years she has learnt to deal with her condition and said the "secret" to living with it is rigorous planning and making time for naps.
Justice, a communications coordinator at Heartland Coca Cola, from Kansas City, Missouri, US, said: “Virtually any place you can think of, I’ve fallen asleep there.
“At the club, courtside at the basketball game, and even at my grandma’s funeral.
"I ask my friends to record whenever I pass out randomly - the compilations are hilarious.
"Loud blaring music and the fog horn from the ferry wouldn't stir me.
“Once I’m asleep there’s no point in waking me up.”
Although she had always shown signs of her condition, it only first became noticeable when she was 17, and she was regularly nodding off during classes in high school.
But her excessive sleepiness started to become a problem when teachers began taking points off her grade for participation.
Justice said: “At first, I thought I was just a typical teenager that enjoyed a nap.
"I tried eating, pinching myself, but nothing would work."
Her concerned parents, Nancy Collins, 59, a family reunification supervisor and Michael Collins, 67, a retired teacher, took Justice to an overnight sleep study in 2013. At NKCH Diagnostic Sleep Center, doctors performed a multiple sleep latency test (MSLT), which measures excessive daytime sleepiness.
The tests concluded that Justice had narcolepsy - which means her brain can’t regulate her sleep cycles, preventing a her from choosing when to wake or sleep.
Justice can’t remember the last time she slept through the night and never knows how long she's nodded off for when she wakes up.
“I was happy when I was diagnosed, because it finally explained what was happening," she said.
“Google tells you what it is, but not how to deal with it.
“People asked me how I’d keep a job, so there were lots of difficult unknown things to consider.
“But I could finally properly adapt to my condition and take control over my life.”
Growing-up, Justice never let the sleep disorder hold her back, and she takes part in all the same activities her friends do.
But she does have to plan her days around having naps or accept that she might randomly pass out.
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FunTranscript
00:00Me and I don't break our asses, we just
00:05Can't trust the places we used to go
00:11I guess I still fuckin' love the way you move
00:22I'm lost, we lost
00:25I still hear your voice in the traffic, we're lost
00:31Oh my God, I know what it's like, I'm so confused
00:38I still fuckin' love you
00:45He said, the fight is over
00:48And that's when I went before my pastor
00:53And told him, I need to go home
00:56I need to go see what's going on