What does sleep paralysis have to do with your experience of hovering above your bed? Well, it has almost everything to do with it. What you actually experienced was the hypnagogic hallucination that can sometimes accompany the sleep paralysis.
These experiences are very well documented.
Actually, one of the many parts of your story that interested me was the part where you said, "I hovered above my bed, I had this strong feeling that someone else was in the room with me but i couldnt see them. or at least i dont remember if i could." Don't you think it just a bit strange that you experienced something as amazing as hovering above your bed, and yet you can't remember if you saw someone in the room with you or not? If it was anything other than a dream, you certainly wouldn't have any trouble remembering a detail like that!
There is more to the sleep paralysis phenomenon than waking up paralyzed, and you should know that if you ever tried to do some research about the experiences you've been having. Try reading
http://www.sleepdisordersguide.com/sleep-paralysis.html to help get you started.
Here is a quote from there: "One of the most important differences between Night Terrors and Common Sleep Paralysis is that Common Sleep Paralysis occurs in Stage one of sleep and Night Terrors occur in stage four."
After finishing that, try going to
http://watarts.uwaterloo.ca/~acheyne/S_P.html to find out about other people who have had similar experiences to yours. Here is a quote from one of the many stories there:
"Several times I felt myself floating over my bed and around my room, usually I don't have control. Only very occasionally is the floating sensation localized to a particular part of the body as was typical for the experience of pressure.'My feet are the ones that get to float. It is an awkward sensation, like my head is too heavy to let the body float completely. So I often lay diagonal, my feet floating up and my head resting on the pillow...' The sensation is probably best described as floating since that captures the rather passive nature of the experience. The lack of voluntary movement during the floating is, of course, consistent with the associated paralysis."
Good luck with your research!