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This process of ‚zooming in’ into the details of our environment, it could be really exhausting (and overwhelmling, and upsetting) if we did this constantly. | This process of ‚zooming in’ into the details of our environment, it could be really exhausting (and overwhelmling, and upsetting) if we did this constantly. | ||
So maybe our perception system | So maybe our perception system developed on purpose a functionalism that works in a way which ‚saves‘ us from overstimulation: | ||
we look at things, quickly, recognize them [= as being the thing we learnt they are], say „Aha, this it is!“, and move on. | we look at things, quickly, recognize them [= as being the thing we learnt they are], say „Aha, this it is!“, and move on. | ||
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And I feel reminded of people with forms of autism that are supposed to deal with exactly this topic of ‚over-perception‘ because they can't help but be stimulated by so many things at the same time. | And I feel reminded of people with forms of autism that are supposed to deal with exactly this topic of ‚over-perception‘ because they can't help but be stimulated by so many things at the same time. | ||
And | And then, many of those people love to listen to e.g. the roaring of a vacuum cleaner or watch the rotating of a spinning top on the other hand as these are constant, steady, uniform sounds or movements (with certain patters): it calms them down. | ||
And I wonder then.... Why is it that listening to a vacuum cleaner for a long time would rather make me nervous than calm me down, and for other people its the other way round? A sound/movement/whatever needs to be so steady and continuously that it secretly slips into our subconscious. | And I wonder then.... Why is it that listening to a vacuum cleaner for a long time would rather make me nervous than calm me down, and for other people its the other way round? A sound/movement/whatever needs to be so steady and continuously that it secretly slips into our subconscious. |
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