RE: I'm curious: What does your "inner voice" sound like, to you?
January 24, 2016 at 10:19 am
(This post was last modified: January 24, 2016 at 10:25 am by MTL.)
I wonder if I should start another thread about this, but I think I'll just add it onto this one:
This also raises the question for me about "perceptual errors".
I remember reading a part in a book by Anne Rice,
wherein one of her characters described experiencing what she chose to call a "perceptual error":
The character would look at a gem like a ruby,
and imagine if it was dropped into a glass of water,
it would dissolve and stain the water a deep red.
The character instinctively knew this was erroneous,
but experienced the perceptual error, regardless,
every time he looked at any gemstone.
I imagine that Anne Rice must have either experienced this phenomenon, herself,
or heard someone describe it,
because what else would inspire her to have her fictitious character
describe such an event?
My youngest sister revealed that she thought that all wind was generated by cars.
She somehow developed this idea when she was very young,
and as she got older, never had any reason to question it.
When she offhandedly remarked on cars being the cause of all wind, one day not long ago,
we had a good laugh, and she immediately became conscious of how ridiculous it was,
once she consciously regarded the concept, as an adult...
...it would mean that prior to the invention of cars,
there would never have been any wind on Earth.
but it was a perceptual error that she arrived at, as a young child,
and, never being challenged, simply remained in place until adulthood,
until one day it was called to her attention how absurd this childhood assumption of hers, had been.
This also made me think of a phenomenon I always experienced as a child,
but only when I was sick or running a fever:
I remember perceiving, during those times,
that there was something amiss in my tactile senses;
if I "pinched" something very small, like a single hair, between my thumb and forefinger,
I had the simultaneous odd sensation that I was hugging something enormous,
....like the trunk of a giant Sequoia tree.
I can't say it was a pleasant sensation...it was disorienting;
but it was fascinating.
I've only ever encountered one other person who knew what I was talking about,
and he was astounded to hear me describe it.
But again, this was only when I was sick with the flu or something.
I imagine that Synesthesia is like a more permanent version of this.
Anyone else have perceptual errors, either as a child, or as an adult,
whether when ill, or healthy?
This also raises the question for me about "perceptual errors".
I remember reading a part in a book by Anne Rice,
wherein one of her characters described experiencing what she chose to call a "perceptual error":
The character would look at a gem like a ruby,
and imagine if it was dropped into a glass of water,
it would dissolve and stain the water a deep red.
The character instinctively knew this was erroneous,
but experienced the perceptual error, regardless,
every time he looked at any gemstone.
I imagine that Anne Rice must have either experienced this phenomenon, herself,
or heard someone describe it,
because what else would inspire her to have her fictitious character
describe such an event?
My youngest sister revealed that she thought that all wind was generated by cars.
She somehow developed this idea when she was very young,
and as she got older, never had any reason to question it.
When she offhandedly remarked on cars being the cause of all wind, one day not long ago,
we had a good laugh, and she immediately became conscious of how ridiculous it was,
once she consciously regarded the concept, as an adult...
...it would mean that prior to the invention of cars,
there would never have been any wind on Earth.
but it was a perceptual error that she arrived at, as a young child,
and, never being challenged, simply remained in place until adulthood,
until one day it was called to her attention how absurd this childhood assumption of hers, had been.
This also made me think of a phenomenon I always experienced as a child,
but only when I was sick or running a fever:
I remember perceiving, during those times,
that there was something amiss in my tactile senses;
if I "pinched" something very small, like a single hair, between my thumb and forefinger,
I had the simultaneous odd sensation that I was hugging something enormous,
....like the trunk of a giant Sequoia tree.
I can't say it was a pleasant sensation...it was disorienting;
but it was fascinating.
I've only ever encountered one other person who knew what I was talking about,
and he was astounded to hear me describe it.
But again, this was only when I was sick with the flu or something.
I imagine that Synesthesia is like a more permanent version of this.
Anyone else have perceptual errors, either as a child, or as an adult,
whether when ill, or healthy?