Conversation
Notices
-
@clacke That Städte of mind is called dissociation. If you look closer, you' ll notice, within all unneccesary memories and other perceptions disappear, too. Afterwards, its kind of waking up.
-
I mean state of mind
-
Very interesting hypothesis. When I read their conclusion, I ask myself, if it would have changed their results a lot, when they would not have taken dancers with a lot of sensoric input, but for instance coders without. Beeing heavily adhd affected by myself, mixed type, for me all kind of strong sensoric input is a kind of 'reality anchor', causing me to shortly (1-5 sec) interrupt my permanent game between derealisation (do they mean that with "taxon"?) and depersonalisation.
-
I was told, we all derealise and depersonalise, it is how our brain works. My understanding is, our brain learns causalities, all the time, without any break. And since at first all memories are stored in different dissociations, we need to repeat things a lot, to make all that different dissociations permeable, to remember that cool song in another situation, too. For me that differentiation between 'flow' and a 'clinical dissociation' is just a question of how much my actual dissociation works for me in my actual situation. To 'zone out' as a pedestrian seems to be no problem for you, but for all of us it becomes very dangerous to answer difficult questions while driving a car within heavy traffic.