Comment by 🥬 lamb-duh

Re: "Developing a Strange Psychosis"

In: u/stack

I practiced visualization exercises for a bit when I was a young adult after realizing that I'm (moderately) aphantastic. I'm not sure where I came up with the idea, but sometimes I would try to close my eyes and imagine that I was just slightly somewhere else, like on the other side of the couch, or at the other side of the table. I could never do it. I could never imagine with my eyes closed that I had sat down somewhere just slightly different.

I might give your thing a try, somehow it sounds less perplexing.

🥬 lamb-duh

May 01 · 7 days ago

4 Later Comments ↓

🍀 gritty · May 01 at 03:07:

I think given a long enough timeline, any mind can develop a psychosis of some kind.

why did you start with these visual exercises?

Having grown in a small town and now living in a highly congested area, I often think of the effects population density has on society, psychology, and the general culture / collective mind of various communities.

🐙 norayr · May 01 at 11:41:

by communicating online (lets say sharing what is may first for us) we sort of learn to look at the world from the other person's perspective.

🚀 stack [OP] · May 01 at 13:10:

I find myself often waiting in the streets of NY for a family member or something... Having a few minutes to kill is not enough to do deeper thinking about anything, and to avoid worrying about something stupid like a news item or politics, I practice some meditation-like activity.

This one is particularly sticky for me. It started as a pure 'rendering' exercise, but then I started adding more elements - sunglasses, gait, trying to feel the weight of the backpack, etc...

🌲 Half_Elf_Monk · May 01 at 19:08:

This is an amazing idea for a lot of reasons. I imagine it doesn't make you look more normal when you're 'spacing out', but you're beginning to imagine the thing-as-itself rather than the thing-as-you-see-it. I bet those are each one word in German. Ach. We do quite a bit of predictive/imaginative thinking in assuming that parts-of-things exist outside of our sight. It's a correct assumption, but still an assumption based on patterns.

Original Post

🚀 stack

Developing a Strange Psychosis — For a while I've been playing a visualization game "Rotate a Cow". Basically you picture a cow and spin it around as if it was on a CAD screen. Over the last year I've been trying a different experiment, and it is backfiring. In this one you place yourself into another person's head, and look at the world from their perspective. It is purely visual -- you are just trying to see what they would see. You can focus on a passerby in the street and "invade" their…

💬 8 comments · 2 likes · Apr 30 · 7 days ago