I frequently experience emotions as physical sensations. I can even physically locate them in my body sometimes. For example, I feel tend to feel sadness and sleepiness in my eyes and anger in my forehead. Sometimes I end up unable to figure out what emotion my current sensations correspond to. On a possibly related note, if I pay attention to what any given part of my body is feeling, after a while I start to feel some low-level pain in that spot. I try not to pay attention to my body very much as a result.
I get lost in books and such very easily, ending up almost totally oblivious to the world around me. I also read very quickly. And if I’m not keeping my brain occupied by something, I tend to either fall asleep or get very frustrated. It also causes me to be unaware of any pains or discomforts I’m feeling.
I often have trouble paying attention to what people are saying when they are talking to me and need to ask them to repeat what they are saying; my brain seems to interpret people’s voices as background noise and I have trouble turning this off.
I often have a song of some kind playing in my head. I can play melodies by ear on the piano, but not harmonies, and I usually find that when I try to recall a memorized song I can only “hear” the singer and not any of the accompanying instruments.
Whenever I am in the process of inserting an earplug inside my right ear, it presses on a spot that causes me to feel an urge to cough. It happens every single time, and it doesn’t have to be an earplug pressing the spot; an otoscope can also trigger the sensation.
I don’t like the taste of most chocolate. I particularly dislike chocolate milk, chocolate ice cream, and chocolate cake.
Whenever I am in the process of inserting an earplug inside my right ear, it presses on a spot that causes me to feel an urge to cough. It happens every single time, and it doesn’t have to be an earplug pressing the spot; an otoscope can also trigger the sensation.
It happens to me too, but in my case I know what caused it. I had shingles in 2000 and have several facial scars and one small bump of scar tissue in my ear canal. The neuralgia associated with the scars has mostly faded, but it is fading more slowly on the scar in my ear, direct contact on the scar still triggers it and in that case gives me an urge to cough.
I get lost in books and such very easily, ending up almost totally oblivious to the world around me. I also read very quickly. And if I’m not keeping my brain occupied by something, I tend to either fall asleep or get very frustrated.
This also happens to me (well, not the getting frustrated part). I sometimes joke that if I ever start snoring it will be the end of my academic career.
I frequently experience emotions as physical sensations. I can even physically locate them in my body sometimes. For example, I feel tend to feel sadness and sleepiness in my eyes and anger in my forehead.
I get this too, and in fact have long speculated it to be the way that most people probably experience emotions. For example, I feel fear as a ripple through my chest with two distinct parameters. The larger the waves and the more they travel outward from the epicenter, the greater the perceived danger. And the further to the right or left of my chest the center of the splash, the more likely the alleged danger is coming from that side.
I have introspected plenty more where that came from, and have gotten confirmation from plenty of different people that their subjective experience of emotions is similar. This isn’t common knowledge, but I assume that’s only because of the difficulty of introspecting such fundamental mental facts. Most people have had this sort of mental phenomena on auto-ignore since they were in their single digits, so it’s usually quite hard to dig up.
There must be a subjective experience constituting each emotion (or they wouldn’t exist), and it generally seems to be a combination between (1) a comfortable or uncomfortable bodily sensation and (2) various other things that would take a while to explain.
I frequently experience emotions as physical sensations. I can even physically locate them in my body sometimes. For example, I feel tend to feel sadness and sleepiness in my eyes and anger in my forehead. Sometimes I end up unable to figure out what emotion my current sensations correspond to. On a possibly related note, if I pay attention to what any given part of my body is feeling, after a while I start to feel some low-level pain in that spot. I try not to pay attention to my body very much as a result.
I get lost in books and such very easily, ending up almost totally oblivious to the world around me. I also read very quickly. And if I’m not keeping my brain occupied by something, I tend to either fall asleep or get very frustrated. It also causes me to be unaware of any pains or discomforts I’m feeling.
I often have trouble paying attention to what people are saying when they are talking to me and need to ask them to repeat what they are saying; my brain seems to interpret people’s voices as background noise and I have trouble turning this off.
I often have a song of some kind playing in my head. I can play melodies by ear on the piano, but not harmonies, and I usually find that when I try to recall a memorized song I can only “hear” the singer and not any of the accompanying instruments.
Whenever I am in the process of inserting an earplug inside my right ear, it presses on a spot that causes me to feel an urge to cough. It happens every single time, and it doesn’t have to be an earplug pressing the spot; an otoscope can also trigger the sensation.
I don’t like the taste of most chocolate. I particularly dislike chocolate milk, chocolate ice cream, and chocolate cake.
Cool, I’m not the only person who has this!
It happens to me too, but in my case I know what caused it. I had shingles in 2000 and have several facial scars and one small bump of scar tissue in my ear canal. The neuralgia associated with the scars has mostly faded, but it is fading more slowly on the scar in my ear, direct contact on the scar still triggers it and in that case gives me an urge to cough.
This also happens to me (well, not the getting frustrated part). I sometimes joke that if I ever start snoring it will be the end of my academic career.
I get this too, and in fact have long speculated it to be the way that most people probably experience emotions. For example, I feel fear as a ripple through my chest with two distinct parameters. The larger the waves and the more they travel outward from the epicenter, the greater the perceived danger. And the further to the right or left of my chest the center of the splash, the more likely the alleged danger is coming from that side.
I have introspected plenty more where that came from, and have gotten confirmation from plenty of different people that their subjective experience of emotions is similar. This isn’t common knowledge, but I assume that’s only because of the difficulty of introspecting such fundamental mental facts. Most people have had this sort of mental phenomena on auto-ignore since they were in their single digits, so it’s usually quite hard to dig up.
There must be a subjective experience constituting each emotion (or they wouldn’t exist), and it generally seems to be a combination between (1) a comfortable or uncomfortable bodily sensation and (2) various other things that would take a while to explain.
Relevant?
Yes. Thank you for the link.