SpunkySkunk347
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,717
Back a few years ago on one of my amphetamine binges, I looked in the mirror after having been up for 4-5 nights.
The hairs on my face didn't look like hair, they looked just sort of strange, like they were glowing or there was some aether around them. Although I knew they were hairs, they just looked like something different for some reason. Then, after a split second of thinking they kind of looked like worms, that was all the suggestion it took and it appeared that all the hairs on my face were actually worms squirming around.
Now, I knew that this was just a visual distortion from amphetamine-induced sleep deprivation, and I of course knew that they were just hairs and nothing more (a person would have to stay up way longer than I did and be in a much deeper psychosis in order to actually believe that they were worms).
However, it helped me gain an understanding of how our sense of vision works -- for the most part, we only visually see what we expect, and not what's actually there. It would waste too much time and resources for our brain to constantly have to take in new external visual information, so our brain takes a shortcut: it fills in the blanks itself, and the mind's expectations are what we see the majority of the time (excluding situations when something out of the ordinary occurs and the brain spends the extra resources needed to take in new visual information).
Especially as one gets older into adulthood, the brain begins to rely more and more on its own expectations concerning the external world around it, and relies much less on fresh input from the senses. We basically put ourselves on auto-pilot mode.
One of the most eerie recurring visual hallucinations I will get during an amphetamine psychosis is the scrambling of letters, visually. For example, say you are trying to read the words on a CD case on a table a few feet in front of you, but you are just slightly too far away and can't make out what the letters are - during an incident of "letter scrambling hallucination", the letters on the CD case actually appear to be changing or scrambling into different letters and symbols, almost as if your brain is not actually seeing the letters, but merely seeing "generic symbol gibberish" that it can not comprehend. The best way for me to describe what it looks like is the scrambling downward-falling green symbols in the movie The Matrix. If we think about how this relates to our cognition, the implications are sort of frightening: in some circumstances, there is simply no way of knowing if something is what it appears to be: when our brain is tired or careless, it will make mistakes when attempting to "fill in the blank", and the result is a visual hallucination. Thus, what your brain is showing you and telling you is "reality" is nothing more than its own fabrication.
Here is a really great experiment that anyone can do to understand what I'm talking about:
http://www.moillusions.com/2012/03/find-your-blind-spot-trick.html
The "Blind Spot" experiement. Basically, there is a rather large spot near the center of our vision which we can not actually see out of, because this spot is being occupied by a cluster of blood vessels in the pupil of our eye; yet, this blind spot goes completely unnoticed throughout the day for everyone because our minds just "fill in the blank" for the missing spot in our vision. Our brain's own expectations and what it knows based on past experience is how it figures out "What to put in the blind spot", yet this is all done subconsciously, and our brain actually tries to trick ourselves into believing that there is no blind spot.
Another common visual hallucination I have is not being able to differentiate between a bug crawling on the wall and just a dot/nail/spot on the wall. Sometimes, even if I look closely, the anomalous "moving dot thing" will seem to have legs, and be crawling, even if it is just a piece of dirt or whatever on the wall -- this I haven't been able to figure out or explain, and its a rather common hallucination: Particularly during a sleep-deprived psychosis induced by amphetamine, why do obscure things sometimes appear to be moving when they are not? My main theory has for a long time been that it has something to do with vascular constriction in our eyes caused by amphetamine, and these hallucinations are very much akin to "seeing something out of the corner of your eye" - some kind of twitch occurs in our eyeball due to vascular constriction, and our fatigued brain instead of realizing it thinks that what it is looking at is moving.
The hairs on my face didn't look like hair, they looked just sort of strange, like they were glowing or there was some aether around them. Although I knew they were hairs, they just looked like something different for some reason. Then, after a split second of thinking they kind of looked like worms, that was all the suggestion it took and it appeared that all the hairs on my face were actually worms squirming around.
Now, I knew that this was just a visual distortion from amphetamine-induced sleep deprivation, and I of course knew that they were just hairs and nothing more (a person would have to stay up way longer than I did and be in a much deeper psychosis in order to actually believe that they were worms).
However, it helped me gain an understanding of how our sense of vision works -- for the most part, we only visually see what we expect, and not what's actually there. It would waste too much time and resources for our brain to constantly have to take in new external visual information, so our brain takes a shortcut: it fills in the blanks itself, and the mind's expectations are what we see the majority of the time (excluding situations when something out of the ordinary occurs and the brain spends the extra resources needed to take in new visual information).
Especially as one gets older into adulthood, the brain begins to rely more and more on its own expectations concerning the external world around it, and relies much less on fresh input from the senses. We basically put ourselves on auto-pilot mode.
One of the most eerie recurring visual hallucinations I will get during an amphetamine psychosis is the scrambling of letters, visually. For example, say you are trying to read the words on a CD case on a table a few feet in front of you, but you are just slightly too far away and can't make out what the letters are - during an incident of "letter scrambling hallucination", the letters on the CD case actually appear to be changing or scrambling into different letters and symbols, almost as if your brain is not actually seeing the letters, but merely seeing "generic symbol gibberish" that it can not comprehend. The best way for me to describe what it looks like is the scrambling downward-falling green symbols in the movie The Matrix. If we think about how this relates to our cognition, the implications are sort of frightening: in some circumstances, there is simply no way of knowing if something is what it appears to be: when our brain is tired or careless, it will make mistakes when attempting to "fill in the blank", and the result is a visual hallucination. Thus, what your brain is showing you and telling you is "reality" is nothing more than its own fabrication.
Here is a really great experiment that anyone can do to understand what I'm talking about:
http://www.moillusions.com/2012/03/find-your-blind-spot-trick.html
The "Blind Spot" experiement. Basically, there is a rather large spot near the center of our vision which we can not actually see out of, because this spot is being occupied by a cluster of blood vessels in the pupil of our eye; yet, this blind spot goes completely unnoticed throughout the day for everyone because our minds just "fill in the blank" for the missing spot in our vision. Our brain's own expectations and what it knows based on past experience is how it figures out "What to put in the blind spot", yet this is all done subconsciously, and our brain actually tries to trick ourselves into believing that there is no blind spot.
Another common visual hallucination I have is not being able to differentiate between a bug crawling on the wall and just a dot/nail/spot on the wall. Sometimes, even if I look closely, the anomalous "moving dot thing" will seem to have legs, and be crawling, even if it is just a piece of dirt or whatever on the wall -- this I haven't been able to figure out or explain, and its a rather common hallucination: Particularly during a sleep-deprived psychosis induced by amphetamine, why do obscure things sometimes appear to be moving when they are not? My main theory has for a long time been that it has something to do with vascular constriction in our eyes caused by amphetamine, and these hallucinations are very much akin to "seeing something out of the corner of your eye" - some kind of twitch occurs in our eyeball due to vascular constriction, and our fatigued brain instead of realizing it thinks that what it is looking at is moving.
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