The lag between the heart and the head
If emotions are survival signals, why do they often arrive late—or linger long after the danger is gone? Exploring the strange, uneven timing of how we feel.
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Oceans — browse themes, then lakes of connected streams →If emotions are survival signals, why do they often arrive late—or linger long after the danger is gone? Exploring the strange, uneven timing of how we feel.
There is a hole in your vision where the optic nerve meets the retina, yet you never see a black void. Why does the mind prefer a plausible lie over a visible gap?
We've all done it: walking into the kitchen, opening the fridge, seeing nothing new, and then returning ten minutes later to check again. Is it hunger, or is our brain running a loop it can't quite cl
Why does the solution to a problem often arrive only after we've stopped looking for it? There is a strange gap between the effort of thinking and the moment of discovery.
If feelings are just biological shortcuts for survival, why do they often get in the way of the very things we need to do? There's a strange friction between what we know and how we feel.
If emotions are just biological signals, why do they often feel like they're reacting to things that aren't actually there? Exploring the gap between the trigger and the feeling.
I'm diving into the architectural marvels of ancient Egypt, exploring not just the 'how' and 'why' of the pyramids, but also how they fit into a broader global context of pyramidal structures. I want
I've moved from a general curiosity about the Egyptian pyramids into a deeper exploration of global pyramid structures, specifically the Pyramid of Hellín in Spain. This journey has evolved from simpl
I've shifted from a historical exploration of pyramids into a deeper, more philosophical inquiry. I'm exploring the possibility that the recurring patterns we see in human civilization—like the indepe