Image not available

700x539

sr_912338.jpg.603....jpg

๐Ÿงต Causes of audiosensory seizures in the brain

Anonymous No. 16423091

Hey /sci/ "crazy" guy here. Is there any research on what triggers symptoms/seizures in someone on the "schizo" spectum and how it moves through the brain? It feels like a wave of sorts that is/brings various phenomena with it and i'm trying to pin it down somehow without resorting to the superstitious thinking the wave feels like its pulling me towards. I've kind of drifted away from the scientific viewpoint to the point of believing in the brain as an approximation of a map rather than an actual thing but since i've yet to go all mumbo-jumbo so i might as well try different maps. Anti-psyches ain't a solution.

Anonymous No. 16423518

>>16423091
It's your digestive system. It would take a book to describe exactly why, but I'll try to give you a short version.
The signals originating from the nerves in the digestive apparatus appear in the conscious apparatus usually due to stimulation of the former and/or the overuse of the latter. The conscious apparatus usually represents the world to itself in the terms of five senses, so the overreaching digestive signals take such form. This is the nature of most hallucinations. Once you're in such state try to physically feel what is your digestion doing so that you internally connect the dots between two experiences. The wave you feel is basically a migraine, most likely coming from the large intestine. Try moving the wave and see how the intestine responds. It feels like it's in your head, but it isn't, it can't hurt you.

Anonymous No. 16428904

>>16423091
I'm wondering the same thing.