martes, 30 de julio de 2013

Dying is not the worst



The most dramatic change is to be relieved to be sore, but we insist on believing that the worst happens with death.

Gestalt theory (1) is the one that best explains our way of perceiving contrast: white on black, silent about noise, release of desolation.

When the contrasts are located in different time perception takes a special dimension.

Clearly noticed perceptual effect that occurs when bursts thunder in the silence of the night, clearly notice perceptual effect that occurs when a white object is resting on a black background; clearly noticed perceptual effect that occurs when a pain is calmed by intravenous injection of an anesthetic.

However, the perceptual effect that occurs when the last guest leaves a party that saturated our home socially (release) is not as noticeable if two or three days later we were plunged into despair because even someone calls us .

Something similar happens when the infatuation is wearing out, slowly but surely, and if we agree, we just have a sweet memory that "cuts" on a sad gestálticamente bitter taste.

The perception arises from two opposing feelings but distant in time it provokes special feelings went from being happy to be sad, that is what the perception changes to build ourselves, we become.

No longer are the colors, the sounds, the scents of something outside that perception change but it is built with personal changes that contrast: we are well and be wrong; entire body seems to change, and change the color of skin chameleon.

The most dramatic change is to be relieved to be sore, but we insist on believing that the worst happens with death.

Note: Original in Spanish (without translation by Google):Morir no es lo peor.



(Este es el Artículo Nº 1.975)

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