Topic Tuesday #100 2014/06/17 "Inner Monologue"

Topic Tuesday #100 2014/06/17 "Inner Monologue"

Well holy crap, I have done 100 of these! I hope they are worthwhile in expanding conversation and highlighting those items you may have never considered or perhaps just never given time to. I have no intention of stopping. My thoughts on this fall to my children, since we just passed the equitable Hallmark holiday of Father's Day. One day, many years from now these musings and explorations will be read by my offspring, and at least then they will either learn something about the world or about their dear old dad.  Hi girls! I hope you are well in the future and make sure to buckle your seat-belts and fly your cars at the speed and height limit. Love you always.

Today is not about a time capsule but about our inner voice, our internal monologue. This is the "voice" in your head when you actively think about things, or perhaps you have in different voices when you are reading or remembering something someone said. We usually have this voice in our heads at a conscious level. This is how we can argue with ourselves. It gets complicated from here. 

Which one is going to do that "Over the Top" thing?

Which one is going to do that "Over the Top" thing?

In cultures where the Abrahamic traditions predominate, we have a cultural perspective on the inner voice. It may be construed as your "conscience" or as "the holy spirit". If the thoughts are classified as being...detrimental, then perhaps that inner voice is not your own but of a possession by a malevolent power or of Beelzebub himself. This is societally prevalent but also based on pure conjecture.

Buddhists, whom have a spent a great deal of time, in meta-cognitive states, thinking about thinking,  see the inner voice as a path to new concepts or to the next idea. "Thought following thought." This does not exactly directly address the inner voice but it does bring us to a place where we can make our inner voice question itself. Once we hit that point, then our minds tend to provide some ambiguity to the source of the concepts we think about or debate with our inner voice. This can be a maddening line of thought all on its own, so... think about it, before you think about it.

Attribution of the inner voice can easily slip into schizophrenia and hallucinations, or more commonly, hearing voices that have an unidentifiable source to the mind. This is also the realm of the supposed demonic possessions, and often is the scapegoat of a tired mind reaching the end of it's cognitive ability, where a little voice tells you to give up. 

We higher apes, with our expanded cognitive abilities, have what we assume to be a unique ability for self reflection and philosophy. We have the awareness of our own voices and even our own thinking. This "higher self" that we have spent extraordinarily large amounts of time and energy exploring is also the reason we "think" and think that the thinking portion of our selves is somehow separate and above the brain that it emerges from. This gives rise to a soul. Our innate fear of the unknown gives rise to the immortal soul. We have clear examples of brain injuries that have changed the way a person behalves and the way they think, so we are close to certain scientifically that thought and consciousness is an emerging aspect of our brain. 

image_thought_life.jpg

If you are keeping track, I just talked you through why I do not believe in a soul and the reason I don't believe there is life after death.  We are our brains, and our brains are us. We have the ability to talk to ourselves, and answer. Some of us like the answers we receive and others may have cause to think otherwise.  What is a person to do?

To give you an example of how your thoughts may not be your own, have you ever had someone say, without the melody, a lyric to a song and been instantly transmuted into a jukebox where the song plays in your head and your inner voice breaks out into song? The same works for less "tangible" thoughts, like the smell of food taking you to your grandparents kitchen. The brain has some things on instant recall, and not always things we enjoy. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a nearly Pavlovian response to mental or physical stimulus. Hear a car backfire, and suddenly your brain transplants you to a personal hell-scape where you were being shot at. Or someone touches you a certain way and you remember being violated decades ago.  Or even worse... makes you think of that Sarah McLaughlin ASPCA commercial...

Thinking about thinking can be rewarding. Thinking about 'what' you are thinking can be hazardous, but also rewarding. Our brains are fascinating constructs that can turn dreams into reality and reality into dreams. Or... at least that is what my inner monologue told me to write... 

Topic Tuesday #92 2014/04/22 "Why Am I Here Again?"

Topic Tuesday #92 2014/04/22 "Why Am I Here Again?"

It has happened to all of us (there is a reason I can say that truthfully). We pickup something to take care of in another room and walk there and once we arrive, the purpose of our journey has eluded us. In our confusion we may just wander back to our point of origin only to realize why we set off in the first place. we beat ourselves up over being too tired or any other plausible excuse for our forgetfulness. 

Here is the result of a recent study, doorways trigger our short term memory to "clear". They are calling it the "doorway effect".

I didn't know I was hungry...

I didn't know I was hungry...

"...some forms of memory seem to be optimized to keep information ready-to-hand until its shelf life expires, and then purge that information in favor of new stuff.  Radvansky and colleagues call this sort of memory representation an “event model,” and propose that walking through a doorway is a good time to purge your event models because whatever happened in the old room is likely to become less relevant now that you have changed venues."

Many things can trigger this same clearing of short term memory. Such as a phone call or a door bell, maybe a child needing attention. All things that can distract for a moment and take you out of your concentration could derail your train of thought. It also is something that be have very little control over. Some things the brain is just predisposed to do, such as the phenomenon of pareidolia, which represents our predilection for seeing faces and hearing voices when the genuine article is just some wind or clever trick of light and shadow. 

It's hard to understand, but sometimes, you just can't trust your own brain. But knowing is.... wait... what was I doing? Oh year, getting a snack from the fridge. Why did I open the refrigerator? Huh....  Right... Sometimes you should just make some external reminders and don't trust that you will remember things. You may laugh at the person with sticky notes on their bathroom mirror, but they may know... or remember something that you forgot just walking through the door.