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Meditation has some weird side-effects. They're not particularly predictable, nor is there a good science for explaining them. I've lost any ability to be frightened by horror movies, and don't suffer imagination-based aftereffects either. Weird.
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It would be fair to ask how I can claim that's related to meditation, and obviously I can't prove it. But I notice the number of situations where limbic responses go bone deep are decreasing. The system seems to modulate itself more actively.
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There is also a large extent to which emotional responses are trained and modelled, moreso than authentic. You are acting out a script. "I'm scared, and this is how scared people act." Only, that part is just a story. Without it, there are only some sensations. Sometimes.
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I don't know if horror stories have ever really invoked anything else than a sensory thrill, a mild catecholamine spike. But, from when I was a little child: "Oh, you'll be terrified reading that!" "You'll have nightmares!" "You will be scared of those things now!"
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It's difficult to formulate just how many of our behaviors are formulaic, shallow, self-reinforcing. What goes in initially percolates, permutates, grows. When the initial response is blunted, the whole response is blunted. But when it's amplified...
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Even weirder, this seems to work almost by category. Things that don't prompt self-reinforcing reactions for me: - Moderate hunger, thirst, tiredness or physical discomfort. - Pain - Manufactured extreme emotion (news, horror, religion) Many other things still do, however.
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Yeah, those sorts of (for lack of better words) energetic effects are common. I've had a lot of that happen while meditating, or during/after postural yoga. Also started having it spontaneously, in everyday life. The more I meditate, the more it happens.
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I've had the understanding before, in some sense, but there's a difference between an "oh, that makes sense" intellectual sort of understanding... ... and actually getting to experience it in your own body, at a sensory and thought level.
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I find them delightful. The genre as a whole is flawed. It's very easy to deliver cheap horror, and that's what most horror "fans" seem to want. But on some level, they feel honest. There is a great drive to assure ourselves that we are not frightened primates... yet we are.
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