• @oddlyqueer@lemmy.ml
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      06 months ago

      As in, you feel compelled to touch other people’s piercings, or you feel a sensation like you have the same piercing on your body?

      • FRYD
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        06 months ago

        Looking other people’s piercings definitely gives me a slight sympathetic pain in the same spot on my body.

      • @nixon@sh.itjust.works
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        06 months ago

        Piercing, scars or any other noticeable thing like that in someone else gives me a sensation on the same spot on my body if I see/recognize/notice it. If someone gets punched, kicked or injured in a movie or such I also can get a similar sensation but to a lower degree if I frame it in my mind that it is fake, if someone visibly breaks a bone or gets injured in a sports game then that has a much more distinct, acute and entirely unpleasant sensation. I don’t watch much sports to keep that from happening.

        I believe it is a type of synesthesia called Mirror Touch.

        • @buffing_lecturer@leminal.space
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          06 months ago

          I sort of assumed this was common. If its not, that explains how some people can watch AFV or boxing and not feel the icky tingles and nausea.

          • @nixon@sh.itjust.works
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            6 months ago

            Yeah, I think it is common in some regards.

            The current prevailing theory on how synesthesia happens in the human brain says that everyone is born with these connections but in early development the synaptic connections are sheared or closed off. Like how your brain will close off bad memories or certain emotions for trauma victims. It is believed to be a similar mechanism. The connection is still there but it is shut down and inaccessible. When people take hallucinogens and see colors or geometric shapes in their vision that is the drug reopening those closed synaptic connections temporarily.

            The degree in which synaptic shearing happens or which synaptic connections get sheared are different for every person. So there could be, like, a bell curve, where some people have more connections throughout their life than others but the majority tend to group towards the middle of the curve. For mirror touch, and several other types of synesthesia, it tends to be a bit of a spectrum of those who don’t experience it to those who experience it acutely. Even then there are those who may experience it internally, like intellectually know there is a sensation and those who have some sort of physical reaction. Synesthesia presents itself in wildly different ways among those with the condition. There are many triggers and many different kinds of responses. If you have one type you are 50% likely to have 2 or 3 different types of synesthesia.

            There are two main tranches that people with synesthesia fall into in regards to the affects of synesthesia; people either think everyone has the same thing and so they don’t talk about it or, once they do talk about it, discover not everyone experiences the same thing they do, or not to the degree in which they do. If the synesthetic response is strong, hard to ignore and not something people are used to hearing about then the synesthete (a person with synesthesia) tends to not talk about their condition due to fear of being ostracized or sent to a psychiatrist and etc.

            I have Emotion>Color Synesthesia, along with several other types (including mirror touch). So my emotions present as colors projected into my vision. When talking about it as a kid I was sent to a psychiatrist as my parents thought I was making it up or crazy. I was put on anti-depressants which, surprise surprise, dulled my emotions and made the emotional>color synesthesia less pronounced but still there. Emotion wasn’t considered as a “sense” in the traditional meaning so it took a long time for me to figure out that it was synesthesia and how mine worked. Only in the later years of the 2000s did synesthesia start to come back into scientific research circles and with the internet it made it possible for edge cases, like myself, to start making contact with each other.

            If you want to learn more about it then the book from 2009 called “Wednesday is Indigo Blue” is a great starting point and kinda spearheaded synesthesia coming back into public discourses. It is not a long book, gives a good overview of the condition and its many variations but is also approachable and not too heady.

            • @Broadfern@lemmy.world
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              06 months ago

              Considering emotions very much have a physical bodily/chemical manifestation it makes perfect sense that a synesthete could experience that. I’m sorry you had to go through all that.

              • @nixon@sh.itjust.works
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                6 months ago

                Yeah, it makes sense in retrospect that emotion would be considered a sense. I have never met, still to this day, anyone else who has emotion>color but I have met other synesthetes.

                I cried tears of joy once I discovered some other people writing about their experience with emotion>color for the first time. Emotion being the trigger is somewhat rare in synesthesia but color as the response is the most common of responses. My understanding and exposure to synesthesia was that it worked in conjunction with the traditional 5 senses of touch, taste, sound, sight and sound smell but that is not the case. There are spacial, emotional, personality, temperature and several others beyond that that are also considered to be a part of synesthesia now.

                It is hard to classify because the responses are subjective to the individual. My color to emotion pairings are unique to me as well as how it presents in my vision though some of the color pairings are somewhat universal at a basic level.

                Thanks for the sympathy but I see it as a gift. Early life sucked as it was very isolating. With my pattern recognition autistic brain that tracked body movements and emotions of others to try and mask better it made it very easy to figure out when adults or others were lying to me or just acting out of character. I had a HUD that would discolor them. I am fantastic at poker but never play with friends or family, while I can’t see their cards I know a bluff without much effort and can run the numbers in my head to make a pretty accurate guess of the probability of their hand, especially with Texas Hold’m.

                The benefit, now that I don’t mask any of this as an adult is immense. I gravitate towards honest and open people. I make friends easily as I can cut through the BS but the majority of my friends I’ve had for several decades. I am very lucky to have such deep and long lasting friendships. Narcissists are a problem for me though, I take others at face value and they tend to mask their intentions well, like the antithesis of me. It is kinda weird. I have to be morally balanced in my daily life; kind, honest and fair or else my worldview gets colored in a depressing/angry/resentful or other negative tint. I can get overwhelmed during extremely distressing events and depending on how long those events last for, like a parent in decline or dying, then I can be overwhelmed by it for months or years. It’s better now that I have a more clear understanding and various coping mechanisms.

                It all takes balance, like with anyone, I just feel the highs and lows more acutely because so much of my attention has to be focused on it. Once I was able to accept it, figured out how it functioned, worked on coping mechanism and sought therapy for emotional regulation then life became pretty great. Happiest I’ve ever been. Wouldn’t give any of it up for any price but it was a tough road.

                It’s genetic too, part of what drove me to figure it all out and use it to my advantage was when I decided to have kids. If they got it then I needed to be able to not alienate them like I was but to help guide them in whatever way it presented in them so they could skip past the several decades I went through to get to the good parts.

                Some people still think it is weird and treat me as such but that’s ok, can’t be friends with everyone.

                Apologies for the info dump, it’s been one of those morning where I am avoiding doing the things I should be doing today but I figured someone might want to hear more about it in case they have similar sensory stuff going on or know someone who does. It was a comment like this in a random thread on a random forum from a random person where I discovered Emotion>Color synesthesia was a thing. Figured I’d try to pay it forward on here in case someone needs it.

                *fixed a word

  • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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    06 months ago

    I love socks, but nowadays any sock size over 44-45 is 44-45. Buy “large socks” 47? Still 44-45. 52? Believe it or not, still 44-45.

    I’m like 45-46 and it sucks. God I’d love a pair of thick beautiful socks.

    • @EtherWhack@lemmy.world
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      06 months ago

      While they are a US brand and are very likely out of the question for the foreseeable future, Darn Tough does those larger sizes. So, they are out there. Just need to find an non-US brand.

    • @sicarius@lemmy.world
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      06 months ago

      Knit your own!
      I recently took up knitting and knitted my first pair of socks for a friend. She loves them.
      Never fucking again! What a pain! Literally, I kept tapping myself in the stomach with the double pointed needles.

      • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Ha ha you’re selling it badly 😁 but I’ll remember it if I become too desperate…

        Nice work BTW.

  • @Gnugit@aussie.zone
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    06 months ago

    Must wear socks at all times, socks must not flop at the toe or they are sent to die a horrible death.

    • grrgyle
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      06 months ago

      Floppy socks are to me a clearer sign of degeneracy than if I caught someone mixing poop with alcohol to make the poop last longer.

      • alaphic
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        06 months ago

        Well… You certainly have a way with words… Some might characterize it as “slightly nauseating,” but that still counts as ‘a way’ if you ask me.

  • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    6 months ago

    Always wearing socks unless I’m bathing. No exceptions. Even at the beach. Even in the water. The socks don’t come off.

    The first time my now wife saw me take off my socks she had a freak out like she didn’t believe they’d actually come off. Like watching someone remove their own skin.

    I go through socks like nobody’s business. Recently upgraded to crew socks to get more durability.

      • @Perspectivist@feddit.uk
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        06 months ago

        I might be a person with ADHD in a ADHD community but that doesn’t mean that I need to view everything through that lens. ADHD explains many things in my life but not all things. It might be a sensory issue for some but I’m talking about myself here. Me disagreeing with a meme is not an attack on your identity.

    • @peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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      06 months ago

      But do you get unexplainable discomfort when you aren’t wearing socks? That’s the sensory issue. If you don’t get that, then it’s just a preference.

  • @ephrin@sh.itjust.works
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    06 months ago

    Only socks with shoes. Can’t wear shoes without socks, but once the shoes come off the socks have to as well.

  • @whoisthedoktor@lemmy.wtf
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    6 months ago

    Socks bad, shoes bad

    They are feet prisons.

    Bare feet club represent.

    We rally against the evil places that require shoes to enter. Boo them!

    • Lemminary
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      06 months ago

      I’m the exact opposite. I hate having my socks dirty and covered in hair. I’d rather wash it off my feet because I find it easier. 😅

  • @Ciderpunk@lemmy.world
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    06 months ago

    Socks are required at all times, especially indoors, unless showering or in bed. No socks in bed. Socks may be taken off if my feet get too hot but the socks must be left nearby to put back on, and also feet cannot touch floor. Socks nearby can only be then used to retrieve new socks as socks should never be put back on once removed unless in an emergency such as getting too hot.

    Ideally said socks are then inside slippers to provide additional insulation from evil floor textures, but no slippers without socks. Also socks can never be pure white, that is disgusting, socks must be ideally black, but dark is fine as long as not majority white fabric. Socks must be tight enough to not move, but also not too tight as to cause discomfort. Also that inside seam near the toes must never be noticeable. If it is, those are coming off immediately and getting thrown away.

    Boy this sounds insane when I type out all my rules…

    • verity_kindle
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      06 months ago

      Eh, not insane. Except for no socks in bed. The socks must be perfectly clean and dry to be bed socks, they cannot have touched any other surface before being worn in bed. The inside of the washing machine and the basket are ok surfaces, though.

      • @pitaya@lemmy.zip
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        06 months ago

        Same; I have bed socks and house socks, and if the bed socks touch the floor anywhere outside the bed they become the new house socks

  • @RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    …neither? Why do people keep asking how autistic my ADD is? Seriously.

    I prefer just wearing socks with no shoes when I play drums, so I can feel the pedal, and without them my feet will be cold on the metal. Is that what you mean sensory issues?

    • @markko@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I’m glad they work for you, but I would not buy these purely because of the pseudoscience nonsense, regardless of how comfortable they are.

      features our proprietary Grounded Conductive Laces™ and iON SYNC® earthing plug. These innovative elements create an electrical bond with the earth, mimicking the barefoot experience.

      How It Works:

      • Grounded Conductive Laces™: Stainless-steel-lined laces and a copper lace plug weave grounding properties directly into the sandal’s design.
      • iON SYNC® Earthing Plug: A conductive rubber plug at the mid foot facilitates electron transfer from the earth to the sole of your foot.
      • @sexual_tomato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        06 months ago

        Yeah they cater to the woo-woo crunchy people because that’s the demographic that is likely to discover “alternative” footwear. I met one of these people on a hike, which is why I even knew they existed.

        I saw that they looked comfy and that you could run in them, so I got some.