Technically speaking we are all living in the past. It takes time (millionths of a second) for light to reach our eyes, sound to reach our ears, touch sensations to reach our skin etc. and then it also takes time for those sensations to be relayed to our brain and our brain to interpret them. So we are always experiencing the world as it was a short time ago.
If you’re standing outside on a sunny day, the only things in between you and the sun are a few layers of gasses.
Inside the womb it can get as bright as an overcast day if the conditions are right (bright day, mother has thin clothes or none on, skin thickness etc)
English
#Offtopic
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I was already manually breathing, but don't let that stop you from realizing that your tongue will never fit comfortably in your mouth.
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Honestly I just woke up and groggily misread this, so now we're all manually blinking too.
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I have an exam in 2 hours. I’ve been manually hyperventilating for the last week.
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Psychiatrists have destroyed my brain chemistry.
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Editado por RADneck: 2/20/2024 1:10:54 AMAt the end I'm smiling Walk a mile to drink your water You know I'd love to love you And above you there's no other -Ian Anderson Edit: The quote is from a song called Living in the Past, for clarity's sake. [spoiler]You are now blinking manually♟️[/spoiler]
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Life hack: take a big gulp of air first thing every morning — enough to last the day. Now you’re free to focus on the things that matter.
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I am now manually breathing and I want to remove your spine.
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Your family is now gone. I can do it too.
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You should spend a minute or two manually breathing every day. It helps with circulation. Besides most people breathe incorrectly. This can affect posture and lung capacity. Pay attention to what is happening with your chest and shoulders when you breathe. If your chest and shoulders rise when you breathe in you’re breathing wrong. Breathing from your stomach gives you more lung capacity and breath support when you talk or yell. But it does feel really weird at first… most of us are use to carrying tension all the time in our chest and backs. And maintaining that resistance naturally leads to using those muscles to breathe. Letting your diaphragm drop and drag air in naturally feels very strange for most of us. Most people only breathe correctly when we call out or yell for help because it maximizes breath efficiency and pushes the voice out further.