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Picking the simplest dish from a 40-item menu can be normal. Too many options tire the brain; a tired brain avoids risk and retreats to ‘safe.’ More choice can mean less energy.
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Kısaca
Picking the simplest dish from a 40-item menu can be normal. Too many options tire the brain; a tired brain avoids risk and retreats to ‘safe.’ More choice can mean less energy.
The “looked away, must be lying” cliché often fails. Stress, shame, and anxiety can mimic the same signs—your brain needs context, not a single cue.
If your face seems to change when you stare into a mirror in dim light, you’re not imagining it. As the brain normalizes a constant stimulus, perception drifts—features can look stretched or altered.
That sudden shiver during a song isn’t just emotion—it’s your reward circuitry lighting up. Music can trigger “frisson” when it bends expectation and resolves at the right moment.
In an argument, one person stays angry for minutes while another recovers fast. The difference is often emotion regulation: the brain learns how to cool a rising fire.
The moment you see a face, a ‘trustworthy?’ feeling can appear. The brain builds a fast model from limited data, and that model can bend new information to fit itself.
We see the world smoothly because the brain keeps predicting with incomplete data. Your eyes leave tiny gaps; the brain fills them with the ‘most likely’ picture. Reality is partly a construction.
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