My sister got a Bluetooth headset and it reminded me that i cant use those because my ears heat up in less than 10 seconds after putting them on, in fact as i am typing this my ears are kinda of uncomfortably hot. Dust also cause my ears to heat, it usually the cause but it can also happen randomly as well as when i leave the PC monitor running when i sleep(same room).

there is some other stuff i thought to mention but i think it would be better for a post after discovering your body(e.g my cousin though all ppl can only see through one eye until recently because he himself can only see through one eye and that’s how he found out he has only one functioning eye)

Also feel free to talk about NSFW stuff and is this post hard to read(sentence structure wise)? Cause i never know if ppl have hard time reading my post, and at the moment i find it hard to read myself

  • SkaveRat
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    861 month ago

    Synesthesia. I can see sound. Really neat, actually.

    Not so neat is my aparent genetic resistance to pain meds and anesthetics. Caused some “fun” in a hospital stay

    • @[email protected]
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      471 month ago

      (Irish ancestry here: Letting them know that you’ve got redheaded relatives is the secret cheatcode to let you stay unconscious during surgery. There’s a whole protocol about it.)

      • SkaveRat
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        yup. My dad is irish. And although I’m not a redhead, I later learned that I have the gene and it’s one of the factors in this problem.

        Too bad I only learned about this fact after I woke up a couple times during surgery and later when they put me into an induced coma and I pulled out my tubes.

    • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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      171 month ago

      Does red hair run in your family by any chance? People with red hair in their family (myself included, I have auburn-ish hair) need 20% more anesthetics.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      Same. I inform doctors that I am resistant to sedation. They nod, not believing me. I go under. I wake up 4 hours early, everyone goes insane. One time they failed to put me out right away. Fortunately they managed to put me out before they cut into me. My last memories before waking are hearing “oh shit, he’s awake”. Another time they used “an adult dose and a child dose” which… doesn’t sound right. But I remember waking with a half dozen people trying to rouse me.

      • SkaveRat
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        41 month ago

        when the surgery team came visiting me afterwards, the anesthesiologist said they used “the elephant’s dose”

    • Owl
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      81 month ago

      How does “fuck you” look like ?

      • SkaveRat
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        91 month ago

        funnily enough, as soon as my brain can parse it as language, my synesthesia doesn’t trigger anymore. It really is just for sounds and music.

        If I listen to a language that I can’t understand, my synesthesia triggers. It’s a fun example of how the brain processes the information

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          if told “fuck you” in say, Norwegian, what does it look like? (if you speak Norwegian, then substitute it for something you don’t speak :P)

          also, does “fuck you” look the same in all unknown languages?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Aphantasia here. Can’t see or remember shit. It sucks.

      Only benefits are speed reading and a boost to abstract/scientific thinking. But episodic memories and visualisation sound more fun.

      Also resistant to everything. Connective tissue disorder? (EDS)?

      • @[email protected]
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        61 month ago

        Aphantasia here too, do you have an inner monologue? I don’t, to the dismay of every therapist and partner I’ve ever had.

        “What are you thinking?”

        “There are not words for this.”

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          Nope just multiple streams of unsymbolic thinking usually. When thinking of something specific or planning how to say something I’ll consciously subvocalise, but there’s no volume/pitch/tone. Having your subconscious talk to you all day sounds exhausting.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      Not so neat is my aparent genetic resistance to pain meds and anesthetics. Caused some “fun” in a hospital stay

      Are you a redhead? Apparently that’s a fairly common trait for them

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      Same here on the resistance to pain meds. I had a such a terrible experience with surgery. Once I woke up I was in such agony but I was also tripping hard from the dilaudid and left over anesthesia that I was unable to communicate effectively. Once a doctor finally listened to me many hours later, they gave me a cocktail of other stuff that finally eased the pain. I also really struggle with dental work.

  • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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    771 month ago

    I’m a tetrachromat if that counts. That means instead of seeing just the regular six color groups most people see, I can see 25% more colors on top of that.

      • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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        371 month ago

        This is correct. In fact, the same gene manifests differently in men even if they had it. In men, if anything, it hinders color. Or so that’s what my doctor told me.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          How did you and your doctor confirm you are tetrachromatic? I find all your replies here fascinating, I hope you don’t mind another question!

          • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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            21 month ago

            It wasn’t my doctor that first found out, it was my school. Just as there are ways people can realize someone is colorblind, there are ways people might realize that someone is a tetrachromat. I remember often feeling something was off when we were describing colors in school and little me was like “wait a minute, why does this feel incomplete?”

      • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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        111 month ago

        Honestly, practically-speaking, you aren’t missing out on too much. Color isn’t as crucial a detail outside of aesthetics. Plus I imagine you have the perfect excuse for running a red light and committing fashion crimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          Haha unfortunately on the red front I can see red, but I miss many of the shades. It’s not so much can’t see red but all reds look the same, reddy browns just look brown, pinky reds just look pink, purples are harder to distinguish from blue.

          No getting out of red lights, unfortunately

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      could you elaborate on what you mean by “more colours”? like infra red or ultraviolet? or do you mean your eyes have an extra colour cone that gives you more precise information about colours so that it’s easier for you to tell them apart?

      • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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        211 month ago

        A human’s eyes see color because of cones in the eyes. Each one corresponds to a different range of wavelengths; one cone corresponds to red, one to yellow or green, and one to blue. Tetrachromats have four cones.

        Look outside at the nearest flower. To you, it could be just yellow, but we might see some cyan or teal that other people don’t. This is how crows, which we typically assume are all identically black, often recognize each other so well; they have five or six color cones I think, and amongst themselves, they look like they have the colors of a parakeet.

        We can see new colors too. They are difficult to describe, though the best way to describe them is to ask you to think of the most neon-esque colors you can think of and think of all the dimensions and hues you might have never seen and which take on a life of their own. These new colors stretch beyond the ordinary boundaries of the rainbow but loop around in the same way.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          fascinating!

          no need to answer if you don’t want to, i don’t want to make you feel like it’s an interview or anything but i do wonder -

          how does art look to you? do you sometimes see colours that are wrong that someone has used without knowing they’re there? do digital things look inherently less colourful since they only emit the light that 3 colour coned people can perceive?

          • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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            31 month ago

            Yes, I do occasionally see colors in art that aren’t there. Not to scare people, but in traditional art, it almost seems like smudges, and I can actually attest even some very classic works of art have some peculiar color arrangements when you see them in person. In digital art, you would be right; it’s like a regular person watching one of those lowkey noire movies or sports movies that voluntarily reduce the color output.

    • M137
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      51 month ago

      I’m apparently one of the only men in the world who have something akin to that, it’s similar but not as strong from what I’ve been told. Never once met another man with a better colour sense than me.

      • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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        111 month ago

        What do you mean, like the add-ons for technology? Technology, as it turns out, is biased towards trichromacy. When using a device or watching footage, you just get the red/green/yellow/blue experience because that’s all that’s programmed in the pixels. It’s to me what watching a noire movie is to a person who sees the normal range of colors.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 month ago

          It’s to me what watching a noire movie is to a person who sees the normal range of colors.

          This is absolutely insane to me as a trichromatic person. I envy the richness of the world that you see

  • Otherbarry
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    661 month ago

    I have photic sneeze reflex aka sudden exposure to bright light tends to make me sneeze. Usually happens if I’ve been indoors for a while and then walk out into a bright sunny day.

    For a long time never really thought about it, just figured it was a normal thing. Wasn’t until adulthood that I started noticing most people don’t do that and looked it up. If Wikipedia is correct 18% - 35% of the world’s population has that condition.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photic_sneeze_reflex

    • SkaveRat
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      461 month ago

      You can’t just post this and leave out the other name for this:

      Autosomal-dominant Compelling Helio-Ophthalmic Outburst

      Or: ACHOO

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        Everyone realizes this is a joke acronym, right? Or am I dumb for thinking that needs to be pointed out?

        • @[email protected]
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          71 month ago

          In academia finding onomatopeeic acronyms is a type of sport. I don’t know enough about this instance, but an acronym like this can be both a joke and a proper academic designation.

    • @[email protected]
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      I’ve definitely got some variant of the photic sneeze. If I’m in a small sneezing fit, and I want to continue to dislodge the whatever, I look for the brightest area and wait. Takes less than 5 seconds.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 month ago

        If I feel a sneeze lingering all I have to do is look at the sky or a light and I can get it out right away. It’s like a cheat code for getting it over quickly. It can be annoying when driving sometimes when the sun is suddenly in my face and I immediately sneeze.

        • @[email protected]
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          Yup! I do the cheat all the time. But I don’t have the inconvenience of the sun randomly triggering it. It’s like I’m Blade, The Daywalker of Sneezing

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          I do this too. I thought it was a normal thing because it’s something my mum taught me to do to get the sneeze out so I thought it was like a common thing that worked for everyone. Until I told my husband to try it and he said no that stops the sneeze. So I googled it and found out it’s a minority thing! It’s like your eyes quickly adjusting to the bright light somehow makes your nasal passages freak out too.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      I have that too and also thought it normal for the longest time. My wife calls it that I ”get sun in my nose”.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      I’m in the crazy sneezing corner at work.

      • My coworker has allergies, with fits of many sneezes.
      • At the same time every day when the sun comes in, I get hit with three rapid sneezes - loud too. It’s always a surprise so I don’t have time to figure out how to sneeze quietly. You could set a clock by it
  • @[email protected]
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    531 month ago

    I noticed that for some reason, when I pee I feel the tip of my toes getting hotter

    I have no idea what causes it

  • CuteCatBeingEatenByHaitian
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    481 month ago

    When laying in dark, any smallest sound makes a bright flash appear in my eyes, before I realize there was a sound. So I am always surprised when it happens, and fraction of a second later I realize there was a sound. So it’s Synesthesia, but from Wish.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      Ha! This happens to me as well! I do have a funny slight extra detail though. I can’t really visualise images in my minds eye (almost aphantasia), but when I’m closing my eyes to go to sleep, and a sudden noise happens, I see a flash of white like you, but also usually some random af detailed image flash in my minds eye. It’s so weird, always different, always amusing, and the closest I get to visualising. It could be anything, like a old woman in a cowboy hat riding a horse or whatever. Also, I have slight grapheme-colour synesthesia, so it’s interesting that you called it wish synesthesia! I wonder if it plays some role!

  • Majorllama
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    311 month ago

    I can fold my ears in on themselves and they will stay that way until I smile.

    Basically my ears are just super soft because I was always playing with them as a kid so the cartridge never really hardened up like it did for most other people.

    As I have gotten older and played with my ears less they don’t stay folded as long but I can still do it.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 month ago

    I can pop, or reverse pop my ears at will. Where most people talk about chewing gum to pop their ears on a plane I can push out and suck them in to change the pressure at will. It’s useful to help regulate how much noise gets in (in a small way) too.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 month ago

      Same, there is a muscle in there that most people can’t voluntarily control.
      But we can!

      Also, I’ve never heard anyone else mention the part about “reversing” their ears! Seems I’m not the only one!

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      I can pop outwards by closing my mouth and nose and then putting pressure on my mouth walls with the air.
      Reverse, I can manage only down to equal pressure, by simply drinking back my saliva.

    • Owl
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      What do you mean by pop ? Ro you hear a champagne bottlw “pop !” instead of the regular crackling noise ?

  • @[email protected]
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    281 month ago

    Imagine in your head a scene on the ocean near a dock with a sailboat. The wind is light and there are small waves lapping against the shore, rocking the boat.

    Well, I mostly can’t do that. Not much of a minds eye. If I really focus I can do it but there isn’t any detail, and my mind doesn’t fill in background.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        Is this why I can’t stand horror movies, and find them really boring? Very interesting!

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      Lol I skipped past the first paragraph after reading the first few words, as it’s just a bunch of words to me, and then realised reading the next paragraph that exactly that was your point. Yes I definitely relate to you 😂

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      Have the same problem with aphantasia but full on, I can’t imagine feeling, hearing or any of my senses In my head. I know something is hot because I remember it hurt but I can’t seem to like create it in my mind.

      Although tbh it’s kinda fun to interupt someone when they say “ok imagine that…” And I’m like “no”. (Usually in jest with someone I trust)

  • @[email protected]
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    281 month ago

    I can smell moulds that nobody else can smell; at least for several more weeks until the moulds get mouldy enough.

    It’s basically the most pointless superpower. I can smell the cereal in the cupboard and tell my wife that it’s gone bad, but she won’t smell it so she’ll eat it and then nothing bad happens except possibly to her gut microflora

    • SkaveRat
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      91 month ago

      I recently learned about some people being able to smell ants. I wonder if you can smell them as well

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      I have something similar (but days, not weeks) and was always the designated tester in my family but half the time they eat the food anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      My nose is specially sensitive to stuff like deodorants and synthetic perfumes, formaldehyde and other paint smells, the stuff from Odonil™, WD 40 etc. I feel like, if I wanted to train myself to detect non-lethal doses of HCN, I might manage it.

  • @[email protected]
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    251 month ago

    Not myself, but my wife. We live in the country side with two cats, and they have a cat flap, 24/7 access. My wife can smell a dead mouse nearly from the second it’s dead. She complained last week about it smelling like death in our hallway, and we couldn’t find the source. It took two days for me to smell it, and then it was gone a few days later. We think it died in the ceiling, so couldn’t do much about it. But her smell for death is crazy!

  • @[email protected]M
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    251 month ago

    I have weirdly thick skin on and especially under my feet, so I can walk barefoot on ice and snow and not feel cold.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    241 month ago

    If I hold my pee for too long, I struggle to start peeing. It’ll weakly dribble but some will come out, then about 5 minutes later I can piss normally. It’s bullshit.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 month ago

      Guessing you’re a male? Similar issue here too. Gets worse as you get older I’ve found.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        21 month ago

        Came on pretty suddenly when I had my appendix out around 20. They put a catheter in for the surgery and there was a little mishap that required some repair. Everything works fine unless there’s too much backpressure. Hasn’t changed much in the past 18 years.

  • @[email protected]
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    231 month ago

    I have a rare condition called EBS (sometimes called butterfly skin). I am lucky enough to have a non life threatening form so it is usually only a problem when I walk/exercise in above 20°C temperatures. And I usually get benefits (I rarely have to queue for things)

  • Tiefling IRL
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    211 month ago
    • I have a forked tongue
    • I once hammered the back of my sinuses hard enough to draw blood
    • I can make my shoulder blade pop out
    • I can keep my eyes open for 5-10 minutes
        • SkaveRat
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          21 month ago

          I feel like this trick lost its magic ever since covid tests taught everyone that nose holes basically go straight into the face instead of up

          • Tiefling IRL
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            It’s not a magic trick though, it’s a sideshow trick. The difference between the two is that sideshow doesn’t need smoke and mirrors, wysiwyg. It still requires practice and training to reliably execute, not to mention performing is its own skill as well.

            As far as sideshow goes, it’s one of the less risky stunts, so you’re very welcome to jam a chopstick up there if you want to try it :)

    • Cactus_HeadOP
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      31 month ago

      the fourth one, both my sisters can do that? makes me squeamish

    • @[email protected]
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      151 month ago

      This happened to me when I took antidepressants for the first time, as well as being incredibly sensitive to sound, to the point where I could hear electricity.

      Not being hyperbolic at all. To test this my partner and I tested a bunch of devices, she flicked either a dummy-switch, or one powering an appliance, and with my back turned, I could tell her if it was on, off, or she hit a dummy switch.

      Ultimately I couldn’t stand being on antidepressants, I felt like my IQ dropped 10 points.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 month ago

        I always thought hearing electricity is normal, up until I realized most people can’t do that. Never been on antidepressants or anything, that’s my normal state of consciousness.

        Surprise surprise, I’m extremely sensitive to all kinds of noise.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          Every time I’ve gotten a hearing test I get praise from the ear person.

          “Your hearing is exceptional!!”

          I know it is. Do you have any idea how often I change out the charging blocks in my room?

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            Yeah same problem. Worst were CRT monitors or old tube-TVs, they made a constant sound quite like a tinnitus.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 month ago

              And all that, for what? So that we can hear someone from like 1 foot further away? Perhaps in the apocalypse we’ll be like dowsers for electricity?

              Hearing: a little bit of super. No power.

      • @[email protected]
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        Some appliances are louder than others. Curious to hear what appliances you can hear

        I’m able to hear the AC hum from motors and any inductive heating elements.

        When it’s completely silent in the room, I can hear the transformer in my phone charger make a variable squealing sound

        • @[email protected]
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          11 month ago

          I don’t mean the hum of any moving parts, I mean the stand-by electricity flowing through them.

          Phone charger, kettle, laptop, TV, stove, fan (without the fan actually moving).

      • @zipzoopaboop
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        21 month ago

        Being dumb does seem to be the key to happiness