I”ve posted this in another sub too but thought maybe I get a more detailed info about our brain here.
Basically I read on the good old internet that if you stare for a period of time into the mirror that your brain will start playing tricks on you and scare you. Well I wanted to see for myself, indeed it did happen. A few times I thought I’ve seen someone behind me for a split second, or that my face moves even tho I didn’t move a muscle etc. Why would our brain do that to ourselves since it could harm us by making us panic therefore it being bad for our brain? Is there any reason that our brain does that? I’m quiet certain it’s not to protect us is it?
Additionally does this maybe explain why people say they seen bloody marry or other ghost storys connected to mirrors? That our brain for some reason plays tricks on us? Since if we go into the bathroom and we expect to see bloody marry by doing that ritual that our brain tricks us and makes us see it just cause we expected it to be there?
Maybe Im thinking too far
Why does our brain do this? Shouldn’t it do the opposite and protect us from it?
In: Biology
Which is more protective, getting scared by something that turned out not to be there, or not getting alerted when something was there?
The first situation is a slight spook, the second is death-by-tiger. We evolved to err on the side of getting spooked, so no, the brain shouldn’t “protect us” by not alerting us at the slightest hint of a threat.
Latest Answers