Live longer, avoid routine
March 15th 2007 00:26
The biological way:
Studies on the brain functioning show that when you're faced with situations that you haven't never been through your brain has many more information to deal with, and thus spend a lot more energy trying to get information about things around.
This has a direct influence on how you see the time that passed. When your brain has some hard work to do, it adds way more new memories in your mind. Even if you're used to say that your trips were "too fast", your brain probably have kept a lot of information about the trip, and thus you'll have plenty of memories about it.
These memories are excatly what will define for you what you have lived.
Can you remenber every single time you went from home to work? Can you even remember anything that happened when you went today to work? If everything went as usual, you'll probably have no memories of it. This time didn't pass to your mind, you don't remember a thing of it...
Conclusion, the less routine you have in your life, the more time your brain will have stored inside it, the more you'll think have lived.
The philosophical way:
Everytime you're faced to a new situation, you'll be absorving new information from "real". This information will be projected inside your mind, and thus you'll be able to use it in other ways in the future.
This will also show you that you're getting depper inside "real".
Comparing babies to old people, you can see that the babie's "base" is way smaller than the ones of elderly people. That's normal, the more you live, the more your base will get "depper", the more it will undersand "real".
Conclusion: the ones who live longer are the ones that expand more their bases with the time they have.
So mate, try tomorrow change your way to work. Get to the other side of the street, it's already something...cheers.
Uula
Studies on the brain functioning show that when you're faced with situations that you haven't never been through your brain has many more information to deal with, and thus spend a lot more energy trying to get information about things around.
This has a direct influence on how you see the time that passed. When your brain has some hard work to do, it adds way more new memories in your mind. Even if you're used to say that your trips were "too fast", your brain probably have kept a lot of information about the trip, and thus you'll have plenty of memories about it.
These memories are excatly what will define for you what you have lived.
Can you remenber every single time you went from home to work? Can you even remember anything that happened when you went today to work? If everything went as usual, you'll probably have no memories of it. This time didn't pass to your mind, you don't remember a thing of it...
Conclusion, the less routine you have in your life, the more time your brain will have stored inside it, the more you'll think have lived.
The philosophical way:
Everytime you're faced to a new situation, you'll be absorving new information from "real". This information will be projected inside your mind, and thus you'll be able to use it in other ways in the future.
This will also show you that you're getting depper inside "real".
Comparing babies to old people, you can see that the babie's "base" is way smaller than the ones of elderly people. That's normal, the more you live, the more your base will get "depper", the more it will undersand "real".
Conclusion: the ones who live longer are the ones that expand more their bases with the time they have.
So mate, try tomorrow change your way to work. Get to the other side of the street, it's already something...cheers.
Uula
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