When humans are placed in complete sensory deprivation (silence and darkness), their brains generate hallucinations because the brain cannot tolerate true silence and will create false reality rather than experience nothingness; this phenomenon was documented in 1950s McGill University experiments where students hallucinated within hours, and was also practiced by ancient civilizations like Egyptian priests and Buddhist monks who used darkness to confront their own minds rather than create fear.
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Your brain would rather hallucinate than face true silence. 👁️ Subscribe to Cogniveil.Añadido:
There is something that happens when the lights go off and the noise disappears.
In the 1950s, scientists paid students to do absolutely nothing. No talking, no reading, no stimulation of any kind.
[music] Just silence and darkness. Within hours, they began to hallucinate. They heard voices, saw things that weren't there.
Some begged to leave after just one day.
Here is what they discovered. Your brain would rather create a false reality than experience true silence. But ancient civilizations knew this already.
Egyptian priests sat alone in underground chambers for days. Buddhist monks retreated into complete darkness for weeks. They weren't suffering. They were forcing their minds to confront themselves. Because here is the truth.
The darkness doesn't create the fear.
It simply removes everything that was hiding it.
Every distraction, every notification, >> [music] >> every noise. All of it hiding something you haven't faced yet.
What have you been using the light to avoid?
Follow CogniVale. Your mind is deeper than you think.
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