marr-cissist:
“Marr Guitar.
”

ohpsychology:

Déjà Vu - the experience of being certain that you have experienced or seen a new situation previously – you feel as though the event has already happened or is repeating itself. The experience is usually accompanied by a strong sense of familiarity and a sense of eeriness, strangeness, or weirdness. The “previous” experience is usually attributed to a dream, but sometimes there is a firm sense that it has truly occurred in the past.


Déjà Vécu - is what most people are experiencing when they think they are experiencing deja vu. Déjà vu is the sense of having seen something before, whereas déjà vécu is the experience of having seen an event before, but in great detail – such as recognizing smells and sounds. This is also usually accompanied by a very strong feeling of knowing what is going to come next.


Déjà Visité -  a less common experience and it involves an uncanny knowledge of a new place. For example, you may know your way around a a new town or a landscape despite having never been there, and knowing that it is impossible for you to have this knowledge. Déjà visité is about spatial and geographical relationships, while déjà vécu is about temporal occurrences. Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote about an experience of this in his book “Our Old Home” in which he visited a ruined castle and had a full knowledge of its layout. He was later able to trace the experience to a poem he had read many years early by Alexander Pope in which the castle was accurately described.


Déjà Senti - Déjà senti is the phenomenon of having “already felt” something. This is exclusively a mental phenomenon and seldom remains in your memory afterwards. In the words of a person having experienced it: “What is occupying the attention is what has occupied it before, and indeed has been familiar, but has been forgotten for a time, and now is recovered with a slight sense of satisfaction as if it had been sought for. The recollection is always started by another person’s voice, or by my own verbalized thought, or by what I am reading and mentally verbalize; and I think that during the abnormal state I generally verbalize some such phrase of simple recognition as ‘Oh yes—I see’, ‘Of course—I remember’, etc., but a minute or two later I can recollect neither the words nor the verbalized thought which gave rise to the recollection. I only find strongly that they resemble what I have felt before under similar abnormal conditions.”


Jamais Vu - Jamais vu (never seen) describes a familiar situation which is not recognized. It is often considered to be the opposite of déjà vu and it involves a sense of eeriness. The observer does not recognize the situation despite knowing rationally that they have been there before. It is commonly explained as when a person momentarily doesn’t recognize a person, word, or place that they know. Chris Moulin, of Leeds University, asked 92 volunteers to write out “door” 30 times in 60 seconds. He reported that 68 per cent of his guinea pigs showed symptoms of jamais vu, such as beginning to doubt that “door” was a real word. This has lead him to believe that jamais vu may be a symptom of brain fatigue.


Presque Vu - Presque vu is very similar to the “tip of the tongue” sensation – it is the strong feeling that you are about to experience an epiphany – though the epiphany seldom comes. The term “presque vu” means “almost seen”. The sensation of presque vu can be very disorienting and distracting.

Oct 27 22:27 with 39,775 notes

violentwavesofemotion:

when fyodor dostoevsky said “i, over here, keep thinking of all these things, and my heart beats fast”

Oct 27 22:12 with 1,696 notes
The whole horizon is on fire – and mercilessly clear.
I wait in silence – grieving and loving.
Aleksandr Blok, from Selected Poems; I Sense Your Coming. Tr. Jon Stallworthy and Peter France.

Oct 27 22:06 with 188 notes
Voices, rumors, shadows, the songs of the drowned: I don’t know if they’re signs or a kind of torture. Someone in the garden is delaying the passing of time. Autumn creatures abandoned to silence.
― Alejandra Pizarnik, from Extracting the Stone of Madness: Poems 1962-1972; “Endechas”

Oct 27 22:01 with 475 notes
365filmsbyauroranocte:
“ Cry When It Happens (Laida Lertxundi, 2010)
”
It was too late for us to be reunited. We knew it at first glance. There was nothing left to reunite.
Marguerite Duras, from The Lover.

Oct 27 21:53 with 523 notes
[…] how you are both my pulse and my stillness.
― “Fragment VI, Letters”, The Cynical Idealist.

Oct 27 21:52 with 1,178 notes
hanniwill:
“ in the end
”
🖤
A crackling fire, coffee, and good talk.
Sylvia Plath, from a letter to Philip E. McCurdy written c. February 1954

Oct 27 21:20 with 3,150 notes
…and the moon is wilder every minute.
W. B. Yeats, from Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats; “Solomon and the Witch,

Oct 27 21:15 with 3,509 notes
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