Posted: 20 Aug 2007, 20:58
Me neither ...SINsister wrote:I don't need to be pished to enjoy that sort of thing, dear Jam~es...
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Me neither ...SINsister wrote:I don't need to be pished to enjoy that sort of thing, dear Jam~es...
I saw a good TV programme on synaesthesia - BBC Horizon, with Dr Jamie Ward narrating parts (Jamie's one of our authors, and he's publishing a book with us on synaesthesia next year).reactiv8 wrote:Synesthesia?!? ... Shall we change your name?!?SINsister wrote:Or both - even at the same time, n'est-ce pas?
I'm glad other people evidently feel like this! - I was getting worried for a moment that the visual opium (TV) had at last taken over! Keep that old grey matter churning folks! - We don't all want a 'safe' Job/Life that the media & the government tries to sell us!boudicca wrote:I sure as hell would rather read a seed catalogue than the Telegraph!
Looked up the article... there's not really much you can say against it, television is pretty much wall to wall s**t. I am sitting now with the usual mid-morning succession of programmes about people buying houses on, that sort of thing really f**king drives me mad. So much of the television schedule seems to consist of people doing the most mundane things... if you want to watch people argue, scratch their arses and talk about having bought their new house, just sit on a park bench for a while and you'll get it for free.
I have a mild form of synaesthesia... as do a lot of others I believe. In its more extreme forms it sounds pretty wacky though. I heard of someone who, in his childhood, when his parents took him to classical concerts, thought they put the lights down "so you could see the colours".lazarus corporation wrote:I saw a good TV programme on synaesthesia - BBC Horizon, with Dr Jamie Ward narrating parts (Jamie's one of our authors, and he's publishing a book with us on synaesthesia next year).reactiv8 wrote:Synesthesia?!? ... Shall we change your name?!?SINsister wrote:Or both - even at the same time, n'est-ce pas?
I'm now gutted to know that everything I learnt about synaesthesia on that TV programme is propaganda, purely because it was on TV. *sigh*
Mild forms are very common. From the blurb for the book "Everyone will be closely acquainted with at least 6 or 7 people who have synaesthesia but you may not yet know who they are because, until very recently, it was largely hidden and unknown."boudicca wrote:I have a mild form of synaesthesia... as do a lot of others I believe. In its more extreme forms it sounds pretty wacky though. I heard of someone who, in his childhood, when his parents took him to classical concerts, thought they put the lights down "so you could see the colours".lazarus corporation wrote:I saw a good TV programme on synaesthesia - BBC Horizon, with Dr Jamie Ward narrating parts (Jamie's one of our authors, and he's publishing a book with us on synaesthesia next year).reactiv8 wrote: Synesthesia?!? ... Shall we change your name?!?
I'm now gutted to know that everything I learnt about synaesthesia on that TV programme is propaganda, purely because it was on TV. *sigh*
It probably looks, tastes and smells very good too.lazarus corporation wrote:It's a really interesting disorder. Jamie Ward's one of the world's leading experts on synaesthesia and his forthcoming book "The Frog Who Croaked Blue" (out May/June 2008 and available at all good bookshops!) sounds really good.
It tastes red and smells of A minor. That's a good combination.Dark wrote:It probably looks, tastes and smells very good too.lazarus corporation wrote:It's a really interesting disorder. Jamie Ward's one of the world's leading experts on synaesthesia and his forthcoming book "The Frog Who Croaked Blue" (out May/June 2008 and available at all good bookshops!) sounds really good.
OI!lazarus corporation wrote:disorder
How about "neurological phenomenon" then?boudicca wrote:OI!lazarus corporation wrote:disorder
Disorder? - I always thought it meant they were good 'shrooms! (or 'cid)lazarus corporation wrote:Mild forms are very common. From the blurb for the book "Everyone will be closely acquainted with at least 6 or 7 people who have synaesthesia but you may not yet know who they are because, until very recently, it was largely hidden and unknown."boudicca wrote:I have a mild form of synaesthesia... as do a lot of others I believe. In its more extreme forms it sounds pretty wacky though. I heard of someone who, in his childhood, when his parents took him to classical concerts, thought they put the lights down "so you could see the colours".lazarus corporation wrote: I saw a good TV programme on synaesthesia - BBC Horizon, with Dr Jamie Ward narrating parts (Jamie's one of our authors, and he's publishing a book with us on synaesthesia next year).
I'm now gutted to know that everything I learnt about synaesthesia on that TV programme is propaganda, purely because it was on TV. *sigh*
It's a really interesting disorder. Jamie Ward's one of the world's leading experts on synaesthesia and his forthcoming book "The Frog Who Croaked Blue" (out May/June 2008 and available at all good bookshops!) sounds really good.
Revr'ndweebleswobble wrote:I love my TV-switch off and stare at forests or bull frogs etc - that be your choice
I wish, man - that'd be friggin' cool!reactiv8 wrote:Synesthesia?!? ... Shall we change your name?!?SINsister wrote:Or both - even at the same time, n'est-ce pas?
boudicca wrote:I just understand why Monday is blue
I'm not sure I'd called Disorder "Oi!", but they were pretty good hardcore punk.boudicca wrote:OI!lazarus corporation wrote:disorder
OK, I sometimes 'glance' at TV too, but I tend to switch it and the SKY+ box on first! ... wouldn't go as far as to say I love it though! ...weebleswobble wrote:I love my TV-switch off and stare at forests or bull frogs etc - that be your choice
Hmm yeah, I try to read as many papers as possible to get some sort of balanced view ... This article caught my eye because I like Tom Hodgkinson & I thought it would be of interest ...boudicca wrote:I sure as hell would rather read a seed catalogue than the Telegraph!
Looked up the article... there's not really much you can say against it, television is pretty much wall to wall s**t. I am sitting now with the usual mid-morning succession of programmes about people buying houses on, that sort of thing really f**king drives me mad. So much of the television schedule seems to consist of people doing the most mundane things... if you want to watch people argue, scratch their arses and talk about having bought their new house, just sit on a park bench for a while and you'll get it for free.
For someone who has learnt how to fly gliders, that's a demanding and thrilling pursuit.SINsister wrote:That sounds incredibly lovely, actually...itnAklipse wrote:And i can't tell you the number of hours i've spent this summer lying down on my back in the forest staring at the clouds.
...and, I just realized, reminds me of a VNV lyric...SINsister wrote:That sounds incredibly lovely, actually...itnAklipse wrote:And i can't tell you the number of hours i've spent this summer lying down on my back in the forest staring at the clouds.