![]() The top 4 are: atmosphere, aura, mood and energy. Hardly anyone actually has it, it’s like OCD where people just like to say they have it for attention when in regality they just like stuff neat.Below is a massive list of vibe words - that is, words related to vibe. It can of course be to a much lesser degree than Hendricks, but still just being able to see colored text in your head means you have a normal functioning, good imagination and that’s basically it. True synesthesia is like Jimmy Hendricks where you can like literally see rainbow colors and patterned coming off of Musial instruments, or you can like vividly taste colors and shit. In reality they’re just describing their imagination, what anyone can visualize on their head. Everyone wants to feel different/special so a lot of time it’s really stretched to say that have the condition. Like if I’m gonna picture a word in big block text, they have to be SOME color, right? So I don’t really think there’s much significance, you’ve just thought about random words and remembered the first color that came to your head. How do you differentiate "Lori" from "lorry" by the way? L names are yellow for me too! Larry is mixed with black though for me, because "r" is black and a double "r" carries quite a lot of weight in the word. Re: the thing about the differing colours for people's names, I wonder if what is happening is perhaps that the colour impression the person gives you is perhaps influencing and mixing with the colour impression the word itself gives you? So perhaps if the actual word Bart or Bartholomew would be one particular colour if it was just a word and not someone's name, it is now a mix of that colour and the colours you associate with Bart himself? What would be the case of the name of someone you know which also has a meaning of a word? So for example if you had a friend whose name was Rob, Faith, Summer or something like that? If you have more colour sensation for longer words than shorter ones, then you're like me! For me, practically the longer a word is (and especially if a certain letter repeats within it) the more colour it has. Some words seem more muddied to me, words like "the" "of" "a" "is". Yes, definitely! Perhaps as you focus it a lot will become clearer over time (that certainly happened to me), but some will probably stay murky or colourless. Is it also normal that some words have a very strong clear color, and other words may not? One common thing I've noticed is L names so far are all yellow. (variations on Alex are still dark, Alexandria is a black purple, Alexander is a red black) A name like Emily is pink. I also tested this by thinking of very common names, like the name Alex is black across the board. His full name of Bartholomew is still orange but with a yellow tone. When I think of him specifically I think of those colors, but just his name alone is like a burnt orange. Is it also normal that some words have a very strong clear color, and other words may not? Some words seem more muddied to me, words like "the" "of" "a" "is".Īlso as far as names go, I've been trying to distinguish whether it's an emotional/personality association to people, but I think I've figured out that it's not.įor example my friend and roommate Bart, his favorite colors are Red and Yellow, he wears those colors all the time, his art is heavy on those colors, his room decorations are those colors. I've started making a list of words and their colors to try and find commonalities! So far the oddest one for me is that the word Grape is silver. I have Synesthesia: I'm not a freak, I'm a Synesthete ![]() ISCA International Synesthesia Connections r/ConceptSynesthesia Sharing experiences with thought processes->shape/colour Pat Duffy’s Blue Cats and Chartreuse Kittens Resource Site PDF Drive: books about Synesthesia (free downloads available) Sean Day's Synesthesia Bibliography (scientific studies and reliable articles, recent and historic) The Synesthesia List (receive the synesthesia community emails) University of Sussex Synaesthesia Research If you disagree with someone, no problem, but please be tactful and respectful! Please follow Reddit rules and Rediquette No offensive language, trolling, insults or provocation.Īny NSFW posts (or comments) must be synesthesia-related and tagged NSFW. “Is This Synesthesia” posts are welcome! No obligation, but before posting you might like to try out the Synesthesia Finder or look at this alphabetical list of types of synesthesia and other related phenomena: you might be surprised to find exactly what you experience. There are many different types of synesthesia and we discuss all of them on this sub. Probably around 4% of the world’s population are synesthetes: people with a neurological trait that enables them to enjoy additional perceptions in response to certain sensory or conceptual stimuli such as hearing sounds or music, tasting food or thinking of numbers or letters.
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