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This explains a lot.....
110 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 3 Aug
The results were surprising: when people reported mind blanking, their brains showed hyperconnectivity — a global, synchronized activity pattern similar to that seen in deep sleep. Typically, when we are awake and conscious, our brain regions are connected and communicating but not synchronized, as they appear to be during mind blanks.
"What we think happens in the case of mind blanking is that the brain is pushed a little bit toward the side of synchronization," Andrillon said. "That might be enough to disrupt these sweet spots of consciousness, sending our mind to blank."
This happened to me in a group setting recently. It was kind of disturbing, having not experienced it in a while, but I felt calm despite being embarrassed.
I had been meditating earlier. It felt similar and might’ve been related.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @carter 3 Aug
cool
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