Photo courtesy of Microsoft |
Have
you ever seen something so often that it fades into the landscape—until you
notice it again? That just happened to me. I must admit this experience took me
by surprise, even though the mechanism behind it completely made sense.
When
I was returning home from an errand this morning, I saw several large trucks
around the neighborhood testing fire hydrants. Since Southern California is in
the midst of a serious drought, it made sense that the city would want to
ensure that water was available to fight fires and test the equipment that
would do this. What surprised me was how many fire hydrants there were, and
where they were. I have driven down these streets for twenty years and I can’t
remember ever noticing, let alone seeing,
one of them!
Of
course, this phenomenon makes perfect sense. Actively noticing and responding
to everything we perceive in our environment would completely overwhelm us; we
would all be in a state of hypnosis every waking moment. Instead, once we
determine that these objects or sensations are not jeopardizing our well-being
or survival, our bodies tune out those stimuli so we can be more alert to new threats.
Furthermore, unless something about the object suddenly changes—such as its
color, smell or behavior—our conscious mind barely registers that the thing
exists. After repeated exposure to that stimulus, it becomes a known in the subconscious mind: comfortable and even “safe”
in its familiarity. There is no reason for the critical awareness part of our
mind to reject this information and raise a metaphoric red flag that something
new and unknown is nearby.
However, the
presence of groups of people huddled around several fire hydrants in the
neighborhood, testing that the devices had and were capable of providing water
to fire hoses, was definitely unfamiliar (unknown) and deserved my notice. And,
yes: I was curious about, if not (yet) alarmed by, what I saw. Within a few
seconds, my conscious mind identified who these people probably were by their uniforms
and the presence of utility trucks bearing a city label. (The presence of city
workers checking over the neighborhood is also familiar, a known, in my mind.) I
was able to quickly figure out what they were doing. The critical area of my
mind accepted this information and sent it directly to my SCM so I
could go about my day. Once again, an otherwise mundane-turned-unusual
experience perfectly illustrated the daily relevance of John Kappas, Ph.D.’s Theory
of Mind.
But
where did all of those fire hydrants
come from when I wasn’t paying attention to them? And when did they show up,
anyway?
Sara R. Fogan, C.Ht. is a
certified hypnotherapist based in Southern California. She graduated with
honors from the Hypnosis Motivation Institute in 2005. For more
information about Calminsense Hypnotherapy®, please visit http://www.calminsensehypnotherapy.com/.
No comments:
Post a Comment