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[personal profile] conuly
On "Alice in Wonderland Syndrome" - not sure if that's the real name or not.

It reminded me of something I go through sometimes, that I think started round about in high school. I posted about it a few years ago, and got some concerned responses, but I really couldn't *do anything* about it at the time so I worked *really hard* to forget all about it, and eventually the problem went away.

Well, it came back a few months ago, and was really freaking me out, and it seems to have stopped for right now, but let me describe it.

Sometimes, I stop... I stop registering part of my body as mine. I mean, I know it's mine, and I can still use it, and I feel things... but it doesn't seem like mine to me.

So I'll be sitting and it will seem like all my vision is coming out of my left eye (it's usually the right side of my body that's affected). If I close my left eye, my right eye still seems fine, and, indeed, with both eyes open I have full 3-d vision, so it's not a physical thing - but I perceive it all as being from my left eye only, not both eyes.

Or I'll stop thinking of my right hand as mine, like it's disattached from my body. I know it's mine, I know it's there, and I can hold things with it, but I can't stop the creepy feeling that it's not actually mine, that it's gone or that it's a fake hand or something.

And then, on top of all this, I start thinking that because of that I'll have trouble *using* the affected body parts.

All I can find with the amazing internets is that sometimes this is related to DID. But... I don't think that applies. It's not stopping me from living my life, anyway, it's just very... creepy.

Date: 2008-06-29 08:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wodhaund.livejournal.com
Those are all things I've experienced before with some regularity (though not, fortunately, any significant frequency). I seem to experience it most strongly when overtired, though it will still sometimes happen when I'm perfectly awake and well-rested.

But it's strange, all the same.

Though, mm, part of me wonders if it's somehow related to the way the brain processes information. You know, when you're wearing socks, you're not consciously aware of the feel of the socks all the time (well, most people aren't, anyway--let's assume for example's sake). You'd go mad if you were fully aware of every little sensation all the time, so the brain blocks out anything unnecessary. I wonder if sometimes, when I'm not using parts as much, my brain decides it doesn't need to acknowledge the pieces not in use, thus resulting in experiences like the ones you mention.

Curiouser and curiouser.

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