Mark:
I also have an additional sense to give you. I call it "proprioception". It is much more than that which dancers expound on. What I am referring to is that sense we all have not only in terms of our bodies, but in placing ourselves in the immediate environment and in this existence as a whole. It turns out that people who lose this sense through accident or disease do not survive for long. Extreme mindfulness gives one an idea of such loss. While it can be liberating, it is deadly in terms of survival.

I can present some physical terms in how this sense works, but a simple introduction on our sensing of electromagnetic forces would suffice. A great uncle of mine researched this in the early 1900s, but modern day research is limited these days, and some is in the area of the paranormal, which is unfortunate. The principles of this sensing are somewhat included in Tesla's theories. A fascinating man who is still ahead of our times.

Carl:
I think I know what you're talking about. That extra sense you're talking about is why Native Americans didn't cut their hair. With it, they could 'sense' the world around them better than without. Subtle currents? Air movement? Who knows. The other part was being IN nature, all the time. There's a tribe in the Amazon that can tell where an animal urinated from 40 yards, tell you what kind of animal it was, and how long ago it had been there. Makes you wonder what it would be like to have senses like that, doesn't it? I wonder if we could handle it. I think a lot of the problems we have in our society is from sensory overload. It's been proven that when a computer gets too much information too fast, it slows down. The human brain doesn't. When it gets too much information too fast, it stops. It reminds me of a couple that I met while in San Antonio. They lived 200 yards south of the treeline in Alaska. They got their mail through Bettlesfield, AK if you want to look it up, but they said it was a day trip to get there. Anyway, when they came back to the continental U.S. after being up there for several years, they became physically ill after ariving in Los Angeles. They ended up in an emergency room, barfing and feeling like warmed-over dog feces, (his words). The doctor finally figured out that they were being overloaded. They just weren't used to the lights and noise. Interesting stuff.

Carl
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