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Poster Handle Chromatophore
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Man made technology can only go so far off world as far as man takes it. What is not man made has no boundary meaning it is inside and outside our solar system as well as time.
 Quoting: Chromatophore


They had a difficult time finding those healers or said witches because it always seemed like those around them did the miracles. Humility arose.

There is two baselines within time. Those that look outside of their time or those that could fit within any time.
 Quoting: Chromatophore


Feedback lol

[link to www.livescience.com (secure)]




Though not indexed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), Paris syndrome is recognized by many experts as a real, though rare, phenomenon. According to Mathieu Deflem, a professor of sociology at the University of South Carolina, Paris syndrome is "most common among Japanese" tourists. Why, then, are Japanese people so susceptible?


"We are talking about a culture that, historically, had a completely different belief system and development trajectory from places in Europe," Rodanthi Tzanelli, a professor of cultural sociology at the University of Leeds in the U.K., told Live Science. These cultural differences, as well as likely unmet romantic expectations, may explain why Japanese visitors are at an elevated risk for Paris syndrome.

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"Culture shock is an illness resulting from the loss of meaning brought about when people from one symbolic reality find themselves immersed in another," Rachel Irwin, now a cultural sciences researcher at Lund University in Sweden, wrote in a 2007 article (opens in new tab). In other words, people can become bewildered — sometimes to a significant degree — when surrounded by symbols (logos, names, signs, brands) that are different from those they would usually encounter.

The symptoms associated with culture shock are similar to those experienced by someone who is feeling anxious. According to Calm Clinic (opens in new tab), a mental health resource website, when someone is experiencing anxiety, signals will be sent to the stomach that are "related to the fight or flight response." As a result, the "signals alter the way that the stomach and gut process and digest food, causing nausea." In particularly extreme cases of anxiety — as with culture shock — this nausea can lead to vomiting, disorientation and a host of other physical reactions.

While everybody experiences culture shock "in one form or another when visiting somewhere new," some people feel it in more pronounced and visceral ways when presented with a culture that is "unexpected or nuanced," according to Deflem.

 Quoting: Chromatophore


Recalls years ago where I was brought into a dimension that is another reality that is more vivid than others that couldn’t stand being within it for only few minutes.

The new world and old world continents is apt for later domains
 
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