speber
CWE Muse / Playing With Angels
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Here's a new development in the hunt for the connection between music and the epileptic brain.
I have claimed to be able to help myself with music.
I have been able to help myself by 'playing' and by 'listening' to certain tracks so far.
The new development is this:
I have had some issues of late and have NOT been able to get the same relief as before using the same techniques. HOWEVER...I have AGAIN begun to see relief by listening to music----just not my 'go-to' tunes! I started listening to new music I've either NEVER heard or music I haven't heard in a long time and found some of them helped my head feel better!
SUMMARY:
I hypothesize that the brain gets 'bored' or 'calloused' in a sense...and no longer responds to the same stimulus after awhile like building up tolerances to AED's!
The change to something new and interesting may spark an 'attention-grabbing' reaction and share of your brain that it wasn't really giving up before and that could be enough to swing a delicate balance into the 'safe zone' for epileptics.
:twocents:
I have claimed to be able to help myself with music.
I have been able to help myself by 'playing' and by 'listening' to certain tracks so far.
The new development is this:
I have had some issues of late and have NOT been able to get the same relief as before using the same techniques. HOWEVER...I have AGAIN begun to see relief by listening to music----just not my 'go-to' tunes! I started listening to new music I've either NEVER heard or music I haven't heard in a long time and found some of them helped my head feel better!
SUMMARY:
I hypothesize that the brain gets 'bored' or 'calloused' in a sense...and no longer responds to the same stimulus after awhile like building up tolerances to AED's!
The change to something new and interesting may spark an 'attention-grabbing' reaction and share of your brain that it wasn't really giving up before and that could be enough to swing a delicate balance into the 'safe zone' for epileptics.
:twocents: