My sister got a Bluetooth headset and it reminded me that i cant use those because my ears heat up in less than 10 seconds after putting them on, in fact as i am typing this my ears are kinda of uncomfortably hot. Dust also cause my ears to heat, it usually the cause but it can also happen randomly as well as when i leave the PC monitor running when i sleep(same room).

there is some other stuff i thought to mention but i think it would be better for a post after discovering your body(e.g my cousin though all ppl can only see through one eye until recently because he himself can only see through one eye and that’s how he found out he has only one functioning eye)

Also feel free to talk about NSFW stuff and is this post hard to read(sentence structure wise)? Cause i never know if ppl have hard time reading my post, and at the moment i find it hard to read myself

  • Chloë (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    I blush extremely easily when I’m aroused or embarrassed . My previous partner used to rely on it to see if her flirting worked and even tried to push it as far as she could to see how red I could get. The answer is very, very red! Even my chest starts blushing at some point! When I have an orgasm I’ll often be blushing all over my body. Apparently it’s normal and I don’t have any health problems…

    Also my sense of smell is insane, and I can touch my nose and my elbow with my tongue.

  • EvilHaitianEatingYourCat@lemmy.world
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    When laying in dark, any smallest sound makes a bright flash appear in my eyes, before I realize there was a sound. So I am always surprised when it happens, and fraction of a second later I realize there was a sound. So it’s Synesthesia, but from Wish.

    • Tina@lemmy.world
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      Ha! This happens to me as well! I do have a funny slight extra detail though. I can’t really visualise images in my minds eye (almost aphantasia), but when I’m closing my eyes to go to sleep, and a sudden noise happens, I see a flash of white like you, but also usually some random af detailed image flash in my minds eye. It’s so weird, always different, always amusing, and the closest I get to visualising. It could be anything, like a old woman in a cowboy hat riding a horse or whatever. Also, I have slight grapheme-colour synesthesia, so it’s interesting that you called it wish synesthesia! I wonder if it plays some role!

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    Synesthesia. I can see sound. Really neat, actually.

    Not so neat is my aparent genetic resistance to pain meds and anesthetics. Caused some “fun” in a hospital stay

    • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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      (Irish ancestry here: Letting them know that you’ve got redheaded relatives is the secret cheatcode to let you stay unconscious during surgery. There’s a whole protocol about it.)

      • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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        yup. My dad is irish. And although I’m not a redhead, I later learned that I have the gene and it’s one of the factors in this problem.

        Too bad I only learned about this fact after I woke up a couple times during surgery and later when they put me into an induced coma and I pulled out my tubes.

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            I also have a super high alcohol tolerance (and I rarely drink), which I think is also an effect of it.

            Weed only has an effect for me if I use a lot of it

    • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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      Does red hair run in your family by any chance? People with red hair in their family (myself included, I have auburn-ish hair) need 20% more anesthetics.

    • frozenpopsicle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Same. I inform doctors that I am resistant to sedation. They nod, not believing me. I go under. I wake up 4 hours early, everyone goes insane. One time they failed to put me out right away. Fortunately they managed to put me out before they cut into me. My last memories before waking are hearing “oh shit, he’s awake”. Another time they used “an adult dose and a child dose” which… doesn’t sound right. But I remember waking with a half dozen people trying to rouse me.

    • Glasgow@lemmy.ml
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      Aphantasia here. Can’t see or remember shit. It sucks.

      Only benefits are speed reading and a boost to abstract/scientific thinking. But episodic memories and visualisation sound more fun.

      Also resistant to everything. Connective tissue disorder? (EDS)?

      • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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        Aphantasia here too, do you have an inner monologue? I don’t, to the dismay of every therapist and partner I’ve ever had.

        “What are you thinking?”

        “There are not words for this.”

        • Glasgow@lemmy.ml
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          Nope just multiple streams of unsymbolic thinking usually. When thinking of something specific or planning how to say something I’ll consciously subvocalise, but there’s no volume/pitch/tone. Having your subconscious talk to you all day sounds exhausting.

    • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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      Not so neat is my aparent genetic resistance to pain meds and anesthetics. Caused some “fun” in a hospital stay

      Are you a redhead? Apparently that’s a fairly common trait for them

    • kiwifoxtrot@lemmy.world
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      Same here on the resistance to pain meds. I had a such a terrible experience with surgery. Once I woke up I was in such agony but I was also tripping hard from the dilaudid and left over anesthesia that I was unable to communicate effectively. Once a doctor finally listened to me many hours later, they gave me a cocktail of other stuff that finally eased the pain. I also really struggle with dental work.

  • Apeman42@lemmy.world
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    Sometimes if I take too big a gulp of water at once, the little bone near my adam’s apple clicks out of place and I have to manually reset it.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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    I’m a tetrachromat if that counts. That means instead of seeing just the regular six color groups most people see, I can see 25% more colors on top of that.

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        Honestly, practically-speaking, you aren’t missing out on too much. Color isn’t as crucial a detail outside of aesthetics. Plus I imagine you have the perfect excuse for running a red light and committing fashion crimes.

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          Haha unfortunately on the red front I can see red, but I miss many of the shades. It’s not so much can’t see red but all reds look the same, reddy browns just look brown, pinky reds just look pink, purples are harder to distinguish from blue.

          No getting out of red lights, unfortunately

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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        This is correct. In fact, the same gene manifests differently in men even if they had it. In men, if anything, it hinders color. Or so that’s what my doctor told me.

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          How did you and your doctor confirm you are tetrachromatic? I find all your replies here fascinating, I hope you don’t mind another question!

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            It wasn’t my doctor that first found out, it was my school. Just as there are ways people can realize someone is colorblind, there are ways people might realize that someone is a tetrachromat. I remember often feeling something was off when we were describing colors in school and little me was like “wait a minute, why does this feel incomplete?”

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      I’m apparently one of the only men in the world who have something akin to that, it’s similar but not as strong from what I’ve been told. Never once met another man with a better colour sense than me.

    • shneancy@lemmy.world
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      could you elaborate on what you mean by “more colours”? like infra red or ultraviolet? or do you mean your eyes have an extra colour cone that gives you more precise information about colours so that it’s easier for you to tell them apart?

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        A human’s eyes see color because of cones in the eyes. Each one corresponds to a different range of wavelengths; one cone corresponds to red, one to yellow or green, and one to blue. Tetrachromats have four cones.

        Look outside at the nearest flower. To you, it could be just yellow, but we might see some cyan or teal that other people don’t. This is how crows, which we typically assume are all identically black, often recognize each other so well; they have five or six color cones I think, and amongst themselves, they look like they have the colors of a parakeet.

        We can see new colors too. They are difficult to describe, though the best way to describe them is to ask you to think of the most neon-esque colors you can think of and think of all the dimensions and hues you might have never seen and which take on a life of their own. These new colors stretch beyond the ordinary boundaries of the rainbow but loop around in the same way.

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          fascinating!

          no need to answer if you don’t want to, i don’t want to make you feel like it’s an interview or anything but i do wonder -

          how does art look to you? do you sometimes see colours that are wrong that someone has used without knowing they’re there? do digital things look inherently less colourful since they only emit the light that 3 colour coned people can perceive?

          • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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            Yes, I do occasionally see colors in art that aren’t there. Not to scare people, but in traditional art, it almost seems like smudges, and I can actually attest even some very classic works of art have some peculiar color arrangements when you see them in person. In digital art, you would be right; it’s like a regular person watching one of those lowkey noire movies or sports movies that voluntarily reduce the color output.

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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        What do you mean, like the add-ons for technology? Technology, as it turns out, is biased towards trichromacy. When using a device or watching footage, you just get the red/green/yellow/blue experience because that’s all that’s programmed in the pixels. It’s to me what watching a noire movie is to a person who sees the normal range of colors.

        • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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          It’s to me what watching a noire movie is to a person who sees the normal range of colors.

          This is absolutely insane to me as a trichromatic person. I envy the richness of the world that you see

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    When I’m in a hypnagogic state (between awake and sleeping) I can look through my eyelids.
    They’re still closed, but I can see the room through them.
    I know it’s not real, and if something were to quietly change in the room, I wouldn’t be able to see it, but it still feels weird.
    I can also pinpoint the moment when I’ll fall asleep, and sometimes go directly from being awake to dreaming.
    Which has the nice side effect that I’m aware I’m dreaming, and the dream world feels just as realistic as if I was awake, except I can control everything in it.

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    I have photic sneeze reflex aka sudden exposure to bright light tends to make me sneeze. Usually happens if I’ve been indoors for a while and then walk out into a bright sunny day.

    For a long time never really thought about it, just figured it was a normal thing. Wasn’t until adulthood that I started noticing most people don’t do that and looked it up. If Wikipedia is correct 18% - 35% of the world’s population has that condition.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photic_sneeze_reflex

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      You can’t just post this and leave out the other name for this:

      Autosomal-dominant Compelling Helio-Ophthalmic Outburst

      Or: ACHOO

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          In academia finding onomatopeeic acronyms is a type of sport. I don’t know enough about this instance, but an acronym like this can be both a joke and a proper academic designation.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      I’m in the crazy sneezing corner at work.

      • My coworker has allergies, with fits of many sneezes.
      • At the same time every day when the sun comes in, I get hit with three rapid sneezes - loud too. It’s always a surprise so I don’t have time to figure out how to sneeze quietly. You could set a clock by it
    • thomasloven@lemmy.world
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      I have that too and also thought it normal for the longest time. My wife calls it that I ”get sun in my nose”.

    • PunnyName@lemmy.world
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      I’ve definitely got some variant of the photic sneeze. If I’m in a small sneezing fit, and I want to continue to dislodge the whatever, I look for the brightest area and wait. Takes less than 5 seconds.

      • burrito@sh.itjust.works
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        If I feel a sneeze lingering all I have to do is look at the sky or a light and I can get it out right away. It’s like a cheat code for getting it over quickly. It can be annoying when driving sometimes when the sun is suddenly in my face and I immediately sneeze.

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          I do this too. I thought it was a normal thing because it’s something my mum taught me to do to get the sneeze out so I thought it was like a common thing that worked for everyone. Until I told my husband to try it and he said no that stops the sneeze. So I googled it and found out it’s a minority thing! It’s like your eyes quickly adjusting to the bright light somehow makes your nasal passages freak out too.

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          Yup! I do the cheat all the time. But I don’t have the inconvenience of the sun randomly triggering it. It’s like I’m Blade, The Daywalker of Sneezing

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    If I hold my pee for too long, I struggle to start peeing. It’ll weakly dribble but some will come out, then about 5 minutes later I can piss normally. It’s bullshit.

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      Guessing you’re a male? Similar issue here too. Gets worse as you get older I’ve found.

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        Came on pretty suddenly when I had my appendix out around 20. They put a catheter in for the surgery and there was a little mishap that required some repair. Everything works fine unless there’s too much backpressure. Hasn’t changed much in the past 18 years.

  • elidoz@lemmy.ml
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    I noticed that for some reason, when I pee I feel the tip of my toes getting hotter

    I have no idea what causes it

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    I can scoop a spit bubble up off the bottom of my mouth with my tongue, fold my tongue around it, and blow the bubble out of my mouth, and it floats to the ground.

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    When I have to shit really bad I can feel a pain in my forearm. Not like a painful pain but more like a tingling sensation in only my left forearm.

    • Tina@lemmy.world
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      How strange! When I have to pee really badly, I feel it in my teeth. Is that weird or normal?! My past partners have never had this uncomfortable tingling sensation from it. I always clench my jaw and wiggle to try and ease the feeling. Obviously also go pee.

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    I can fold my ears in on themselves and they will stay that way until I smile.

    Basically my ears are just super soft because I was always playing with them as a kid so the cartridge never really hardened up like it did for most other people.

    As I have gotten older and played with my ears less they don’t stay folded as long but I can still do it.

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    I sometimes feel the same thing at different spots of my body.

    Like if someone pinches the skin on my back I could feel the pain of the pinch on my shoulder as well.

    • Tina@lemmy.world
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      Me too! If I’m scratching or picking at my skin, sometimes I feel it somewhere else, so I figured it’s normal and just nerve signals being connected somehow, but never spoken about it.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    I can pop my clavical by pushing my shoulder toward my back with my opposite hand.

    I can inhale through my ass to fart on command.

    My thumbs can bend backwards without assistance from the other hand.

    I can inhale smoke from a cigarette or pipe or something, and blow it out of my ears (it hurts though; I don’t like doing it).

    I can kinda wiggle my ears.

    I can put my own dick in my own butt, but just the tip.

    I can tell when there are electronics turned on around me even if they aren’t intended to make noise, because they all seem to give off this kind of almost imperceptible high pitch whine. Not enough to be bothersome, but just enough to know something probably has current running through it.

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      I can tell when there are electronics turned on around me even if they aren’t intended to make noise, because they all seem to give off this kind of almost imperceptible high pitch whine. Not enough to be bothersome, but just enough to know something probably has current running through it.

      Same here. But that’s basically just good hearing.

      • Mayor Poopington@lemmy.world
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        I could do that with CRT TVs. Back when we had one, I could always tell when someone was watching TV. No matter where I was in the house.

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          It’s quite normal for kids and teenagers.

          Starting in the 20s, your hearing of higher frequencies will degrade and you won’t be able to hear CRTs anymore.

          When I was 30 I visited someone who had a CRT for gaming, and a 19 year old friend complained about the pitch I couldn’t hear. That was the moment I felt old for the first time

          • f4f4f4f4f4f4f4f4@sopuli.xyz
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            I’m over 40 and can still hear CRTs.

            Seasonic PC power supplies are good quality, but man, they have some serious coil whine.

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            As a child I was told by my parents that using headphones (circum aural) would destroy my hearing. They preferred me using earphones (in ear) instead.
            I kept using headphones.

            I’m way past the teens and can still hear the tubelights (the new ones, only from very close, when other things are silent) and the old flat screen CRT. Also, the whine from the UPS at the previous workplace, which most other couldn’t hear, but for me, was pretty loud.

            The difference was that my headphone volume tended to be at 10 - 20% while other people went out to dance parties with continuous loud music (I didn’t).

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                By UPS at work, I meant one that takes up half a server room filled with transformer and battery units. The fans are not loud enough to be heard outside the room. But the high pitched sound (possibly coil whine) could be heard 2 rooms over.

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                  Ah, sorry, I read that to mean that you’ve never had a CRT TV so it didn’t make sense to me. But now re-reading that I have absolutely no idea how I understood what I understood, that’s what happens when you ask stuff online before coffee I guess.

    • Tarquinn2049@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, the electronic device sound is coil whine, mostly produced by power transformers, but a few other things too. Some do it loudly enough or low pitch enough for everyone to hear, others are quiet enough or high pitch enough that only people like us can hear them.

    • randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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      I can tell when there are electronics turned on around me even if they aren’t intended to make noise, because they all seem to give off this kind of almost imperceptible high pitch whine.

      I can also hear the noise that some batteries make when they get charged.

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    I have hypermobility, but a mild form that just lets me bend my fingers back without any of the major problems associated with it.

    My hands and feet are slightly adhesive when they’re any wetter than bone dry, so you can hear a faint peeling sound when I walk barefoot in the house, even a little bit on short carpet. Think peeling scotch tape and reduce it by 50%.

    I can also control the muscles responsible for equalizing the pressure in my ears, and that allows me to put them under a slight vacuum to slightly dampen loud noises.

    I also have long toes. Not to the extent of a chimp, but I have successfully signed my name with them before (though even lower quality than signing with my left hand).

    I also cannot cry from cutting onions. This sounds awesome until you’re cutting 3 bags of onions in one go and you learn that the tears dilute the sulfuric acid that forms. That was a painful evening.