Carbon Copied: Wireless Wavelengths
Posted By gluhring on June 26, 2009
Wireless Wavelengths –
Injecting Synapses
It was at about this time last year, I felt a twinge in the base of my neck, piercing enough to shatter an eyebrow, and concerning enough to leave the imprint of numbness in the back of my skull. Through obvious concern from the lingering effects which lasted several weeks and melted swelling effects from eardrum to eardrum, I visited a medical practitioner. The sage wisdom and dime-store advice the good practitioner provided did nothing to ease the painful swelling – but it did bring new perspective into how delicate my cranial fluid columns were susceptible to disrupting effects – the wavelengths of my brain were ‘out-of-whack’ – so to speak…
As I mentioned, the pain subsided shortly thereafter, and with a scar of a lost patch of hair as a reminder, I could feel the bouncing waves of stress-free matter beaming back and forth within the confines of synaptic caverns, peaking signal after signal in free, unabated form – my headache had gone away. In my retrospected viewpoint, I attributed the signal fade of free formed brainwaves to stress – the concentrated process of focusing one aspect and area of the brain for long durations of time – stress seemed to infiltrate my guards of protection and penetrated my concentration into one singular point of entity – I had been stressed about my job…
If it hadn’t been for a couple month hiatus from employment, a renewed sense of purpose and a better understanding of money making endeavours, I’m sure a relapsing synaptic effect would have sure knocked on my cranial column by now… Anyways, the purpose of the point I plan to propose is one of obviousness – that our brains and minds are a fragile conglomeration of matter, and if ethereal matters such as one’s employment could cause concern for chaotic shutdown, what could real matters such as wireless wavelengths bring to the concentrated pools of spinal fluid traps and triggers of the mind?
MORE – via Carbon Copied: Wireless Wavelengths.
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