24 PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTS YOU MAY NOT KNOW OF
- It is possible to die from a broken heart. It's called stress cardiomyopathy.
- People fascinated by serial killers are better conversationalists.
- If you tear paper off your drink bottles - you're sexually frustrated.
- 70% of your dreams contain secret messages. They carry more weight and meaning than our conscious thoughts.
- Your favourite song is your favorite because you associate an emotional event with it.
- Feeling ignored causes the same chemical effect as that of an injury.
- If you have a crush on someone, your brain will find it impossible to lie to that person.
- Being sad makes people less gullible, improves their ability to judge others, and also boosts memory.
- 98% of the time when someone says they've to ask you a question, you recall all the bad things you've done recently.
- Your brain treats rejection like physical pain.
- Androphobia is a fear of men.
- Convincing yourself you slept well, tricks your brain into thinking it did.
- When a woman is attracted to a man, she speaks in a higher pitch than normal.
- Falling in love has similar neurological effects as the high produced from taking cocaine.
- Your most brightest memories are usually incomplete.
- The very last person on you mind before you fall asleep is either the reason for your happiness or your pain.
- Its difficult for our eyes to perceive red and blue colors together.
- When someone cries tears of joy, the first teardrop would always come from the right eye. tears of pain start from the left.
- If a person can not cry, he is weak.
- Biochemically speaking, being in romantic love affair cannot be distinguished from having an obsessive compulsive disorder.
- When a person dies, he has 7 minutes of brain activity left in which he has a dream-like sequence of their memories.
- Unexpressed emotions will never die. They are buried alive and will come forth later in uglier ways.
- "Synesthesia" is a neurological condition that can cause a person to see, smell and taste music.
- The average high school kid today shows the same level of anxiety as the average psychiatric patient in the 1950s.
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