A book on hallucinations which are not caused by schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. (It also doesn’t deal much with culturally normal hallucinations, which is too bad.) Hallucinations - sensory perceptions which occur during waking and are not based on consensus reality - are surprisingly common, and include many experiences which
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Embarrassingly, right up until I was diagnosed with a mental illness that sometimes presents with auditory hallucinations (in my late 20s), I really thought they might be real. Finding out that these rare but usually funny or comforting visits were just a mis-firing of my fucked-up brain was really depressing. It's good to know that they might have been produced as a part of normal human experience rather than being further evidence of how my specific treacherous brain was trying to mess with me, if that makes sense.
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Hallucinations caused by mental illness are typically threatening, frightening, or otherwise unpleasant, not funny or comforting.
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The only hypnogogic hallucination I get with any regularity (assuming that's what it is) is a sudden bright flash of light and a faint sound - it's very similar to having an old disposable flash bulb go off in your face. I wouldn't mind it except that it tends to jolt me awake.
I can't remember ever having any other hallucinations, although it wouldn't surprise me if I did sometimes when I'm sick and I simply don't recall. I have articulated my thoughts inside my head as speech ever since I was a fairly young child, but it's always my conscious mind speaking, so I don't experience it as an auditory hallucination.
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And yeah, I agree -- I'd love to know more about the neurology behind such things.
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Only an EEG can say for sure!
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