- Wikipedia, the Bible of the common googling person"In positive psychology, a flow state, also known colloquially as being in the zone, is the mental state in which a person performing some activity is fully immersed in a feeling of energized focus, full involvement, and enjoyment in the process of the activity. In essence, flow is characterized by the complete absorption in what one does, and a resulting transformation in one's sense of time."
I remember being told as a teenager that we need to lose ourselves to find ourselves, which seemed like empty rhetoric. — Jack Cummins
I remember being told as a teenager that we need to lose ourselves to find ourselves — Jack Cummins
While it is a little hard for me to understand how one could be anything else, — Joshs
Losing the role playing lets the real you come out. — DMcpearson
Aren’t the different roles I play with the other people in my life part of the real ‘me’. Arent I changed by each interaction with others — Joshs
Losing yourself in a flow state doesn't mean shifting to another "self". It means becoming part of the process without one's ego. That's a problem with philosophy, which involves thinking rather than doing. — jgill
What I found was that it comes down to what is considered to be the 'true' self which may emerge when one loses oneself, or the false self. How much is about authenticity? — Jack Cummins
Do not disturb my circles. — Archimedes (just before a roman soldier slew him)
It shows, in a crude way, that our brains aren't, unlike computers, capable of parallel processing — TheMadFool
Or rather, that our brains “process” by predicting the general flow of the world and its events, and then revert to particular attentional focus to the degree their ingrained habits of prediction need interrupting and updating.
The whole world is imagined as it is shortly about to be. Then we tidy up any small bits we might have got wrong — apokrisis
I can carry out the physical activity of smoking (I'm a chain smoker) while I cogitate on the issue at hand but I cannot think of a problem in biology and, at the same time, find an answer to a mathematical question. — TheMadFool
With enough practice, one might learn. Some folk can add up a column of figures almost by glancing. So you might master the mathematical task to the level of a habitual unthinking skill, leaving capacity to work on the biology problem.
But it gets more complex of course. If you have a genuinely novel problem to solve, you need to add the skill of “looking away”. You need to switch from a left brain attentional style that narrows expectations down to a predictable kind of correct answer, to a right brain peripheral attentional style that is open to unexpected mental connections.
So there is narrow concentration versus wide eyed vigilance as complementary modes of higher level attentional processes. — apokrisis
An insight that manifests itself suddenly, such as understanding how to solve a difficult problem, is sometimes called by the German word Aha-Erlebnis. The term was coined by the German psychologist and theoretical linguist Karl Bühler. It is also known as an epiphany, eureka moment or (for cross word solvers) the penny dropping moment (PDM) — Wikipedia
Eureka! — Archimedes (as he ran naked through the streets of Syracuse)
The “real you” in modern society is the attentional one, not the habitual one. The thinking and self-questioning one, not the one lost in the simple unexamined flow of everyday social relations. — apokrisis
I like to think of some drugs (particularly psychedelics) as allowing a shortcut to states that can otherwise be achieved through meditation practice. — Xtrix
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