Honest question. How do people with trypophobia live their day to day lives? There’s holes literally everywhere.
It's not holes in general, it's the type and arrangement. It doesn't even have to be holes. I saw a certain pattern of rust in the bottom of a bucket and that had me weirded out for hours.
Think of it another way, imagine an irregular arrangement of holes like a wasp nest or numerous spider holes in the ground. Something like the arrangement of seed locations in a sunflower...er...flower. It's hypothesized that it's a remnant of the fight of flight biological mechanism due to where your ancestors evolved. Basically a biological reaction to avoid things that visually look like it might be a habitat for dangerous and poisonous insects.
I've actually got goosebumps all over my arms right now from typing this out because I've had to think about it to tell you about it. For me I wouldn't generally consider it debilitating, but it is extremely unnerving. To the point where I will not look at sunflower...er...flowers if I can help it. Wasp nests weird me out as do natural bee nests, but harvested honeycombs do not. That's because natural wasp nests and bees nests are irregular whereas the harvested honeycombs from bees nests are for the most part very regular. Well, as long as I don't look at them too closely, if I do and I notice the irregularity in the cells ... time to look away.
Now, time to go watch some videos of puppies playing around so I can stop being weirded out.
Regards,
SB
Or, you know, cover the vents with ping-pong balls.Yes trypophobia is a real thing and I can see how the top of the Series X would cause it, just turn it on its side and away from you I suppose, problem solved.
Oh. My. God.photic sneeze reflex.
Always had it, and literally everyone has always told me I’m making this up, “makes no sense to sneeze from looking at a bright light, stupid!”.
I’m 38 years old and I just googled that term and my whole life now makes sense.
At an earlier job, a coworker has that exact thing too. Almost every time stepping outside would trigger it unless it was overcast. Sometimes it would happen when meetings would transition from all lights off with projector going to all room lights on. He said the most annoying thing about it was all the responses of "Bless You" from anyone around him.
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We had a woman in our office who had a phobia of apples.
Don't thank me, thank dr karlOh. My. God.
I HAVE THIS.
Always had it, and literally everyone has always told me I’m making this up, “makes no sense to sneeze from looking at a bright light, stupid!”.
I’m 38 years old and I just googled that term and my whole life now makes sense.
Thank you.
I have this but not to the same degree. I have to look directly at a bright light for it to trigger a sneeze, so it's not that bad for me.Yep. Always the transition from indoors to out on a sunny day and I sneeze. I wonder if there is a community for mutants like me.