Sunday, 21 June 2026

MISSED THREAT MORE DANGEROUS THAN A FALSE ALRM SO SCAN X MNKY MIND

 A

Here’s a clean, sharp breakdown of Shin’en / Monkey Mind — the restless, scattered, constantly‑jumping mind described in Zen, Vedanta, and mindfulness traditions.


🧠 What “Monkey Mind” Means

The term points to the mind’s tendency to jump from thought to thought, like a monkey leaping from branch to branch. It is restless, reactive, easily distracted, and driven by habit.


🔑 Core Points on Shin’en / Monkey Mind

  • Restless jumping — Thoughts arise rapidly, pulling attention in multiple directions without stability.
  • Habit-driven reactivity — The mind reacts automatically to triggers, sensations, memories, and fears.
  • Lack of presence — Awareness gets hijacked by internal chatter, preventing calm, clarity, or insight.
  • Emotional turbulence — Anxiety, irritation, craving, and worry feed the mind’s movement.
  • Identification with thoughts — The mind believes every thought is “me” or “mine,” strengthening the cycle.
  • Energy leakage — Constant mental motion drains vitality and reduces focus.
  • Vasana activation — Old tendencies (vasanas) surface as repetitive thought loops.
  • Fear of stillness — The mind avoids silence because silence exposes its emptiness.
  • Attention fragmentation — The mind splits into micro‑thoughts, preventing deep concentration.
  • Ego reinforcement — The monkey mind strengthens the sense of a separate self through constant narrative-making.

🌿 The Deeper Insight

The monkey mind is not a problem to fight — it is a pattern to understand.
When seen clearly, without resistance, its energy naturally settles.


🧘 Next Step

Would you like techniques to calm the monkey mind or a deeper spiritual explanation?


‘Climate change is not going backwards. We must prepare for a lot worse’ Alexandre Florentin, climate engineer

FOOTBALL

 A

Here’s a clean, sharp summary of the football article you shared — in my usual structured, high‑clarity style, with Guided Links embedded naturally.


POINTS — “Is high World Cup goal count due to the new football?”

  • New World Cup ball — Adidas introduced the Trionda, the official World Cup ball, priced at £130 and designed with fewer panels and smoother surfaces.

  • Players noticing differences — Lionel Messi, Harry Kane, and Kylian Mbappé have already scored seven goals between them; England goalkeeper Joe Hart says the ball feels “faster off the foot.”

  • Aerodynamic changes — Research by Professor John Eric Goff shows that fewer seams reduce drag, making the ball travel faster and behave less predictably.

  • Historical pattern — Every World Cup introduces a new ball, and each redesign tends to alter flight behaviour, sometimes controversially.

  • Higher goal count — The opening week saw unusually high scoring, raising the question of whether the ball is partly responsible.

  • Not just the ball — Improved player fitness, training, and offensive tactics also contribute to the surge in goals.

  • Conclusion — The ball does influence performance, but it is one factor among many shaping the tournament’s goal explosion.


If you want, I can also create:

  • a table comparing past World Cup balls
  • a deeper aerodynamic breakdown
  • a short editorial commentary

Just choose the direction.


GOOD V EVIL X WISDOM V IGNORANCE

 A



Simply, we are derivatives of this known existence We feel pain and bleed

APHANTASIA X SDAM

 A

Aphantasia + SDAM (Severely Deficient Autobiographical Memory) — deep dive

These two conditions are often discussed together, but they are not the same system failure, and importantly: they can occur independently.


1. Core definitions

🧠 Aphantasia

Aphantasia

  • Inability (or severe reduction) to voluntarily generate mental images

  • Example: being asked to “visualize an apple” produces:

    • no image

    • or purely conceptual knowledge (“I know what an apple looks like”)

  • Affects imagery, not necessarily memory or emotion


🧠 SDAM (Severely Deficient Autobiographical Memory)

Severely Deficient Autobiographical Memory

  • Reduced ability to re-experience personal past events

  • People with SDAM typically:

    • know facts about their life (semantic memory intact)

    • but cannot “relive” events mentally

    • lack emotional re-experiencing of past scenes

Example:

  • “I know I went to Paris in 2018”

  • but not “what it felt like to be there” in episodic form


2. Key distinction (important)

FeatureAphantasiaSDAM
Visual imageryabsent/weakmay be normal
Autobiographical memoryoften normalimpaired
“Mental time travel”sometimes intactusually impaired
Emotional relivingnot requiredoften reduced
Core issueperception simulationepisodic reconstruction

3. How they overlap (but are not identical)

They can co-occur because both involve internal simulation systems, but they target different components:

Shared cognitive machinery:

  • hippocampus (episodic reconstruction)

  • default mode network (self-projection)

  • prefrontal integration (scene construction)

But different outputs:

  • Aphantasia → “no picture in mind”

  • SDAM → “no movie of your life story”

You can have:

  • aphantasia + normal autobiographical memory

  • SDAM + normal imagery

  • both together (more rare, more severe internal simulation reduction)


4. Subjective experience differences

Aphantasia experience:

  • thinking is:

    • verbal

    • conceptual

    • spatial-but-not-visual

  • memory feels like:

    • facts + summaries

  • dreams may still be vivid (important exception)

SDAM experience:

  • life recall feels like:

    • reading a biography about yourself

    • not “re-entering” scenes

  • past events feel:

    • emotionally distant or flat

  • identity is more “statistical self” than “narrative self”


5. Cognitive implications (what actually changes)

Aphantasia tends to affect:

  • mental imagery tasks

  • visualization-based memory strategies

  • spatial imagination in subjective form (but not necessarily performance)

  • reading experience (less cinematic imagery)

SDAM tends to affect:

  • autobiographical continuity

  • emotional reinforcement from past experiences

  • learning from episodic memory (“I remember how it went last time”)

  • sense of “re-living” vs “knowing”


6. Important misconception

❌ Myth:

“Aphantasia = poor memory”

✅ Reality:

  • many people with aphantasia have excellent memory

  • SDAM is the condition more directly tied to autobiographical recall deficits

They are orthogonal dimensions, not one spectrum.


7. Philosophical angle (ties to your earlier argument)

These conditions are often used in debates about consciousness because they suggest:

  • memory is not a single unified “movie system”

  • subjective experience is modular

  • “inner imagery” is not required for intelligence or reasoning

But they do not imply:

  • absence of consciousness

  • reduced awareness of reality

  • or any failure of “reality access”

They instead suggest:

consciousness can exist with radically different internal representational formats


8. Open scientific questions

Researchers still don’t fully know:

  • Is SDAM primarily hippocampal, network-based, or developmental?

  • Are aphantasia and SDAM linked through a shared “simulation system”?

  • How do these conditions affect:

    • future imagination

    • decision-making

    • identity construction


9. One-line summary

  • Aphantasia: “I don’t see images in my mind.”

  • SDAM: “I don’t re-live my past in my mind.”

  • Both: “thinking still works — just in different internal formats.”


If you want, I can map:

  • how these conditions relate to default mode network neuroscience

  • or how they affect philosophical arguments about imagination, qualia, and consciousness models

A

I’ll structure this as case history → diagnosis framework → anecdote-style presentation → neural pathway model, for both aphantasia and SDAM, since they often get discussed together.


🧠 1. CASE HISTORY (typical presentation)

Aphantasia case history

Aphantasia

Patient report:

  • “I can describe my mother’s face, but I don’t see it.”

  • “When people say ‘picture an apple,’ nothing appears.”

  • “Reading is conceptual, not cinematic.”

  • Often only realizes difference after learning others literally see images

Development:

  • lifelong (not acquired injury in most cases)

  • discovered incidentally (e.g., psychology article, imagery tests)


SDAM case history

Severely Deficient Autobiographical Memory

Patient report:

  • “I know my life story, but I don’t relive it.”

  • “Past events feel like facts about someone else.”

  • “If I don’t write it down, it feels like it didn’t happen.”

  • Difficulty using past experience as emotional reference

Development:

  • usually lifelong pattern

  • often unnoticed until adulthood comparisons emerge


🧩 2. DIAGNOSIS FRAMEWORK (how it’s identified clinically/research-wise)

Aphantasia diagnosis approach:

  • Vividness of Visual Imagery Questionnaire (VVIQ)

  • subjective report consistency

  • imagery task failures (e.g., mental rotation, scene construction)

  • no structural MRI “lesion” marker

Key diagnostic rule:

intact vision + intact cognition + absent voluntary imagery


SDAM diagnosis approach:

  • Autobiographical Interview (episodic detail scoring)

  • distinction between:

    • semantic recall (facts)

    • episodic recall (re-experiencing details)

Key diagnostic rule:

intact memory knowledge + reduced episodic reliving


🎭 3. ANECDOTE-STYLE DESCRIPTION (what it feels like)

Aphantasia anecdote:

A person is asked:

“Imagine walking through your childhood home.”

They respond:

  • they know the layout

  • they can list rooms

  • but there is no internal “visual walk”

They are not blind in imagination—they are map-based thinkers without internal imagery rendering.


SDAM anecdote:

Same prompt:

“Remember your childhood home.”

They respond:

  • factual recall: “We had a blue door, two floors.”

  • but no sense of being there again

It is like:

reading a biography of your life written in third person, without re-entering scenes


🧠 4. NEURAL PATHWAY MODEL (simplified but accurate)

Aphantasia pathway model

  • Prefrontal cortex (intent to imagine)
    ↓ weak top-down signaling

  • Parietal cortex (spatial construction)
    ↓ reduced integration

  • Occipital visual cortex (V1–extrastriate)
    ↓ low activation

  • Result: no “visual emergence”

➡️ Core failure: top-down imagery activation loop


SDAM pathway model

  • Hippocampus (event binding)
    ↓ weak episodic reconstruction

  • Medial prefrontal cortex (self-reference)
    ↓ reduced coupling

  • Posterior cingulate cortex (autobiographical integration)
    ↓ weak narrative reactivation

  • Angular gyrus (scene reassembly)
    ↓ poor episodic “mental time travel”

➡️ Core failure: episodic reconstruction loop


🔗 5. COMBINED SYSTEM VIEW

Both sit inside a larger system:

🧠 “Simulation Network”

  • hippocampus → memory scenes

  • visual cortex → imagery

  • DMN → self + time travel

  • prefrontal cortex → control/initiation

Difference:

  • Aphantasia = weak visual simulation channel

  • SDAM = weak autobiographical simulation channel


⚠️ 6. KEY CLINICAL DISTINCTION

FeatureAphantasiaSDAM
Imageryabsent/weakusually intact
Life memory factsintactintact
Re-living eventsvariablereduced
Core deficitperception simulationepisodic reconstruction

🧾 FINAL SUMMARY

  • No structural brain lesion is known in either condition

  • Both are network connectivity differences, not damage

  • Aphantasia = “no internal picture rendering”

  • SDAM = “no internal time-travel re-experiencing”

  • Both reflect differences in how the brain builds internal models, not loss of intelligence or awareness


If you want, I can next turn this into:

  • a flowchart of brain regions and signal failures

  • or a case report style clinical note (like neurology write-up format)

  • or compare it to amnesia / hippocampal lesion patients for contrast