The article explores misophonia, a neurological disorder characterized by intense negative reactions to specific repetitive sounds and sights. This condition disrupts the individual's normal state, often leading to panic and rage. Triggers, or activators, include common stimuli like eating, drinking, or even background noises, which are hard to avoid in daily life. Understanding misophonia is still developing, as it remains a poorly defined condition with ongoing research focused on its characteristics and implications for those affected, who experience these intense sensations often leading them to evade their triggers.
When someone with misophonia is triggered, they are snatched out of their normal state of being (without warning and against conscious will)... often overwhelmed with the urge to repel the offending sight or sound by running away.
Misophonia is (most likely) a neurological disorder in which ordinary, usually pattern-based or repetitive sights and/or sounds trigger deeply unpleasant physiological responses of the body's nonconscious defense mechanism.
Collection
[
|
...
]