| 6LV.com Home | Psychology Articles Index |
Shopper Favorites
Personal Search Portal
MALL.ShopperFavorites .com
Over 1,500,000 Products and Growing!
Hot Searches @ Shopper Favorites
  • fantasy football free league pick
  • credit card processors
  • outdoor recreation
  • nfl football weekly pick
  • legal help louisiana
  • website design
  • check credit for cards
  • New Jersey Lawye
  • nfl football game
  • computer graphics

  • The Man Who Tastes Shapes  

    by Keith Varnum


    Some people see, taste, hear and feel things the rest of us don'
    t. James Wannerton tastes words: "New York is runny eggs. London
    is extremely lumpy mashed potatoes." Carol Steen sees every
    letter with a color: "Z is the color of beer, a light ale."

    For Carol Crane, music is felt: "I always feel guitars on my
    ankles and violins on my face." Other people experience smells
    when exposed to shapes, or hear sounds inside taste. And for
    some, numbers have color, sounds have smell, and words have
    flavor. Music is not only heard, it's seen and tasted--the list
    goes on.

    Neurologist Richard Cytowic explores this surreal world of "
    synesthesia" in his book, The Man Who Tasted Shapes. "
    Synesthesia means joined sensation, and some people are born
    with two or more of their senses hooked together," explains
    Cytowic.

    The most common form of synesthesia is when a person see letters
    in different colors instead of seeing black ink letters as black.
    Although people differ from each other in what colors the
    letters are, the colors usually remain the same for each
    individual throughout their life.

    Depending on what food they taste, other synesthetes experience
    taste as a shape, like a triangle or circle. Another person sees
    orange when feeling pain.

    For New York artist Carol Steen, synesthesia is inspiration. She
    sees shapes and colors when listening to music or receiving
    acupuncture-images that she transforms into works of art. "It's
    like putting on sunglasses and being able to see the world
    through the sunglasses," she says. Once, when Steen injured her
    leg while hiking, all she saw was a world bathed in orange.

    And, Carol Crane does more than simply hear a concert. She
    physically experiences each instrument within a different part
    of her body.

    Still another person hears a sound that tastes like pickles. For
    as long as he can recall, words have triggered the part of
    Wannerton's brain that responds to tastes and flavors. "I can
    remember being in a big school assembly hall listening to the
    Lords Prayer," he says, "and it was while listening to that, I
    used to get flavor after flavor coming in. It was mostly bacon."

    Wannerton says his synesthesia causes him some discomfort in his
    personal life. "I've had girlfriends with names I couldn't stand
    saying. Tracey is a very strong flavored name and it's flaky-
    pastry. Whenever I was in her company, that's what I thought of
    constantly." And at the end of the day, he suffers from sensory
    overload. But still he doesn't want a cure. "I've had it since I
    can remember, and taking it away--I wouldn't like the thought of
    that," he says.

    What's going on inside the synesthete's brain?

    Dr. Vilyanur Ramachandran, a neurologist who studies quirks of
    the brain, was scanning the brain of McAllister, a man who sees
    music. During the imaging, the music being played stimulates not
    only McAllister's audio cortex, but also his visual cortex. "The
    visual area lit up in him," says Ramachandran, "so you know
    there was neurological activity in the visual region of his
    brain even though he was only listening to music." McAllister
    describes it as a "Fantasia-like experience: explosions of color
    all over the place. A bright flash of lavender getting dimmer
    and dimmer; now we're going over a pink staircase, some lavender
    violins. It looks very beautiful."

    This is all the more surprising since McAllister is blind! He
    lost his sight when he was 12, the result of a degenerative eye
    disease. But he never lost his synesthesia.

    Are we all born with joined sensation?

    Though scientists can prove synesthesia exists physiologically,
    they still don't know what causes it. Some researchers think
    cross-wiring in the brain produces the phenomenon. Another
    theory is that everyone is born with synesthesia-that we, as
    infants, experience the world as a jumble of interwoven
    sensations. Then, as most of us mature, our physical senses
    slowly become distinct and sharply defined, like images being
    brought into focus by a camera lens. With synesthetes this doesn'
    t happen.

    For some, synesthetic perceptions seem to exist outside the body.
    Carrie Schultz describes how she sees electric guitar riffs in
    purple swirls that envelop her.

    For others, the awareness is internal, in their "mind's eye."
    When Glenda Larcombe hears a truck backing up--making a beep-
    beep-beep sound--she sees the beeps as a series of red dots. The
    mingling of senses is often difficult for synesthetes to
    describe. Larcombe, for instance, said the red dots she sees
    when she hears beeping are not part of her actual vision. "It's
    not like I would see a red dot right in front of me-it's in my
    mind's eye" she says in an interview. She also reports feeling
    her interviewer's voice, "like a wave, like water, with yellow
    and orange."

    Ex-journalist, Page Getz says "God is blue." She describes
    headache pain as a kind of greenish-orange, music by the rock
    group Nirvana as having the taste or sensation of Dr Pepper, and
    the color after sex as static silver. She quit her job as a
    journalist because her editors' word changes often disrupted
    what she saw as a sentence's natural chromatic progression.

    Everyone's got blended senses to a degree

    Psychologist Carol Mills says this sensory-blending ability
    might be a normal part of all adult brains. "It may go on in all
    of us even if we don't have synesthesia," said Mills. "For
    example, if I give you a very high-pitched note and a series of
    colors and ask you to match one, you are going to pick a light
    color. If I give you a low bass note, you are probably going to
    pick a dark color. The difference is when a synesthete hears a
    low note, they see dark. When they hear a high note, they see a
    light color."

    No firm figures exist for how common synesthesia is. The best
    estimates range from 1 in 200 to 1 in 20,000.


    About the Author

    Drawing from the wisdom of native and ancient spiritual traditions, Keith Varnum shares his 30 years of practical success as an author, personal coach, acupuncturist, filmmaker, radio host, restaurateur, vision quest guide and international seminar leader (The Dream Workshops). Keith helps people get the love, money and health they want with his FREE “Prosperity Ezine” at http://www.TheDream.com.







    | Take me to the Home Page | Psychology Articles Index |






    © 6LV .Com - Views, opinions and stated facts are those of their respective author and not necessarily 6LV .Com.
    Articles have been republished, with permission, for your reading enjoyment.