If you cringe a little when you think about your former self, that shows that you’ve grown as a person.īut wouldn’t it be great if you could go back to high school knowing what you know now? How much easier would it be to approach that special person you wanted to ask to the dance but couldn’t muster up the courage? How much more would you appreciate those carefree days when all you had to worry about was a bio test or who had a crush on whom in homeroom? If you look back at how you acted, dressed and behaved in high school and have a little bit of shame, that’s probably a good thing. #MyHighSchoolWasWeird- Cindy Price January 24, 2022 On the opposite end of the spectrum, Suge Knight also graduated from my high school. I figure it's also likely due to the rectangles looking more 3D (therefore like a real object) while the circles appear as 2D.
"This may be because rectangles (including the ones we see in door panels) are often more common than circles in our daily environment, and so the brain favours the grouping that delivers rectangular shapes." "For most people, the grouping into rectangles initially dominates," the authors write. The lines come together to form edges, contours and shapes, and our brains fill in the objects.
Once you see them, it's pretty easy to switch back and forth, but hoo boy, does it take a while to actually see them the first time.Īccording to an explanation from a professor and student from the University of Sydney, the reason we have a hard time seeing the circles at first is because of our brain's strong tendency to identify objects in what we're seeing. \n\nSo weird, my brain actually jolted when I saw them.\u201d - Gavin Buckingham Buckingham)