Post by account_disabled on Jan 6, 2024 11:12:13 GMT 7
Hides pride. Writing a book must be an act of pride. It is the individual who, not yet a writer, takes on the features of the writer, takes possession of the abilities and skills of the writer and writes. How will he be able to complete his work if within himself there is not that feeling of pride that pushes him to move forward, to fight against the block, against the creative void, against the insecurity of the future? Writing is an act of pride I repeat it. Hope does not exist, because it has the color and flavor of illusion. With hope you don't move forward, you don't write a book. Obstacles cannot be overcome, problems cannot be solved. It is with pride that one can progress. No conqueror succeeded in his undertakings if he had not been proud.
There was no humility in those souls, nor hope. There was pride: a deep, rooted self-esteem that led to concrete results. Writing is an act of pride because by writing we are beyond others, above the mass, above the average, above those who enjoy works and cannot create them. It should not be seen as a negative feeling, because it is directed towards one's own self Special Data and not to the detriment of others. If anything in their favor. Pride in writing is the drive that leads the author to write and finish his work, despite everything that is against him around him. It should be seen as the driving force, because it eliminates his insecurities and fears, accentuates his determination and desire.From studies carried out by researchers at Emory University (Atlanta, Georgia), after having volunteers read the thriller Pompeii by Robert Harris, an increase in connectivity was found in the left temporal cortex of the brain, an area associated with the receptivity of language, and in the central sulcus, sensorimotor area of the brain.
It was important for the researchers to find a compelling book with a strong narrative line – and a novel, rather than a short story, because a long story allowed the brain to have repeated stimuli. According to neuroscientist Dr. Berns, the neural changes they saw associated with physical sensations and movement systems suggest that reading a novel can transport you into the protagonist's body. I found the phenomenon of embodied cognition interesting: when you think or see a sport, for example, the neurons associated with the physical act of that sport can be activated . The researchers found that reading a novel and imagining yourself in the protagonist's shoes engages imagination in a process similar to visualizing muscle memory in sports. Thus was born literary neuroscience , a new field that is studying the effects of reading on our brains
There was no humility in those souls, nor hope. There was pride: a deep, rooted self-esteem that led to concrete results. Writing is an act of pride because by writing we are beyond others, above the mass, above the average, above those who enjoy works and cannot create them. It should not be seen as a negative feeling, because it is directed towards one's own self Special Data and not to the detriment of others. If anything in their favor. Pride in writing is the drive that leads the author to write and finish his work, despite everything that is against him around him. It should be seen as the driving force, because it eliminates his insecurities and fears, accentuates his determination and desire.From studies carried out by researchers at Emory University (Atlanta, Georgia), after having volunteers read the thriller Pompeii by Robert Harris, an increase in connectivity was found in the left temporal cortex of the brain, an area associated with the receptivity of language, and in the central sulcus, sensorimotor area of the brain.
It was important for the researchers to find a compelling book with a strong narrative line – and a novel, rather than a short story, because a long story allowed the brain to have repeated stimuli. According to neuroscientist Dr. Berns, the neural changes they saw associated with physical sensations and movement systems suggest that reading a novel can transport you into the protagonist's body. I found the phenomenon of embodied cognition interesting: when you think or see a sport, for example, the neurons associated with the physical act of that sport can be activated . The researchers found that reading a novel and imagining yourself in the protagonist's shoes engages imagination in a process similar to visualizing muscle memory in sports. Thus was born literary neuroscience , a new field that is studying the effects of reading on our brains