Object alteration: Difference between revisions

>Josikins
Grammatics
>Josikins
grammatics
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<onlyinclude>'''Object alterations''' can be described as the experience of perceiving textures, external objects, and scenes to be progressively warping, moving, stretching, animating, and shifting in their structural form in a manner which can vary from subtle to extreme. When one looks away from the object or texture being distorted the object retains its original shape until it is looked at directly once again, whereafter it begins distorting in a similar or different manner. The manner in which the distortions occur is not uniform and cannot be reliably predicted. The intensity of the effect is often linked to the intensity and progression of the mental state that precludes this effect.
<onlyinclude>'''Object alterations''' can be described as the experience of perceiving objects, and scenes to be progressively warping, moving, stretching, animating, and shifting in their 3-dimensional form in a manner which can vary from subtle to extreme. When the person double takes the object returns to its original shape until it is looked at directly once again, whereafter it begins distorting again in a similar or different manner. The manner in which the alterations occur is not uniform and cannot be reliably predicted. The intensity of the effect is often linked to the intensity and progression of the mental state that precludes this effect.


For example, when staring at an object such as a chair its 3-dimensional shape may begin to drastically elongate or tilt into an exaggerated form which retains its original colours and textures.
For example, when staring at an object such as a chair its 3-dimensional shape may begin to drastically elongate or tilt into an exaggerated form which retains its original colours and textures.