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Do all the letters have different colors (I know you mentioned b, o, and 3 being red, but are they the same shade of it?) or do some repeat?
Are characters you aren't familiar with (like Cyrillic, or Greek letters) affected as well?
I guess I usually think of those as black, but even the ones that are black (most of them) have an alternate actual colour. Exclamation marks are red, question marks are blue, the and sign (&) is yellow, asterisks are blue...What about things that aren't pronounced, like (, ^, or !?
Yes. In that case, D and d are both red. With other letters, for instance R, there are multiple colours (red/blue/green) and then the lowercase only has one of those. Small r can't only be red.Are d and D the same color?
Sorry if I seem like I'm asking way too many questions at once, I'm just really curious about this. :V
have you generally always known you perceived stuff that way, or were you like me and read the article and were like, "wait, I think this too"?
holy shit same here!! :OExclamation marks are red, question marks are blue, the and sign (&) is yellow
I'm wondering about all of you- have you generally always known you perceived stuff that way, or were you like me and read the article and were like, "wait, I think this too"?
I read a book or article about someone with synesthesia one time and was all 'wow it would be kinda cool to have this' and then when I read the article here I was all 'wait... the letter A does sound yellow!'
Also the letter E sounds flat and gray, but an 'e' sound on the end of words (like with a y as in leafy or happy) make it yellow sounding :/
I seriously refuse to believe 90% of the posters in this thread.
Besides the fact this is a documented and studied phenomenon that may occur in 1 in 23 people, you just think we're crazy? :P I don't blame you.
I think with most people here this is less "wires in the brain are messed up and sensory input gets muddled synesthesia" and more "learned the alphabet from a book where each letter was colored something different and now permanently believes A to be blue synesthesia". I mean as far as I'm concerned Alabama, Delaware, and Michigan are yellow, Maryland and Mississippi are pink, Oregon is green, and Indiana is red, but I can definitely trace that back to a placemat I had as a kid. So I tend to believe most of these guys. Either way, I really don't see what these dudes have to gain by making up something on a pokemon forum to make them seem a tiny bit more interesting.
I think with most people here this is less "wires in the brain are messed up and sensory input gets muddled synesthesia" and more "learned the alphabet from a book where each letter was colored something different and now permanently believes A to be blue synesthesia".