InterplayFrames – Telegram
InterplayFrames
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HERE You’ll learn how to:

- Spot the frames you inherited but never chose

- Shift frames that limit your freedom or peace

- Choose frames that lead to meaning, power, connection, and growth

- Build a personal practice of “reframing” in daily life
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Framing courage as a frequency you choose to tune into.
The creative act and the necessary disintegration preceding the new synthesis (from The Sleepwalkers by Arthur Koestler)
what if you questioned what you want instead of what you’re supposed to want
Clever sign
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in place of ፌስታል you carrying this to save the planet. Meanwhile the world leaders make the bombshell rain.
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ReFraming a former mountain
My type of LGBT
Framing her laughs.
Frames of Truisms,
1977–1979 Jenny Holzer.
"The hardest part of any real decision is sitting in the discomfort of not knowing. The answer doesn’t come from thinking harder: It comes from staying in the silence long enough for clarity to arrive."

Link
Framing hope
Framing International Law.
Error dialog tie frames
"Tell Them Frame" would make the world a better place imo.

Think the waiter was friendly?
Tell them.

Your friend looked good today?
Tell them.

Someone's work inspired you?
Tell them.

The world is loud with criticism and quiet with appreciation. Be the exception. It could make someone's day.
complex ≠ complicated
Reframing shareholders as not owners of a company, but suppliers of capital. If they don’t like the returns, they can invest elsewhere.
consciousness isn't framed yet.

It’s often forgotten that Francis Crick, who along with James Watson discovered the structure of DNA, spent the last 25 years of his life researching the brain. In fact he spent as long researching the brain as he had on molecular biology and genetics, publishing 23 research papers, many articles and two books on neuroscience and consciousness.

Crick was intrigued by how little was known about consciousness. He found it “remarkable that most of the work in both cognitive science and the neurosciences makes no reference to consciousness”.
There’s a woman named Kalina Christoff who studies what’s called spontaneous thought. I looked at some of her work, which includes things like daydreaming and mind wandering. These are very interesting phenomena where the mind just finds its own path.

She put experienced meditators in an MRI scanner and told them to press a button whenever a thought arose. They were trying not to have any thoughts at all. What she concluded was that you can only go about ten seconds without a thought.

But here’s the interesting part. When people pressed the button, she could see what was happening in the brain at the same time the thought appeared. She noticed activity in the memory center she was observing, the hippocampus, about four seconds before the person was aware of the thought.

So there is actually a very elaborate and fairly long process before thoughts become conscious. They seem to exist somewhere else first, and then they pop into what we call the stream of consciousness.

The fact that it takes about four seconds suggests that something is going on during that time. Perhaps different thoughts are competing with one another to get into that workspace.
Kalina Christoff Research on spontaneous thought suggests that our minds generate ideas before we become aware of them. In one experiment, experienced meditators were asked to press a button whenever a thought appeared. Brain scans showed activity in the hippocampus about four seconds before participants consciously noticed the thought. This suggests that thoughts form and compete in the background before entering conscious awareness. In terms of framing, it means what we perceive as a “new thought” is often the result of earlier mental processes shaping which idea finally reaches our attention.