Naked Science Forum

On the Lighter Side => New Theories => Topic started by: trevorjohnson32 on 12/11/2018 17:40:45

Title: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 12/11/2018 17:40:45
Subtle gestures of your body language can be an innate response to the behavior of you tailbone and to avoid dizzyness from it wagging. You can start your tail wagging or pass a wagging motion between your hands, knees, balance system, and tail by creating an almost indetectable wobbling in the motion of a tail wag with one of these parts, but it is difficult to make a tailbone gesture with any two methods at the same time. It can experience pauses, a change in motion, or a change in speed in accordance with: emotion caused by thought, outside stimulus's, making gestures, changing focus in your eyes, breathing and a few other things..

When you stifle a tailbone wag it may come out as dizzyness in your ears. Changing focus onto your tailbone can stop this dizzyness, so will wobbling your hands or knees in a motion to the dizzyness. Watching something move back and forth, like a bouncing emoji or shadows through the trees can alter your tail wag and dizzyness. So does making slight movements with your mouth, head, eyes, hands and legs. You may compulsively shake your leg or adjust yourself in your seat. Breathing can change a wag's motion or speed, or put momentary stops in the wag. Breathing in or out can stop or start your tail wag. When Highly interested in something your tail will swing fast, when moderately interested it swings slower or stops. You can be interested in a variety of things: people around, your own thoughts, saying something, doing something.You also may already avoid having thoughts that make you dizzy this way. Doing something other then sit still, like taking a drink, or smoking, provides a moment to away from your thoughts, and you move around which stifles the tail. All of these things you might do already to stop dizzyness from your tail and you don't even know it. Any anxious gesture can be relieved by focusing on your tail.

Wagging your tail all the time because you think its fun or therapeutic can be frustrating, painful, and cause hallucinations. Changing back to a normal state where you adjust your comfort with stifling methods will alleviate this, so will sleep, so will enjoyment of usual activities, driving a car for a while will keep your tail from wagging as your constantly at the edge of your seat focusing on new things.

It doesn't matter if you are out in public or home alone, it will wag either way, As long as you are sitting or standing still, you will feel it. It doesn't matter if you have thoughts or not it will wag either way, however thoughts can have an effect. It doesn't matter if you are calm or emotional it will wag either way. It will sometimes wag when you want it too and other times it won't. It wags frequently along to music then without. When I'm driving I feel it wag almost every time i'm sitting at a red light, then If I move it all I can barely feel over the bumpy road. It doesn't matter if I'm talking to someone it may or may not wag. If I'm walking I can feel it move around, but it more swings around and I can put a momentary glitch in it so it swings slower or differently. That your tail swings when you walk is also true for dogs and is related to balance. After you've been walking and stop and stand still it can still resonate a wag. Just focusing on you tail is meditative. It doesn't matter if you watch it or not it will wag either way.

When wagging alone you may experience a response from voices. Mine will shun me when I intentionally try to wag. I use different methods to start a wag. One of them as I mentioned is wobbling my knees or hands ever so slightly in the motion of a tail wag. I can then pass this motion into my tail. Another trick is to purposely wobble your balance system in your ears to immitate a tail wag. Of all the artificial tail wagging I create, using the balance system to start a wag creates the biggest disturbance with voices. I gather the general impression that voices can wag there tails or at least experience dizzyness on there own, However a ghost or voice cannot keep the dizzyness going in my ears if I use simple techniques like those above to drown out the ghost's wag.

Another method you can try with ghosts is a one wag. By wagging your tail one time and repeating every 5 seconds, you can stimulate another person's tail, or a ghost. It is a complicated trick.

I also notice my spine shake like rotate in circles that I do automatically that makes my head feel like a bobble doll, this gesture can be felt while pretending to swing say a baseball bat, it will make your head dizzy without wagging your tail.

Embrace the dizzyness, embrace the wag.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: guest46746 on 12/11/2018 18:05:01
One could postulate that the bigger your tail the more it wags, A balanced wag is a thing of hypnotic beauty! lol
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 12/11/2018 19:32:21
I didn't know this could wag, and I'm still not sure it can.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coccyx
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 14/12/2018 03:44:00
There seems to be a lot of inherent pressure not to wag the tail deliberately, and if it starts to wag to make it stop quickly. Alternating a slight wobbling motion between your knees and your hands can loosen up the tailbone.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 14/12/2018 05:38:44
I haven't heard anything like this before. Are you sure it isn't all in your head?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 14/12/2018 21:09:06
I haven't heard anything like this before. Are you sure it isn't all in your head?

No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag, which should only take a short time.

Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 15/12/2018 05:49:42
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 15/12/2018 18:28:03
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?

reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 15/12/2018 19:51:22
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?

reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.
None of what you have said here, or elsewhere in the thread, makes any sense.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 16/12/2018 02:29:53
You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public

I don't buy it.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/12/2018 05:12:14
I don't buy it.

It's noticeable when your standing, say in a line at the store or at a diner checkout or a bar, as a gesture in the legs. Once you get your tail wagging you can pass it off to another person who might adjust his legs, then after a couple seconds adjust them again at which point your up to make a gesture back. Its all about emotion of thought and body language.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 16/12/2018 05:34:27
It's noticeable when your standing, say in a line at the store or at a diner checkout or a bar, as a gesture in the legs. Once you get your tail wagging you can pass it off to another person who might adjust his legs, then after a couple seconds adjust them again at which point your up to make a gesture back. Its all about emotion of thought and body language.

I'm skeptical that mere leg adjustments reveal much of anything about one's tailbone.

Do you have some reputable source for this information to back up your claims?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/12/2018 10:55:16
It's noticeable when...
It plainly isn't or someone else here would have noticed it.
Provide some evidence that you are not just making this up.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/12/2018 17:17:12
I don't now its my discovery that wagging will cause you to become dizzy, that isn't anywhere else on the net. However when I first took interest in this subject back in 2012 there was a website and still are a few that do confirm that the human tailbone does in fact still wag. I can't find them anymore.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/12/2018 21:48:22
Come back when you have evidence.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 20:44:40
So I've been fooling around with making gestures and wagging my tail in public since I wrote this. A few of the gestures I've noticed people naturally make when I stimulate there tail to wag are esp. moving their legs or adjusting the way they stand, shaking there leg, or this sort of jolt of tension through the waist that causes them to stand straight as if someone had just poked them in the back. I'll get back to you as I become less of a baby at this information.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/01/2019 20:59:19
If you just come back with this
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
Nobody will be impressed.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 16/01/2019 21:08:00
So I've been fooling around with making gestures and wagging my tail in public since I wrote this. A few of the gestures I've noticed people naturally make when I stimulate there tail to wag are esp. moving their legs or adjusting the way they stand, shaking there leg, or this sort of jolt of tension through the waist that causes them to stand straight as if someone had just poked them in the back. I'll get back to you as I become less of a baby at this information.

How would that even work? How is anyone going to see your tailbone moving through your pants in the first place?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 21:16:32
How would that even work? How is anyone going to see your tailbone moving through your pants in the first place?

Good day to you sir! Well like I said I'm only about 2 months old at watching for this, so it certainly hasn't become second nature yet. But when another person's tail starts to wag it is visibly noticeable as a circular motion in there entire waist. Almost everyone adjusts there legs pretty quickly. You can stimulate another person's tail by making gestures, or by wagging your own, and then stopping, its strange the wag will pass itself around between people.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 16/01/2019 21:22:43
But when another person's tail starts to wag it is visibly noticeable as a circular motion in there entire waist.

And how do you know that this circular motion that you see in other people is indeed due to their tail wagging?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/01/2019 22:02:52
But when another person's tail starts to wag it is visibly noticeable as a circular motion in there entire waist.
If that was anything like true, everybody would know it.
Why don't they?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 22:57:07
And how do you know that this circular motion that you see in other people is indeed due to their tail wagging?

 Because I have watched this gesture in my own waist when my tail starts wagging while standing. I believe the motion travels through your entire skeleton which is how you feel it in your balance system as a dizzyness.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 22:58:54
If that was anything like true, everybody would know it.
Why don't they?

It must be because the Michelson Morley experiment was right after all... :)
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 17/01/2019 05:51:21
Because I have watched this gesture in my own waist when my tail starts wagging while standing.

Now you need to demonstrate that tail wagging is the only thing that could cause such a gesture. Otherwise, how do you know that they aren't simply moving their waist without any kind of tail wag to accompany it? It would also be nice if you could find a video of this circular motion you say that you perceive. I'm not convinced that it isn't all in your head.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: opportunity on 17/01/2019 10:31:15
Hmmm.

Who's wagged class recently, school, maybe work?

Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 17/01/2019 19:08:10
If that was anything like true, everybody would know it.
Why don't they?

It must be because the Michelson Morley experiment was right after all... :)
OK, so you accept that you don't have a real answer.
So, presumably you take on board my point that, if it was a real effect, everyone would know about it, but they don't, so it isn't.
Since you accept that it's not a real phenomenon, we can close the thread.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 08/02/2019 05:57:27
One thing I ve definitely noticed in the past ten months since watching my tail wag make me dizzy, is if a ghost is in disagreement with me, he will sometimes wag his tail to show positive feeling over something that is defeating me. I will wag my tail along with him sometimes because I don't think he realizes what the gesture implies and I try to talk him down in the arguement.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 08/02/2019 10:24:14
One thing I ve definitely noticed in the past ten months since watching my tail wag make me dizzy, is if a ghost is in disagreement with me, he will sometimes wag his tail to show positive feeling over something that is defeating me. I will wag my tail along with him sometimes because I don't think he realizes what the gesture implies and I try to talk him down in the arguement.
I think the help you need is psychological, rather than scientific.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 14/03/2019 13:54:17
Noticed my tail wagging as a dizzynees in my ears whilst I was put on hold on the phone.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: The Spoon on 14/03/2019 14:56:47
Noticed my tail wagging as a dizzynees in my ears whilst I was put on hold on the phone.
Then you are either delusional or trolling.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 29/03/2019 13:16:48
imagining you are holding a baseball bat over your shoulder and rotating it like you're about to swing causes your tail to wag, as far as I can tell it always does a least a little.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 16/05/2019 16:36:31
In exploring if 'ghosts' can create a dizzyness in my ears, I've come to realize that when something starts to wobble, whether its my tail, my balance system, my knees, it can combine with my vision, even in the dark with my eyes closed, and cause specific spots in my vision to appear to be wobbling. I have noticed several times that this wobbling in the vision can occur on its own after I stop wagging my tail or whatever I'm doing to cause it. Although I can cause something similar voluntarily by moving my brow or squinting in and out slightly, I cannot stop the involuntary wobbling in the eyes by adjusting facial muscles it would seem. I don't think it's my focus adjusting in and out either. So I can't control this gesture entirely because I don't know it where it comes from. But I'm seriously doubtful its from a ghost anymore.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 04/12/2020 21:11:52
That emotions enter the body through the tailbone, and cause a physical reaction in your other systems is my theory. The tailbone seems to mean agreement when it wags along and disagreement when it wags opposed. The disagreemnt agreement aspect is stifled when you don't have a choice in the matter. Something like over attraction to a female that isn't met with you, or the general public's response to who you are as person. This stifling effect can lead to chronic depression. Letting your tail at ease and breathing slowly will relax, while eating can help with anxiety and depression.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 04/12/2020 21:20:50
That emotions enter the body through the tailbone, and cause a physical reaction in your other systems is my theory.
It's not a theory.

"A scientific theory is an explanation of an aspect of the natural world that can be repeatedly tested and verified in accordance with the scientific method, using accepted protocols of observation, measurement, and evaluation of results. Where possible, theories are tested under controlled conditions in an experiment."
From
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory

You have what's usually referred to as a wild ass guess or "WAG".


Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 04/12/2020 22:20:34
That emotions enter the body through the tailbone

Emotions start in the brain.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/12/2020 17:36:49
Emotions start in the brain.

Yes but I'm saying that those emotions effect you physically starting at your tailbone. Once they enter they can cause headaches, stomach anxiety, depression in the face. etc.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/12/2020 18:12:44
Yes but I'm saying that those emotions effect you physically starting at your tailbone
And you are saying ti with no evidence and in the face of others giving their well informed opinion that you are wrong.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/12/2020 18:21:24
And you are saying ti with no evidence and in the face of others giving their well informed opinion that you are wrong.

I'm sorry I should have said that the tail spins causing a gravity wave. Then you would have had more to say then your trite responses of how wrong everyone else is. perhaps I will right a poem about it.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/12/2020 18:29:33
And you are saying ti with no evidence and in the face of others giving their well informed opinion that you are wrong.

I'm sorry I should have said that the tail spins causing a gravity wave. Then you would have had more to say then your trite responses of how wrong everyone else is. perhaps I will right a poem about it.
Feel free.
Please remember that this is not a poetry site.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/12/2020 19:40:02
You can cause different physical pains resembling anxiety intentionally by wobbling the knee slightly and simultaneously moving your tailbone. Changing speeds, using pauses, and changing direction of the wobble in your knee observe how anxiety symptoms flare up in your ears, stomach, head, and coccyx.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/12/2020 20:01:12
You can cause different physical pains resembling anxiety intentionally by wobbling the knee slightly and simultaneously moving your tailbone. Changing speeds, using pauses, and changing direction of the wobble in your knee observe how anxiety symptoms flare up in your ears, stomach, head, and coccyx.
You might be able to.
The rest of us can't.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/12/2020 20:10:56
You might be able to.
The rest of us can't.

You do understand this is the new theories section don't you?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/12/2020 20:24:05
Yes.
You do understand what "Theory" means, don't you?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/12/2020 20:35:54
Yes.
You do understand what "Theory" means, don't you?

Are you just posting because you're lonely at this point? Just guessing for whom wouldn't find friendship witha crank like you.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/12/2020 20:42:07
Just guessing for whom wouldn't find friendship witha crank like you.
Do you read through your stuff before you post it?

Anyway, I'm posting to try to dilute the hogwash and increase the usefulness of the site.
Why are you doing the opposite?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 07/12/2020 21:39:46
Yes but I'm saying that those emotions effect you physically starting at your tailbone.

What's the evidence for this?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 08/03/2021 20:38:27
Yes but I'm saying that those emotions effect you physically starting at your tailbone.

What's the evidence for this?

Common  sense again, are you completely overlooking that you can feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion? And about how long have you been doing that? My evidence is common sense again, I'm not saying I get every point dead on, but the general picture is there.
The tail seems mystical and when the wag comes out of your eyes as spinning in different parts of your room it seems to play with my mind and emotions, I would associate the dizzynes coming out of different parts of the room with yelling and fear I was watching some random Facebook person in prison. This made me highly vigilante. For the first two years after figuring out my tail wagging was making me dizzy I was told to shut up about it by voices. Right now I believe that the dizzyness that comes out as a visual hallucination for me is nothing more then my tail bone wag displacing itself out my balance system and into my eyes. It stops and starts in association with typical gestures that would start and stop a tailbone wag, including breathing, eye focus, body gestures, and thought. Lately when I catch my tail wagging, I ve been able to use my thoughts to question it wagging when I want it too, and it reacts to my thoughts.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 08/03/2021 21:48:05
are you completely overlooking that you can feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?
No.
I'm pointing out that  like everyone else who has posted here except you, I can't do that.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 08/03/2021 22:01:04
are you completely overlooking that you can feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?
No.
I'm pointing out that  like everyone else who has posted here except you, I can't do that.

Can't do what? I can't coin a new term into science?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 08/03/2021 22:46:36
Can't do what?
feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?
Trevor,
People can't really do that.
Do you not understand this?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 08/03/2021 23:45:58
Common  sense again

https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Appeal-to-Common-Sense

are you completely overlooking that you can feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?

Unless you are simply referring to me tensing my buttocks muscles, I cannot do that.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Petrochemicals on 09/03/2021 02:55:25
I think you may need to have your prostate checked. It's only a blood test, no latex gloves and such. Go and have it done.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 17/07/2021 19:11:35
Can't do what?
feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?
Trevor,
People can't really do that.
Do you not understand this?

I guess you wouldn't be able to notice it if you're always spinning to emit gravity waves like Bored Chemist :)

Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 17/07/2021 19:38:41
Can't do what?
feel for your tailbone and analyze it yourself to have an opinion?
Trevor,
People can't really do that.
Do you not understand this?

I guess you wouldn't be able to notice it if you're always spinning to emit gravity waves like Bored Chemist :)


Have you noticed that nobody else has joined in with your hallucination?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 18/07/2021 21:04:29
A dizzy A day

One day
bored chemist say
I'm a dizzy
not just from what i say
or think
or something
but for no reason
what the hay?
So to make dizzyness go away
he use gravitationale waves
through his telescope
he gets the waves
and stuffs them in his ears
with a q tip
nice day!

Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: The Spoon on 18/07/2021 22:32:50
A dizzy A day

One day
bored chemist say
I'm a dizzy
not just from what i say
or think
or something
but for no reason
what the hay?
So to make dizzyness go away
he use gravitationale waves
through his telescope
he gets the waves
and stuffs them in his ears
with a q tip
nice day!


What is this idiotic, childish nonsense doing on here?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 18/07/2021 22:50:08
If I'm not mistaken, I think I actually know the sensation that Trevor is talking about. I certainly don't associate it with a wagging tail, but it does seem to radiate upwards from the tailbone and through the back.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 18/07/2021 22:55:16
What is this idiotic, childish nonsense doing on here?
The author doesn't seem equipped to do any better.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 19/07/2021 03:05:32
If I'm not mistaken, I think I actually know the sensation that Trevor is talking about. I certainly don't associate it with a wagging tail, but it does seem to radiate upwards from the tailbone and through the back.

first time for anything, are you actually agreeing with something I've said?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 19/07/2021 06:15:14
first time for anything, are you actually agreeing with something I've said?

Possibly, although it's hard to compare physical sensations between two people.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 21/07/2021 18:21:52
first time for anything, are you actually agreeing with something I've said?

Possibly, although it's hard to compare physical sensations between two people.


Do you think the tailbone is possibly connected to the mind and the emotions and that causes strange sensations?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 22/07/2021 02:33:03
Do you think the tailbone is possibly connected to the mind and the emotions and that causes strange sensations?

There are muscles anchored to the tailbone and muscles are controlled (in part) by the brain, so I guess it's possible. The range of motion is very limited compared to other joints, though. As for "strange sensations", I don't know.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 23/07/2021 18:31:47
If you stare at an object like really stare at it til it becomes blurry, while sitting comfortably your tail may start to wag. From there its a game of asking it questions to sooth it so it continues to wag. Keeping a tail wag going may mean answering things quickly as they pop up in the mind esp. from outside stimulus's and hallucination's. Talking to your tail and telling it to ignore hallucination may help. Visual hallucination of a tailbone wag dizzyness can be stopped by brething and eye focus. The mysitcal nature of your tailbone coming out your eyes can make the hallucination seem like it acts on its own. But it doesn't. It's just the trickery you have to have in thought to stop it otherwise you adjust focus or breathing which is a good way but not the way to train the mind.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 23/07/2021 19:15:30
If I'm not mistaken, I think I actually know the sensation that Trevor is talking about. I certainly don't associate it with a wagging tail, but it does seem to radiate upwards from the tailbone and through the back.
This?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisson
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 24/07/2021 00:17:21
If I'm not mistaken, I think I actually know the sensation that Trevor is talking about. I certainly don't associate it with a wagging tail, but it does seem to radiate upwards from the tailbone and through the back.
This?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisson

Ah, yes, that seems right.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 24/07/2021 00:36:39
That's well enough documented.
But...

No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?

reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.

Well that's nothing to do with reality.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Origin on 24/07/2021 14:22:02
Keeping a tail wag going may mean answering things quickly as they pop up in the mind esp. from outside stimulus's and hallucination's. Talking to your tail and telling it to ignore hallucination may help. Visual hallucination of a tailbone wag dizzyness can be stopped by brething and eye focus.
Most people do not have hallucinations unless they are on drugs or have a mental illness.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 25/07/2021 00:31:44
Keeping a tail wag going may mean answering things quickly as they pop up in the mind esp. from outside stimulus's and hallucination's. Talking to your tail and telling it to ignore hallucination may help. Visual hallucination of a tailbone wag dizzyness can be stopped by brething and eye focus.
Most people do not have hallucinations unless they are on drugs or have a mental illness.

This is true. However the tailbone may have significance beyond drugs and the mentally ill. I feel like it''s a computer gate for the emotions from the brain into the physical systems. A shunned tail is significant in feeling.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 25/07/2021 11:33:51
A shunned tail is significant in feeling.
No, it is not.
feel like it''s a computer gate for the emotions from the brain into the physical systems.
No, it is not.
However the tailbone may have significance beyond drugs and the mentally ill.
It has nothing to do with drugs or mental illness.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Just thinking on 06/08/2021 09:33:26
reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.
I will start to focus more on this now it has come to my attention I just need to look more at the tail bone. I will report back on my findings.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 15/08/2021 19:31:48
I've been giving direct commands to my tailbone to 'ignore outside stimuli' as it effects me.  I don't quite know what to expect from all this on the tailbone, other then dizzyness and anxiety being related, but I feel like I 've taken a step in directly having thoughts that are tailbone commands. My tails response feels smarter somehow.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Just thinking on 17/08/2021 22:37:19
I'm too scared to check out anyone's tail expertly the laddies their husband might sock me in the eye and if I check the men well you know what that will look like.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 23/08/2021 23:01:23
I'm too scared to check out anyone's tail expertly the laddies
You may  benefit from learning to distinguish Laddies from Ladies.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Just thinking on 23/08/2021 23:15:37
You may  benefit from learning to distinguish Laddies from Ladies.
Good one It's not me it's my spell check. That reminded me I was looking low on the horizon with my telescope and my neighbours said your not looking at my wife are you I said no I'm trying to see Uranus.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Just thinking on 23/08/2021 23:24:25
I was just thinking Elvis the pelvis would have had the answer to this question.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Origin on 24/08/2021 19:39:00
My tails response feels smarter somehow.
Perhaps that is the origin of the term 'smart ass'.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/06/2023 05:26:34
I can imagine one day a game show where two guys sitting around an old rickety piece of furniture and using their tailbone wag and gesdures gesteurs gesssstur gestures and creative thought make a creeking or cracking noise in the furniture and a judge determines if it was loud enough. Then if it creeks they can watch video to decide whose tailbone wins.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 07/06/2023 06:07:48
Also another trick that's vital to using your tailbone without going into a rabbit hole. While starring at something pay attention to something in your peripheral, after a second the object might wobble, you can change the wobbling to a general wobble of your vision by not focusing on anything, or you can use thought to ask about a specific object like 'what's in that?' and that object alone will wobble. The wobbling can sometimes originate from the center of the forehead effecting the vision. People talk to me about chakra's?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/06/2023 08:31:37
I can imagine one day a game show...
Nobody else can.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: The Spoon on 07/06/2023 09:59:43
Also another trick that's vital to using your tailbone without going into a rabbit hole. While starring at something pay attention to something in your peripheral, after a second the object might wobble, you can change the wobbling to a general wobble of your vision by not focusing on anything, or you can use thought to ask about a specific object like 'what's in that?' and that object alone will wobble. The wobbling can sometimes originate from the center of the forehead effecting the vision. People talk to me about chakra's?
Why do you persist in posting this idiotic nonsense?
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 07/06/2023 10:52:29
Why do you persist in posting this idiotic nonsense?
I think it's a medical issue.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Kryptid on 07/06/2023 21:10:07
Also another trick that's vital to using your tailbone without going into a rabbit hole. While starring at something pay attention to something in your peripheral, after a second the object might wobble, you can change the wobbling to a general wobble of your vision by not focusing on anything, or you can use thought to ask about a specific object like 'what's in that?' and that object alone will wobble. The wobbling can sometimes originate from the center of the forehead effecting the vision. People talk to me about chakra's?
Why do you persist in posting this idiotic nonsense?

Please don't call posts idiotic. It's inflammatory. You can feel free to point out problems with the reasoning, but try not to sound insulting in the process.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 14/06/2023 23:54:50
Well its what you've all been waiting for an AI translated my paper on the tailbone

Reflecting on the notion of human tailbone wagging, I've devoted considerable attention to observing any indications over the past five years. While intriguing, the idea of stimulating tail-like movement through a slight knee wobble followed by a sudden stop remains unverified. Previously, I mistakenly associated this phenomenon with schizophrenia, as the resulting dizziness seemed intertwined with auditory hallucinations. However, I now recognize that wobbling and dizzy visual experiences can stem from various sources, including the center of the forehead, inner ears, eye visions, musculoskeletal system, or even changes in breathing patterns. I've also come to realize that certain nervous gestures, like pocket paper crinkling or purposeless twitching, may arise as instinctive responses attempting to suppress the effects of tailbone wobbling. It is important to note that the natural wagging of the tailbone is associated with the release of adrenaline, which can manifest differently depending on an individual's size and the triggering circumstances. Adrenaline can induce both positive excitement and a fight-or-flight response, the latter often associated with anxiety. Viewing the brain as a computer, I've considered the possibility that the voices experienced by individuals with schizophrenia may be analogous to a disruptive 'program' that affects the balance system and leads to auditory perceptions. While this speculation is thought-provoking, it is crucial to recognize that schizophrenia can affect deaf individuals as well, implying that the balance system's role in hearing voices may be more complex. It is also worth mentioning that the spinning or vibrating nature shared by the balance system, a gyroscope, and a fan could potentially explain the heightened likelihood of auditory hallucinations when a fan is operating. As I continue to explore ways to observe control over dizzy visual hallucinations, I've found that fixing my gaze on an object for a few seconds and then shifting my attention to peripheral objects can elicit subtle wobbling effects. By consciously redirecting my mental focus between different objects in my visual field, I can gradually gain a better understanding of these experiences.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 15/06/2023 12:27:09
Previously, I mistakenly associated this phenomenon with schizophrenia,
It almost certainly wasn't a mistake.
That's why nobody else experiences the phenomenon.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Origin on 15/06/2023 14:39:40
. Previously, I mistakenly associated this phenomenon with schizophrenia, as the resulting dizziness seemed intertwined with auditory hallucinations. However, I now recognize that wobbling and dizzy visual experiences can stem from various sources, including the center of the forehead, inner ears, eye visions, musculoskeletal system, or even changes in breathing patterns.
Not being a health professional, I have no idea how to respond to posts like this.  I wonder what is the best way to respond to help the poster?  I have no idea.  I suppose this where the ignore feature comes into play... good bye.
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: trevorjohnson32 on 15/06/2023 21:17:03
anxiety
When you see or hear something that causes excitement the first involuntary thing to happen is a change in breathing. This then effects your blood oxidizing. The tailbone starts to wag and it makes your vestibular dizzy and amplify's the emotion and thoughts are effected. You can feel your vestibular get soar and your head get fuzzy which can make your stomach sick. If your stomach roars, problem solved right? ha
Title: Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
Post by: Bored chemist on 15/06/2023 21:30:03
The tailbone starts to wag
No, it does not.

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