#kinda reinforces ''this fish is good it is my partner not like those other bastards''
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One of the cool things about human brains is that we can practice our responses to things we've never actually experienced.
Children love to play imagination games including dark and dangerous situations because it's how their brains work out a script of what to do if that ever actually happens. Adults like to read and watch and create media about horrible things, things they've never experienced (and hope never to experience) because it lets them play out and consider how they would act in that situation, laying down neural pathways for it ahead of time.
I think people who say "if you write about X happening, or like fiction where X happens, you like X" have it completely backwards tbh. People often like writing/reading/watching things about X happening not because they want it to, but precisely because they don't. Engaging with it in fiction lets their brains go "good job! you're prepared now!".
Every single time I see a take that amounts to "if you write about X happening, or like fiction where X happens, you like X" I'm reminded of this one time I was at a casual friends house as a young kid. We were in her room, pretending to "be orphans" escaping from an evil orphanage and having to take care of each other and fend for ourselves. It was all very Little Orphan Annie/All Dogs Go to Heaven and based on the 80s pop media.
And this girl's mom comes in, hears what we're playing and gets all MAD and UPSET. She says that if we play act something, it's because we want it to happen. So her daughter must WANT HER TO DIE.
First off lady, we were 6 year year olds, so take it down several notches. We barely had a concept of mortality for fucks sake. She made us feel so guilty and ashamed, because she was taking our game personally.
Now I have a 5 year old. And sometimes she looks at me and says "pretend you're dead, and I have to -" Whatever it is. Some adult task she's assigned herself.
And it's just so transparently obvious that she's practicing the idea of having to do things on her own. Which is exactly what 5 year olds are supposed to do. I actually find it very flattering that the only way she can envision me not being available to help her is to be literally deceased. Otherwise, obviously, she wouldn't have to do scary hard things alone.
It's a natural coping mechanism. She's self-soothing about what would happen if I wasn't there by play-acting independence in a perfectly safe environment. She's also practicing skills she needs, and making up excuses for practicing them on her own, without taking on the responsibility of being able to do them by herself all the time yet.
Humans mentally rehearse bad this in their brains all the time. We can do that by ruminating- going over worries over and over again, which tends to lead to anxiety and helplessness and depression. Or we can do it with a sense of play- by recognizing that the fiction is fiction and we can dip our toe into these experiences and expose ourselves to bad things without actually being injured.
My daughter does not want me dead. And I don't want bad things to happen in real life. But fiction and pretend help me face the horrors of the world and think about them without collapsing or messing myself up mentally.
#writing#also yeah so vaspider's response reminds me of something I learnt recently about apistogramma dwarf cichlids#they're territorial and form pair bonds but in tanks after a while pairs may turn on each other to the point of straight up killing#and y'know what seems to help prevent this? adding a mirror from time to time#they're built to experience conflict and violence and negative social interactions and if you deny them that they'll find it in each other#give them a mirror now and then and they both get to go absolutely screaming mad at these other fucking fish that they Hate#it's clearly stressful and aggressive and drives them mad but actually it's *good* for them from time to time#kinda reinforces ''this fish is good it is my partner not like those other bastards''#complex brains need some form of external stress sometimes or they'll find stress wherever they can#apistos evolved to live with horrible neighbours they sometimes brawl with it's a sort of calibration I guess?#they will be violent at some point they need an external factor to direct it though#I wonder whether human generalised anxiety might in some cases be a similar thing of like...without real but rare dangers present#the brain goes 'well I gotta be anxious about *something*'#and so you're having a panic attack about going to the shops for some milk#because your life does not contain enough leopards to calibrate your brain's ''when to feel flailing fear'' circuitry
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