Synesthesia is when someone sees colors or shapes when they hear sounds, like music or words.
Imagine you're eating your favorite candy, it's red and sweet. Now imagine that every time you hear the word red, you see a bright red shape in your mind, just like your candy. That’s what synesthesia feels like for some people. They mix senses together, hearing becomes seeing, or tasting becomes feeling.
How It Works
Think of your brain as a busy playground where different groups play together. In most kids, the group that hears music stays in one corner, and the group that sees colors stays in another. But for someone with synesthesia, those two groups sometimes join forces, so when they hear a song, the color group starts playing too, making them see colors while listening.
A Real Example
If you have a friend who always draws happy faces when they hear laughter, or feels softness inside their chest when they hear a gentle voice, that’s like having synesthesia, it's how their brain mixes things up in a fun and special way.
Examples
- An artist draws shapes that make them feel different emotions.
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See also
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- Do We All See The Same Colors?
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