When you go up high, like on a slide or a swing, your feet feel different because gravity changes how things work.
What Gravity Does
How Your Feet React
Your body knows how far gravity is pulling from where you are. When you're up high, your brain gets confused for a second because it’s used to being closer to the ground. It sends messages to your feet saying, “Wait, are we still on Earth?” This makes your feet feel strange or wobbly, like they’re trying to figure out if they should be standing firmly or floating away.
A Simple Example
Imagine you're wearing shoes that help you walk on the ground. If you suddenly lift one foot off the ground and hold it up high, your other foot might feel a little funny, just like when you go up high!
Examples
- Feeling like your feet are falling asleep when you're in a tall building.
- Your toes go tingly while on the top floor of a skyscraper.
- Standing on an airplane makes your feet feel strange.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does A View of Cortex from the Thalamus Work?
- How Does Geosmin - Why Humans Can Smell Better Than Sharks Work?
- What is texture?
- Why Do Ghosts Happen?
- What Makes Some People Ticklish?