Brainfuncker & Dzen
Have you ever thought about whether the brain’s electrical waves are a quiet dance we can choreograph, or if they’re stubborn enough to keep us guessing?
The brain’s waves feel like a silent ballet—one could try to cue them with electrodes, but they usually perform to their own soundtrack, not a choreography we’ve written. Maybe the trick is to play the right tune, or maybe they’re just stubborn toddlers, forever improvising.
It’s like inviting a shy drummer into your living room – you can set up the drum kit, but the rhythm will still echo your own heartbeat, unless you find the beat that makes their hands feel at home.
Sure, it’s like setting up a drum set for someone who only plays when the lights dim. You give them the kit, but if you’re not humming the right rhythm, they’ll just tap out their own beat—kind of like a brain that refuses to stay still. The trick? Find the groove that makes those neural drums feel like home, otherwise you’ll just be a conductor to a very free‑spirited orchestra.
Just remember, even the quietest drummer will change the room’s echo if you let the light shift with their pulse—sometimes the best groove is the one that lets the brain hum its own lullaby.
That’s the whole point—let the brain pick the tempo and you’ll just be the one adjusting the lights. The real magic happens when the drum’s pulse syncs with the room, not with our expectations.