Saturday, July 24, 2010

MIRROR OF THE SOUL


Eyes are the mirror of the soul and Jewels of the Human Body.
Your eyes are to see what you already know. You see it so you can recall what you need to do. Your eyes are your abundance.

Eyes: Not organizing your time so that you can live in the present always.

Your eyesight deteriorates because you do not want to see how you waste time when all your outflow is concentrated on everything but the present.

Your third eye has to do with your inner visions of your soul. It shows you the direction your soul wants go. When you do not understand these visions, you go against the soul’s plan.

Eye contact is a meeting of the eyes between two individuals.
In human beings, eye contact is a form of non verbal communication and is thought to have a large influence on social behaviour. Coined in the early to mid-1960s, the term has come in the West to often define the act as a meaningful and important sign of confidence and social communication.The customs and significance of eye contact vary widely between cultures, with religious and social differences often altering its meaning greatly.

Eye contact and facial expressions provide important social and emotional information; people, perhaps without consciously doing so, probe each other's eyes and faces for positive or negative mood signs. In some contexts, the meeting of eyes arouses strong emotions.
In some parts of the world, particularly in Asia, eye contact can provoke misunderstandings between people of different nationalities. Keeping direct eye contact with a work supervisor or elderly people leads them to assume one is being aggressive and rude — the opposite reaction of most Western societies.
Eye contact is also an important element in flirting, where it may serve to establish and gauge the other's interest in some situations.
Mutual eye contact that signals attraction initially begins as a brief glance and progresses into a repeated volleying of eye contact, according to Beverly Palmer, Ph.D. and professor of psychology at California State University, Dominguez Hills.




Eye Contact and Mental Processing
A study by University of Stirling psychologists concluded that children who avoid eye contact while considering their responses to questions had higher rates of correct answers than children who maintained eye contact.One researcher theorized that looking at human faces requires a lot of mental processing, which detracts from the cognitive task at hand.Researchers also noted that a blank stare indicated a lack of understanding.
Dr. Gwyneth Doherty-Sneddon was quoted as having said,
"Looking at faces is quite mentally demanding. We get useful information from the face when listening to someone, but human faces are very stimulating and all this takes processing. So when we are trying to concentrate and process something else that's mentally demanding, it's unhelpful to look at faces."

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