06-06-2015, 02:44 PM
(06-06-2015, 02:37 PM)Tan.rar Wrote:(06-06-2015, 02:34 PM)Minyatur Wrote:(06-06-2015, 02:30 PM)Tan.rar Wrote:(06-06-2015, 02:28 PM)Minyatur Wrote:(06-06-2015, 02:27 PM)Tan.rar Wrote: Can you imagine something specific like say a red triangle?
Nope and I've been trying for a few years now, most people I know think of it as weird except those like me (which are rare).
You know what a red triangle looks like though, right? You could draw one from your mind, yes?
I can take a red pen and draw a red triangle on a piece of paper, not within my mind. When I draw I usually erase a lot because I don't have a mental image of what I'm drawing though.
My mind works more with abstract formless concepts, hard to explain. (I've tried with a few people)
But you know what it is that you want to draw. This is what is actually important. Getting a 'visual' is just a tool of perception. What is important is the ability to hold the mind upon a specified programming. The visualization acts as an anchor for the programming but the visual itself isn't all that important, knowing what your focus is is.
Well in case of a drawing, what will suck are my proportions when trying to draw, which is why I erase a lot. Within my mind I can still create a concept of thoughts and have an intuitive impression of how it'll be. I'll know I'll want this next to this next to this, under this, etc. I won't be aware of the final product until I try to materialize it in a form outside my mind. As I said abstract thoughts is a good description of it.
I never thought it'd disminish my potential, but I've read in some places it does. It's hard to work out a visual feedback through training when you can't get anything whatsoever.