In a recent article, we talked about how your gut is probably the most powerful muscle in your body, in addition to your brain, your heart, and your digestive tract. It’s a simple observation, but one which is true if we stop and think about it. If you’re struggling to figure out how you’re feeling about a particular topic, or how you’re feeling about something in general, it might be because your gut is telling you something.
Gut feelings are powerful because they are more immediate and immediate-to-you. They are also more accurate than our brain’s more deliberative and slow decisions. In our gut we feel what we should feel. We are not swayed if we have a bad day. Unlike our brain, our gut is not as quick to second-guess. It takes a lot longer to make the big decisions that our brain makes.
Gut feelings are powerful because they are more immediate and immediate-to-you. They are also more accurate than our brains more deliberative and slow decisions. In our gut we feel what we should feel. We are not swayed if we have a bad day. Unlike our brain, our gut is not as quick to second-guess. It takes a lot longer to make the big decisions that our brain makes.
We are not a very accurate biological indicator of our feelings. Our gut is more accurate, but also slower in its responses. In our gut we feel what we should feel. We are not swayed if we have a bad day. Unlike our brain, our gut is not as quick to second-guess. It takes a lot longer to make the big decisions that our brain makes.
While we’re talking about gut, let’s talk about our brain. Our brain is made up of billions of neurons, each of them capable of carrying signals to our organs. When we experience a pain, our brain sends a message to the spinal cord and the muscles in our body, telling them to tense up. The nervous system then sends messages to the muscles, telling them to relax. Muscle tension can then cause pain, or can be used to our advantage.
The nervous system is made up of millions of nerve cells, each cell containing millions of nerve fibers. Each nerve fiber is like a tiny electrical cable that transmits electrical impulses in the right pattern to the organ it belongs to. When someone has a pain, their nervous system sends a message to the muscles, telling them to relax. The muscles respond by firing more of their muscle fibers into muscle to relax the person. In this way, our muscles create a very positive pressure that can help us relax.
Our nerve cells are the power plants that run our autonomic nervous system. These cells are responsible for the release of hormones, chemicals, neurotransmitters, and other chemicals into our blood stream. These chemicals are responsible for our mood, body temperature, or any other function that we need to carry out every day.
There are three major types of nerve cells in our body: sensory, motor, and autonomic. So we have a sensory cell, a motor cell, and an autonomic cell. Any of these cells can fire off a “spike” in our body temperature due to the firing of the cell. When that spike hits the rest of the body and creates a sensation, we call that sensation an “autonomic spike”. Our autonomic spike is the sensation of feeling relaxed.
Haggen, our new time-looping stealth ’em up, is a game that’s based on the concept of a time loop. In a time loop, we’re stuck in the same place all day. While in a typical game, we can do a little random action to change the action we’re currently doing, in a time loop, we’re stuck in the same place.
Haggen, we wanted to take a very short break from our usual game and take a look at a game in the same vein. We saw a few trailers for the game, but since our time loop takes place in the same location for two days, we decided to look at the game in two days time loop, rather than one. That way, we can take advantage of the fact that we’re in the same place, which is why we’re playing this game.