perception and reality Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/perception-and-reality/ Dr. KarenTurnerPhD Sat, 23 May 2026 19:29:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://karenturnerphd.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cropped-Karen-Turner-logo-32x32.png perception and reality Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/perception-and-reality/ 32 32 What Do You See First? The Psychology Behind Optical Illusions and a Nimble Mind https://karenturnerphd.org/what-do-you-see-first-optical-illusion-nimble-mind/ Sat, 23 May 2026 19:27:27 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=6950 What Do You See First? A face? A bird? A bridge? Two people? The tree itself? There is something strangely compelling about optical illusions. People pause.Study them.Look again.Then…

The post What Do You See First? The Psychology Behind Optical Illusions and a Nimble Mind appeared first on Dr. KarenTurnerPhD.

]]>
What Do You See First?

A face?

A bird?

A bridge?

Two people?

The tree itself?

There is something strangely compelling about optical illusions.

People pause.
Study them.
Look again.
Then suddenly notice something they did not see a moment earlier.

And almost immediately, another person sees something entirely different.

That is what makes perception so fascinating.

Human beings often assume they are seeing reality exactly as it is.
But the brain does not simply record the world.
It interprets it.

What we notice first is shaped by:

  • experience
  • memory
  • emotional state
  • expectation
  • attention
  • personality
  • even stress levels

Two people can look at the exact same image and walk away with completely different impressions.

One immediately sees the faces.
Another notices the couple standing on the bridge.
Someone else focuses first on the bird flying overhead.
And another person sees only the landscape.

None of them are wrong.

The brain filters information constantly.

That filtering process influences not only optical illusions, but relationships, conversations, aging, identity, and emotional life itself.

Which is why exercises like these are about much more than entertainment.

They quietly reveal how the mind works.

In psychology, cognitive flexibility refers to the brain’s ability to shift perspectives, adapt to new information, and reconsider assumptions.

It is one of the most important ingredients of emotional resilience and healthy aging.

A nimble mind remains open.
Curious.
Engaged.

Not rigid.
Not emotionally frozen.
Not trapped in only one interpretation of life.

And contrary to popular belief, the aging brain is often far more capable than culture gives it credit for.

Many older adults become:

  • more intuitive
  • more emotionally perceptive
  • better at recognizing patterns
  • less reactive
  • more reflective

The brain continues adapting throughout life.

In fact, modern neuroscience increasingly supports the idea that the brain retains neuroplasticity well into older adulthood.

That means new neural connections can continue forming.
Learning can continue.
Growth can continue.

The human mind was never designed to stop evolving at a certain birthday.

But there is an important distinction between growing older and becoming mentally passive.

Those are not the same thing.

A person can age chronologically while remaining intellectually alive, emotionally curious, and psychologically engaged.

And that engagement matters.

One of the quiet dangers of later life is not simply aging itself.
It is narrowing.

Narrowing routines.
Narrowing conversations.
Narrowing experiences.
Narrowing expectations.

Many people slowly stop challenging the brain without even realizing it.

Life becomes repetitive.
Predictable.
Mentally smaller.

But the brain thrives on stimulation.

Not frantic overstimulation.
Not endless noise.
Not constant distraction.

Meaningful stimulation.

Curiosity.
Reading.
Conversation.
Creativity.
Reflection.
Problem solving.
Novelty.

Even a simple optical illusion invites the brain to pause and search differently.

It asks the mind to reconsider what it thought it was seeing.

That process is psychologically healthy.

Because flexibility is not only cognitive.
It is emotional too.

People who remain psychologically flexible often cope better with change, uncertainty, transitions, and aging itself.

They are more capable of adjusting when life shifts unexpectedly.

And life always shifts.

There is also something deeply symbolic about these illusions.

Sometimes what matters most is hidden in plain sight.

A person can spend decades moving quickly through life without fully noticing themselves.

Always managing responsibilities.
Always caretaking.
Always adapting to everyone else’s needs.

Then later in life, they suddenly begin seeing things they overlooked for years:

  • exhaustion
  • loneliness
  • longing
  • creativity
  • wisdom
  • emotional truth
  • the desire for peace
  • the need for boundaries

Sometimes the hidden image is not in the picture.

Sometimes it is within ourselves.

Perhaps that is why these illusions resonate so strongly.

They remind us that perception can change.

And when perception changes, life often changes too.

A nimble brain is not necessarily the fastest brain.

It is the brain willing to remain open.

Open to growth.
Open to learning.
Open to reexamining old assumptions.
Open to seeing life differently.

That kind of flexibility becomes increasingly valuable with age.

Because growing older should never require becoming psychologically smaller.

The goal is not simply preserving memory.
It is preserving curiosity.

The willingness to keep noticing.
Keep questioning.
Keep exploring.

To stay mentally alive to the world.

So…

What did you see first?

And what else might become visible when the mind remains curious enough to keep looking?

The post What Do You See First? The Psychology Behind Optical Illusions and a Nimble Mind appeared first on Dr. KarenTurnerPhD.

]]>