
Sensation: n. using one or more subsets which are (sight and/or hearing) and/or (smell and/or taste) and/or (touch and/or balance) and/or the brain processing the input given by the body senses
We sense our environment and bodies with our senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch, and balance and depend on our brain to properly process all this information and store what is necessary or relevant to our existence.
What we sense can also impact the future way that we sense because overexposure to a sense will cause boredom or insensitivity to stimuli in the future. In effect what we sense has an impact on the way we sense in the future.
The development of callouses is an example of sensations altering our bodies and becoming less sensitive to sensations in a particular area in the future. Getting tired or bored of a program which we initially thought was entertaining or exciting is an example of desensitization to repetitive eventually unrewarding experiences or stimuli.
Nothing is more predictable than change and if we are not getting enough rewards from our sensations then we look for new ones.
Being addicted to a sensation(s) is also possible and this is why it is hard to change both good and bad habit addictions which apparently are rewarding enough in your life to make you want to continue or repeat them. An adrenaline or dopamine high brought on by certain foods, drugs, and activities is a desirable sensation which our brain frequently likes and tries to repeat.
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