www.ynhh.org/healthlink/mentalhealth/index.htmlThis is a link to "Transcranial electromagnetic stimulation" which is one way to quiet an overactive mind - or so it would seem. I tried it using a Radio Shack Bulk Tape Cassette Eraser and everything inside my head quieted down or shut up - normally the way I like to operate between problems or episodes of brain flatulence. One theory of this is that the influence polarizes everything into a collectively neutral state - like electroshock therapy, but without the bite.
If images are confused by to much inner psycho-babble, this might help.
Bets - The images we see everywhere are interpretations. The actual object occurs somewhere in the "outside", and only when active can it be sensed - for example, bouncing light off it that hits our retinas, and the patterns of light change (or we do) - else we can't sense it at all. A relationship that is totally unchanging is not available to be sensed by people nor by machines. When you ask whether the images are "symbols", or whether they are "things", it turns out that they are nether.
A study of autistic and normal art students quickly points out that the autistics draw a batter representation of the model. Normals can approximate that by inverting the image, and drawing it in its inverted perspective. This works even better if the non-dominant hand is used.
Both methods isolate the art from the conceptualization that we form about the model. Autistics don't generalize, so they draw the model dispassionately. Normals generalize, integrate and correlate and eventually they come up with a mental concept of what they are supposed to do. Then they draw the concept. Not only is there a strong tendency to produce what we expect, but at least in my case, I also draw in the visual astigmatism with which I perceive it.
When we try to bring in any kind of "understanding", we spoil the process (I trust that Juditha will verify this). So whatever those things are that you are getting as you practice, those are the ones.
dave