When a Word Stops Feeling Real. Semantic Satiation
There is a strange little moment the mind pulls on us from time to time. You say a word over and over, something simple like apple or love or even your own name, and all of a sudden it stops feeling like a real word. It turns into a sound with no meaning behind it. That moment of slippage has a name. It is called Semantic Satiation. A fancy term for something every human has done at least once, usually without the first clue what just happened. At its core, Semantic Satiation is the brain getting tired of firing the same signal repeatedly. When you repeat a word, your brain sends that meaning along the same neural pathway again and again. After a few seconds the system gets overstimulated, something like a muscle that trembles when pushed past what it was built for. The brain pulls back. It has heard enough. The result is a momentary numbness. The meaning slips away and leaves you holding the sound alone. This is not just a quirk. It tells us something important about how meaning actua...