Once upon a time in the 1980s I was in the bath listening to Samuel Barber’s “Adagio For Strings”. Then I heard my girlfriend come home. She walked in the bathroom and said uurgh! music to die to! I was surprised as I thought it was happy music.
I think this piece tends to be used in films are very tragic moments so people associate it with that and people play it at funerals because the deceased person enjoyed listening to it. I don’t think it’s a sad piece if I just listen with a clear mind though. I can have the opposite with one of Beethoven’s pieces I think Symphony 7 in A, I saw it advertised on a Classic fm most relaxing songs album but it can make me feel a bit agitated as I find it sounds quite intense. Happy music to me quite upbeat and in a major key, usually without intense dynamics. I think maybe the way people process music can be quite subjective maybe it could be dependent on neurotype, would be interesting to see if there are any studies.
Alexithymia by definition is an inability to recognise or express an emotion for example having butterflies in your stomach and thinking you’re ill when you’re actually nervous, it does sound like you have synesthesia linked to your emotions so I’m not sure if that is separate to alexithymia or could be a combination? I don’t have synesthesia so I can’t really relate. I possibly have alexithymia, I can recognise very strong emotions (mainly anger,happiness, sadness) but anything in between is neutral or I need to ponder on it for a few days at least to work out why I’m behaving a certain way (I think at those times after a lot of thinking about it at various points of the last year I ‘m usually stressed but not at exploding point)
Hi Thanks for the reply. You say to you the piece is not sad and a deceased person can enjoy listening to it. Maybe it purpose is to lift us from sadness therefore it has to be partly close to it then.
“it does sound like you have synesthesia linked to your emotions so I’m not sure if that is separate to alexithymia or could be a combination?”
That is what I am trying to find out. As I understand it Alexithymia is Greek for no words for emotions. However I experience all kinds of shades of difference in imagery so does it mean it is harder to combine the two. If so could it mean there is another explanation. That is people who are seen as having Alexithymia can be very emotional and diverse with emotions but finding words for them is more difficult.
Can relate when you say that you recognise anger, sad or happiness but anything in between you have to ponder on it.
Hi Thanks for the reply. You say to you the piece is not sad and a deceased person can enjoy listening to it. Maybe it purpose is to lift us from sadness therefore it has to be partly close to it then.
“it does sound like you have synesthesia linked to your emotions so I’m not sure if that is separate to alexithymia or could be a combination?”
That is what I am trying to find out. As I understand it Alexithymia is Greek for no words for emotions. However I experience all kinds of shades of difference in imagery so does it mean it is harder to combine the two. If so could it mean there is another explanation. That is people who are seen as having Alexithymia can be very emotional and diverse with emotions but finding words for them is more difficult.
Can relate when you say that you recognise anger, sad or happiness but anything in between you have to ponder on it.