the-haiku-bot:

death-threat-collector:

cryptic-ink:

psychoticallytrans:

feelthemonster:

I’m not a psychology researcher, but my guess would be that the nature of it being a time-limited puzzle game where you have to juggle multiple factors means that your short-term memory gets filled and the traumatic images are “dumped” in favor of remembering how many times to rotate the L piece. “As soon as possible” is probably because the sooner you do it, the less likely it is to become part of your long-term memory.

If that is true, then other time-limited activities where you have to remember and plan in a tight time frame may serve a similar purpose.

This can have an effect hours after the traumatic event happens too! All participants were treated within about 6 hours and played for a total of 20 minutes of Tetris (with at least one play time of 10 minutes straight).

Here are the links given in the screenshot:

Here is the paper that the second link uses as a source:

Trauma tetris! Line up the traumas into a row to blow them up!

Trauma tetris! Line

up the traumas into a

row to blow them up!

Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.