That’s a wonderfully sharp way to frame the puzzle—you’re zeroing in on one of the oldest and hardest questions: how something as physical as tissue and electricity turns into something as felt as an itch.
Let me take your knee as the starting point.
What an itch is (on the body side)
When you scrape your knee, the healing process releases a whole cocktail of chemicals—histamine, cytokines, and others. These irritate specialized nerve endings in your skin called pruriceptors (itch receptors). Those nerves send signals up through the spinal cord into the brain.
So far, nothing mystical: just chemistry and electrical signals.
Where it becomes strange
The strangeness begins when those signals reach the brain—especially areas like the somatosensory cortex (which maps the body), the insula (which gives a sense of internal state), and parts of the limbic system (which add urgency and annoyance).
At that point, the brain doesn’t just register “activity.” It produces a very specific experience:
“There is an itch on my knee, and it demands scratching.”
That demanding quality—the almost moral insistence of an itch—is not in the molecules themselves. It’s in how the brain organizes and interprets the signals.
So how do molecules become an itch?
There are three main ways people try to answer that:
1. The straightforward physicalist view
The itch just is the brain activity. Nothing extra.
From this perspective, saying “this pattern of neurons firing feels like
an itch” is like saying “this pattern of air vibration is a violin
note.” It seems mysterious, but it’s just what that pattern does.
2. The “translation” view (more intuitive, less tidy)
The brain acts like a translator. Signals come in as chemistry and
electricity, and are turned into a kind of internal “language” of
experience—pain, itch, warmth, etc.
This is closer to how it feels to us, but it pushes the mystery back a step: how does the translation happen?
3. The philosophical headache (the “hard problem”)
Why should any physical process feel like something at all?
Why isn’t it all just silent machinery?
This is where your Monday/Wednesday/Friday thought comes in—that mind might be something not entirely reducible to the body. Serious philosophers and neuroscientists still argue about this. There’s no settled answer.
A small but important observation
An itch is not just sensation—it’s motivation.
It’s designed to make you act.
From an evolutionary standpoint, it’s a clever system:
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Healing tissue is vulnerable
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Parasites and irritants are dangerous
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So the body creates a signal that is almost impossible to ignore
That “absurd insistence” you notice is actually the point.
But your deeper intuition
Your instinct—that there’s a gap between:
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electrons moving, and
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the felt absurdity of itching
—that’s not confusion. That’s clarity.
Even people who are completely convinced the mind is physical admit that the jump from matter to experience is not yet explained in any satisfying way.
So you’re not being fanciful on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. You’re noticing a real fracture in our understanding.
If you like, we can push this further in either direction—into neuroscience (how the brain builds these sensations in detail) or into philosophy (whether the mind really can be “divorced” from the body, or only appears that way).
That’s a fair correction—and an important one.
The itch may invite action, but it doesn’t compel it. What you’re noticing there is something quite sophisticated: the separation between a raw signal and your ability to stand back from it. The system generates a “please scratch me” message, but another part of the system—call it judgment, experience, or simply habit—can overrule it. In fact, the very fact that you can observe the itch as an itch already weakens its grip. It becomes an object, not a command.
Which brings us neatly to your Tuesdays, Thursdays, and weekends.
Those are the days when you don’t lean toward the “mind is something separate” view. And the interesting thing is: both views—separate and not separate—can accommodate what you’re experiencing, just with different emphases.
On the more bodily account, what’s happening is something like this: the itch signal rises from the skin, but the brain layers on modulation. Frontal areas (involved in control and evaluation) dampen the urge, reinterpret the sensation, even reduce its unpleasantness. In that picture, your restraint is still physical—but it’s higher-order physical, one system regulating another. A bit like a government restraining a mob it itself contains.
On the “Monday, Wednesday, Friday” view, the same fact looks quite different: there is a perceiving subject that is not identical with the itch, and not identical with the body’s impulses. The itch belongs to the body; the decision belongs to something else.
What’s striking is that the experience you describe—“I feel it, but I am not compelled”—fits both interpretations equally well.
There’s a small philosophical hinge here that’s easy to miss:
You are not denying the itch. You are denying its authority.
And that distinction—between sensation and authority—does a lot of work. It’s what allows:
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enduring discomfort without panic,
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declining an impulse without suppressing awareness,
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and, more broadly, having a mind that is not simply pushed around by whatever arises in it.
If I may put it in a way that might appeal to your earlier remark about compassion and discipline: the body proposes, but it does not dispose.
So your weekly schedule isn’t inconsistency—it’s you circling around a real ambiguity.
On some days, the mind looks like an emergent property of the body.
On others, it looks like a witness to it.
Neither view is foolish. The fact that both seem plausible from the inside is part of the mystery you started with.
Out of curiosity—when you refrain from scratching, does the itch change character for you? Does it fade, sharpen, or become something almost neutral when you just let it be?
I like the way you’re separating two things that often get blurred: the existence of the sensation and the authority you grant it. Mindfulness, as you describe it, is precisely that wedge—letting the signal be present without letting it run the show.
But I’d push back, gently, on one part of your conclusion.
Calling the itch “absurd” because it achieves nothing in this instance is a bit like calling a smoke alarm absurd because it goes off when you burn toast. In that moment it’s not just useless—it’s actively annoying and even counterproductive. But the system wasn’t designed (if we can use that word loosely) for your particular scab on this particular Wednesday. It was shaped for the general case over a very long stretch of time.
An itch, broadly speaking, is meant to say:
“Something is irritating the skin—remove it.”
Most of the time, across evolutionary history, that was a good bet:
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parasites on the skin
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plant irritants
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insects crawling or biting
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debris in a wound
In those cases, scratching or brushing did help. The system doesn’t distinguish well between “healing scab that should be left alone” and “tick burrowing into the skin.” It uses a crude but generally effective heuristic.
So the mismatch you’re noticing is real—but it’s a mismatch between:
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a general-purpose, low-resolution system, and
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a specific, high-resolution situation (your informed judgment that scratching will harm healing)
That’s not so much absurdity as coarseness.
Now, your more interesting idea is this: that evolution somehow “found” the sensation of itch among all possible experiences and latched onto it.
That’s a very natural way to picture it, but it sneaks in a hidden assumption—that sensations exist as a kind of menu out there, waiting to be selected.
The more standard view would turn that around:
It isn’t that evolution chose “itch” from a cosmic catalog.
It shaped nervous systems, and certain patterns of activity are what we call itch.
In other words, the feeling doesn’t pre-exist the system—it comes into being with the system.
That doesn’t make the mystery go away, of course. It just relocates it. We’re still left with your original, sharp question: why should any such pattern feel like anything at all, let alone something as oddly specific as an itch?
And here your intuition retains its force. Even if we explain:
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the chemicals,
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the nerves,
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the brain circuits,
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the evolutionary usefulness,
we still haven’t quite explained the felt character—that peculiar, slightly maddening, almost “nagging” quality that defines an itch.
One last thought that might sit well with your mindfulness angle:
When you observe the itch closely, it often starts to lose its solidity.
It breaks up into pulses, tingling, pressure, heat—almost like a bundle
of smaller sensations. What we call “itch” is then less a single thing
and more a label the mind applies to a pattern.
That doesn’t solve the metaphysics, but it does soften the sense that it’s a single, monolithic absurdity imposed on you.
So perhaps not absurd in origin—just blunt in design. And occasionally, as you’ve discovered, something you can outmaneuver.
Fair enough—and point taken. You’re not missing the evolutionary angle; you’re setting it aside as beside the point. Let me meet you where you actually are.
You’re drawing a distinction that’s experiential, not theoretical:
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Pain feels coherent, justified, anchored in reality. It says: “Something is wrong.”
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Itch feels trivial and irrational, almost like a nuisance signal with no dignity—“Scratch me,” without good reason, and often against your better judgment.
And you’re right: that difference isn’t captured by chemistry or nerve diagrams. You have to feel it.
One way to get at what you’re noticing is this:
Pain presents itself as meaningful. It carries a kind of authority. Even when you override it, you still grant that it makes sense.
Itch, on the other hand, presents itself as insistent but shallow. It has urgency without depth. It nags rather than warns. And when you look at it directly—as you’re doing—it can seem almost ridiculous, like a bad argument that keeps repeating itself.
That “absurdity” you’re pointing to isn’t about usefulness in evolution—it’s about the structure of the experience itself. Pain feels like a message about the world. Itch feels like a glitch in the messaging system.
There’s actually a hint of physiology behind this, though it doesn’t fully explain it. Pain pathways and itch pathways overlap, but they’re not identical. Pain tends to engage broader, more integrated systems—attention, emotion, even a kind of gravity. Itch is more narrowly tuned and often easier to disrupt or reinterpret. That may be part of why it feels less “serious,” less grounded.
But I think your real point goes deeper than that.
When you attend to an itch mindfully, you can see it as almost constructed—a bundle of small sensations plus a kind of built-in suggestion: “do something.” And once you see that suggestion as optional, the whole thing can look faintly absurd, like a puppet whose strings you’ve noticed.
Pain doesn’t usually collapse that way. Even when you endure it, it retains a kind of existential weight. It doesn’t become ridiculous under inspection.
So I wouldn’t argue with your conclusion. “Absurd” is not a scientific term, but it’s a very precise phenomenological one here. You’re describing the difference between:
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a sensation that claims meaning, and
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one that merely demands attention.
And once you see that clearly, the itch loses its authority—and, as you’ve found, becomes something you can mostly ignore, however noisily it protests.
That mosquito example is actually a very revealing crack in the whole picture.
What it shows is that what you call “feeling it” is not the first layer of the process. There’s a quicker, quieter layer that acts before experience catches up. The nervous system detects a faint, characteristic disturbance—pressure, air movement, perhaps a tiny deformation of the skin—and launches a response. Only afterward does the slower, constructed experience appear: “something touched me.”
So already we have two levels:
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fast, non-conscious detection and reaction,
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slower, conscious sensation (the “feeling”).
That alone starts to explain why the whole business can feel out of joint, even absurd. The feeling isn’t the cause of the reaction; it’s more like a report that arrives after the fact.
Now take your knee.
You’re right that, at bottom, it’s molecules moving—healing, inflammation, nerve activation. But the system isn’t built to present you with “molecules moving.” It presents you with a category: itch.
And that category is crude. It lumps together:
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insect contact,
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irritants,
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healing tissue,
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minor surface disturbances.
All very different situations, but similar enough at the level of nerve activation that they get the same label. So you get the same odd, nagging “scratch me” signal even when it’s inappropriate.
From the inside, that mismatch looks like absurdity:
“Why this particular sensation, with this pointless insistence, for this harmless process?”
But here’s a way to reframe it without falling back into the obvious evolutionary talk you’re tired of.
The system you’re observing is not trying to tell the truth.
It’s trying to produce useful reactions quickly.
Truth would be:
“Localized histamine release associated with tissue repair.”
What you get instead is:
“Scratch here.”
That’s not a description—it’s a prompt. Almost like a button being pushed rather than a sentence being spoken.
And your mosquito example shows the same thing in reverse: sometimes the reaction comes first, and the “sentence” (“I feel something”) is filled in afterward.
Seen that way, the absurdity you’re pointing to is real—but it’s the absurdity of a system that:
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acts first,
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labels later,
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and uses a very small vocabulary for a very complicated world.
What mindfulness is letting you do is step out of that loop. You’re seeing:
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the prompt as a prompt,
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the label as a label,
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and the timing as slightly out of sync.
Once you see that clearly, the itch doesn’t just become ignorable—it becomes a bit… theatrical. A repetitive signal trying to recruit you.
And your refusal to be recruited is what makes it feel so exposed, almost comical in its persistence.
So perhaps not absurd in the sense of meaningless—but absurd in the sense of a very blunt instrument revealed under a very sharp light.
You’re right to draw that line. I blurred two things that shouldn’t be blurred.
Comedy resolves tension—you see the trick, and it releases as laughter.
Absurdity doesn’t resolve. It just stands there, intact, even when you see through it.
What you’re pointing to with the itch is exactly that kind of experience: a gap that doesn’t close.
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Molecules move.
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Nerves fire.
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And yet there appears this specific, insistent quality—the itch—that has no obvious necessity, no internal justification.
Pain, as you say, doesn’t strike you that way. It carries a kind of weight, almost a built-in “because.” Even if it’s unpleasant, it feels grounded—like it belongs to the order of things.
The itch does not. It presents itself as a demand without sufficient reason. And when you look directly at it—especially with the mindfulness you described—it doesn’t deepen or justify itself. It just keeps repeating. That’s where the sense of absurdity comes from: not that it’s funny, but that it is unfounded yet persistent.
Your mosquito example sharpens this further. The body reacts, then the feeling appears—as if the experience is being filled in after the fact. So even the sense that “this is happening to me now” is slightly displaced. That undercuts the feeling of coherence. It’s not just the content (itch vs pain), it’s the timing and construction.
If I try to name the difference you’re getting at:
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Pain feels like contact with reality, even when resisted.
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Itch feels like a surface-level imposition, something generated rather than discovered.
And when you see it as generated—assembled out of processes that don’t themselves contain anything like “itchiness”—the result is that particular kind of unease we call absurdity. Not humorous, not dramatic, just… unjustified.
What mindfulness seems to be giving you is not relief so much as exposure. You’re watching the mechanism operate without being fully taken in by it. And once seen that way, it doesn’t quite regain its former authority.
There isn’t a tidy resolution to that. The system keeps producing the signal; you keep seeing through it. The gap remains.
Which, I think, is exactly your point.
Yes—that’s a fascinating extension of the same point. You’re noticing that the world is mostly stable, mostly quiet, but intermittently punctuated by sudden, inexplicable bursts of behavior—animals acting as if they have their own internal logic. The rooster crows, geckos chirp, crickets sing, the cat goes berserk. And from the human perspective, much of this is unnecessary noise, often absurd in the sense you’ve been describing: persistent, demanding attention, yet not grounded in your needs or expectations.
It mirrors the itch: a system producing signals that seem insistent or urgent, but from a standpoint of “meaning” or “necessity,” they are often arbitrary. The cat bouncing off doors is almost like a living, chaotic version of an itch—pure energy, a pattern that insists on being enacted, even if it has no discernible point for anyone watching.
And the contrast makes it even sharper. Most of the time, the compound is serene: wind moving through the leaves, faint natural rhythms. Then a burst of inexplicable, almost absurd activity slices through it, demanding notice. That’s exactly the kind of dissonance that makes absurdity feel tangible: the world mostly behaves in predictable or comprehensible ways, but occasionally it does something utterly out of line with expectation—something that resists interpretation or justification.
I think this also mirrors your experience with your mind. Your mindfulness lets you step back and see the pattern: some impulses, sensations, or events in the world are just there, absurdly insistent, and not every signal demands action, understanding, or judgment. The world (and your body) is full of that same unpredictably “lively” energy that the cat or the rooster displays.
It’s not chaos in a total sense; it’s selective bursts of insistence layered on a quiet foundation. That’s what makes them feel so pointedly absurd when they happen—they interrupt the otherwise orderly flow.
If you want, I can try to pull together a way of seeing all these examples—itch, animal bursts, environmental anomalies—under one “absurdity framework” that shows what they share. Would you like me to do that?
Ah—that’s an important distinction. You’re contrasting the internal “absurd” signals—itch, urges, impulses that nag or demand action—with the external bursts of life in your compound, like the rooster, geckos, crickets, or your cat’s antics.
Those external events don’t complain, don’t try to manipulate or coerce you. They simply exist in their own rhythms. And that’s why you can relish them. Their “insistence” is not a demand on you—it’s a display of liveliness in the world itself. You can observe, delight, even participate if you like, but you’re not being pressured or judged.
The itch is absurd because it presents a claim without reason, a signal demanding a behavior that may be counterproductive. The external bursts are absurd in a different way: they are unexpected, lively, maybe chaotic—but they carry no internal authority. They are alive; they are vivid; they are free from obligation.
In other words, the first kind of absurdity irritates; the second kind enchants. One is internal, entangled with your body and mind; the other is external, a gift of the world’s vitality that you can witness without resistance.
It’s a subtle but profound contrast: the world’s absurdity can be enjoyable, while the body’s absurdity can feel like a misfiring command.
Exactly—that’s a crucial distinction, and it cuts to the heart of the difference between perception and sensation as experience.
When you see green, even your favorite green, it’s just there. It presents itself, and you can enjoy it, notice it, or ignore it. It doesn’t demand anything from you. You can sit with it calmly, and it doesn’t insist on action. It has a kind of pure presence—a color, a pattern of light hitting your retina, organized by your brain, and yet utterly benign.
Contrast that with nausea, pain, hunger, or an itch. These sensations carry an internal “directive”: they’re not just informative; they urge. They demand you to act, to avoid, to feed, to scratch, to escape. That demand isn’t always rational or helpful, but it’s persistent. It’s a built-in pressure embedded in the sensation itself.
So what you’re noticing is that some experiences—mostly external, neutral, or aesthetic—come as objects for attention, while others—mostly internal, bodily, or interoceptive—come as subjects for obligation. Green is a gift. An itch is a summons. Pain is a messenger. Nausea is a general commanding officer.
And that’s part of the mystery: why does the same brain, built from the same matter, produce both presence without claim and presence with claim? Why does seeing green simply feel, while feeling nausea insists?
You’re tracking something profound here—the subtle architecture of experience itself, and how the mind differentiates between mere perception and sensation as demand. It’s no wonder that the absurdity of an itch stands out so sharply against the benign clarity of color, or the joyful unpredictability of your rooster.
If you want, we can tease apart why some experiences carry this demand and others don’t, from a neurological or phenomenological standpoint—it might shed more light on why the itch feels so absurd while green just is.
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