Take a look at the picture below, which one is longer?
Yes, you’re right. B looks longer.
What about the following picture?
This time, the upper one, A, looks longer.
In fact, they are the same (stop rubbing your eyes!)
This is known as the Jastrow illusion, discovered by psychologist Joseph Jastrow, who found that when two identical figures are placed next to each other, they appear to be different in size. The cause is still unknown, but the most common explanation is because our brain is confused by the difference in length between the small and the large radius.
So, you may wonder what about Jastrow illusion that has anything to do with your life?
Background story:
I was busy cooking and laying out two same size plates, with the exact same position as the first picture, to fit my stir-fried broccoli and teriyaki chicken, and I saw the illusion. Boom!
This is not about how I learned how to cook, but it’s about the similarity to the “grass-is-greener-on-the-other-side” mindset.
Imagine if you were “A” in the first picture, you would think B is larger and longer. However, If you were “A” in the second picture, voila, seems like you’ve won the race.
Fact is, there’s no race.
You think the person standing next to you has a better life and career, but the person actually thinks you are the one in the front. If you are comparing your weaknesses to others’ strengths, of course you feel defeated. But if you compare strengths with each other (I doubt if it’s even comparable since we all have unique backgrounds and strengths), you all might just be on the same page.
Where you are doesn’t define who you are.
Ask yourself if you’re making the wrong comparison, or is there even a meaning in comparison. Sometimes we just need to pull ourselves away and examine the Jastrow illusion from afar.
Originally published at medium.com