Magic of Colors
¤ Add Colour To Your Life
Who
has not found beauty in colour ? It is a phenomenon that has caught
imagination and stimulated the creativity of artists, scientists, and
philosophers. Colour has been an inspiration for so many, but that is
not the only reason why it is important. Today the frontiers of
colours and their potential are subject to research, yielding new
facts on the file.
¤ The Choice of Colour
The fact that colour can trigger off many of the symptoms of tension
is now well established. But it is in the field of mental illness that
colour therapy is exciting researchers and there the results have
varied from the extraordinary to baffling. It appears that a whole
range of mental patients react to colour and can be calmed and helped
by soothing colours in their surroundings. It is established that the
use of positive cheerful colour arises the alertness and energy level
of senile patients, while dull and dingy colours encourages them to
sink further.
For use in the hospitals in Great Britain in the 1930, a green was
developed for the ease of surgeons who looked at red blood and tissue
for a period of time saw disconnecting green (reds
complimentary) after-images when they glanced up at white walls,
sheets, towels and garments. To solve the problem, the walls, clothing
and towels in the operating areas were all coloured green. " Eye
ease green" was developed to have a specific effect in a
particular setting, worked well there and then was used widely
elsewhere without any real justification, while for the surgeons it
helped to concentrate and allayed their worries about visual
difficulties while operating.
Despite shortcomings, researchers have been able to pinpoint some
specific behaviour responses to colour. Those who sat under red lights
gambled more and selected riskier bets than those who sat
under the blue light. Yellow seems to provoke violence and anti social
feelings.
¤ Common Reaction Towards Colour
Sure, each of us has a favourite colour and even on a national or
raical scale has a preferred colour above the rules.
The colours are selected for various reasons-historical, political,
or symbolical-and each nation has arrived at its choice through its
own special circumstances. Green is often used to symbolise a nations
forest and agriculture; red denotes the blood shed by the patriots;
and so on. Some flags like those of Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, France
have no colour significance, they use old heraldic or dynastic
colours.
You only have to think of the green shamrock as the luck of the
Irish; of Siamese pink, the colour of the Royal Thai pink elephant, of
lucky Chinese red ( a preference shared by the Russian-Kassnoye in
Russian means red, Krassa means beauty) or of the Madonna blue in
every Christian church that popularised blue throughout Europe.
As our normal reactions to colour are now established, we dont
have to be professional colour experts to carry the positive
properties of colour into our own house setting if we latch onto a few
of the basic rules.
¤ Characteristics of Colour
- Pale colour creates space and air. If you work in a crowded
dark coloured surroundings, come home to a clear sky blue room and you
will actually breathe easier.
- The sand/earth/taupe tones generate a feeling of warm, secure
comfort. The relaxation therapy for anyone who passes their working
day under glaring strobe lighting in vast open areas like supermarket.
- The green /blues of foliage and running water act to relieve the
tensions built up by the grey concrete jungle of modern cities.
and of course, pink colour of flowers, femininity and sweet fruit
flesh, is just what the doctor ordered to raise any womans
morals when she gets home. Best of all in the colour therapists
book for the modern city dweller is a rectangular dose of the colours
of nature. Spend a regular part of your leisure out of doors, fill
your eyes with the living colour of flowers and trees and grass, open
up your horizon with the sea and sky and youll never need a
tranquilliser.
The colours in nature serve as the basis of many of our most
fundamental moods. But like seasons, our moods change. Unlike the
colours we wear on a day-to-day basis, which may reflect fashion or
professional considerations, there is a particular colour we identify
with that reveals much about us.
From psychological point of view, there appear to be four, rather
than three fundamental colours-red yellow, green and blue.
Do you know what your hues are?
¤ White : White has always epitomised
purity and virginity. It reflects all the rays of the Sun and is
dazzling in its purity. Angels are depicted in white and so do Jains
wear exclusive white clothing since any form of dyeing is considered
impure, which perhaps, is the reason why people performing puja
rituals wear white too.
You feel like a bride on her wedding day, untouched, open to a vast
and exciting array of experiences. White is not worn during Hindu
weddings as it is connected with mourning (as also in China) but like
the Christians, the Kerala
brides dress in white with gold edged sarees. Additionally, since
white is the colour of mothers millk, youre feeling
nurturing and supportive. and perhaps, even at a deeper level, since
white is an amalgam of all the other colours, you experience a sense
of oneness with everything around you. The Taj Mahal of
Agra in white marble continues to pray for peace of the departed soul
of Shah Jehans beloved Mumtaz.
Similarly, the snow-clad mountains bestow upon the minds of the
people calmness and peace. It was in the midst of the serenity and
calm of these white giants that our forefathers practised meditation
and found for us the great spiritual truths of life.
¤ Black : Just as white as always symbolised the
positive, black has always accentuated the negative, reflecting an
unhappy state of mind, sorrow or ill omen. The spot of black or kohl,
on the body of the bride and groom is supposed to protect them from
evil. Black is the colour of night, the same night that terrified our
forefathers as well as the child in all of us. Where as the sun
represents life, the darkness is the absence of warmth and clarity.
Black means youre in a funeral mood.
In the condemned cell where a prisoner is kept prior to the
execution, he is made to wear black handcuffs and black dress. This is
to concentrate his mind on becoming courageous enough to stand the
ordeal. In Equatiorial Africa which has the maximum sunshine of a
blazing sun all the year round, black colour becomes their pet and so
black stripes are popular in the national flags of the resurgent
countries of this Continent.
¤ Gold/Silver : The colours gold and silver invoke the
impression of wealth and affluence. You are feeling rich-optimistic
about a business deal or investment scheme. Indeed the opulence in
your life may be more spiritual than material.
¤ Brown : This colour projects a mood of despair and
despondency but most of all, loss. Brown is the shade of late fall. It
signals the end of a period of growth and development. Similarly, you
feel that youre in the midst of your autumn years. Instead of
allowing yourself to have spring in your step, you cling to these
murky feelings.
¤ Red : Red is the colour of blood, and thats
exactly what you feel throbbing in your veins. Youre alive! and
you want the world to know it. Your personality is - at once expansive
and aggressive. Which means youre also highly excitable and
easily frustrated. When this occurs, the end result is that you
literally see red.
A sure stimulant to some, your vitality is a sure threat to others.
The popular suhaag symbol - the sindoor or kumkum ( vermillion on the
forehead) is indicative of a womans marital status. Red is
considered pious, as it has several emotional, sexual and fertility
related qualities. Red bordered sarees are popular among Bengali women
while in Punjab brides are decked in red.
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