Where you are changes how you think.
Most people overlook this. They assume their state comes only from inside — thoughts, emotions, personal history. But environment is always shaping perception, long before conscious thought appears.
Every place carries a pattern of stimuli: light, sound, space, movement, density. These factors influence the nervous system directly. A cramped, noisy space narrows attention. Open land widens it. Artificial urgency tightens perception. Natural rhythm loosens it.
Psychogeography, in this sense, isn’t mystical. It’s practical awareness of how place affects perception.
In this field transmission, I explore:
what field awareness actually means
how environments shape attention before thought
why modern life encourages environmental blindness
how screens and artificial inputs collapse spatial awareness
and how reconnecting with space steadies perception
When awareness collapses inward, perception becomes abstract. You live in thought rather than in space. Reintroducing field awareness brings perception back into balance. The nervous system settles because the environment is being registered rather than ignored.
This recording was made outdoors, in open countryside. Not as a metaphor, but because space itself changes internal state. Distance, depth, and natural sound alter perception in measurable ways.
This week’s work is simple:
change one environment deliberately.
Step outside. Walk somewhere open. Sit without headphones or media. Notice how attention, mood, and clarity shift when space replaces confinement.
Field awareness isn’t escapism.
It’s recalibration.
New field transmissions drop Thursdays.
— Doktor Snake
The Dokology Podcast explores attention, mind control, internal sovereignty, and perception — applied awareness for the modern world.










