Guard Dog

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​Contrary to the old way of thinking, dogs don't see in black-and-white. Our research has shown that they're limited to gradients of yellow and blue. Or so we think. Because there are colors humans can't see either, pigments that have no precedent, and when it's filtered through our pitiful little world of red, blue and green, we can't even distinguish the hand reaching out to us from the wallpaper, the tongue slithering back down the toilet drain when we open the lid, the tendrils curling around our hearts in the passenger seat of the car, ready to tear it out at moment's notice. Our brains don't just choose not to process the colors - they choose not to accept that a dimension of chaos, living in tandem with ours, even exists. So when we analyze what a dog can see, just looking at the raw data, we're only getting half the story, looking at their eyes through our own. We can't look at this image and see what they see. http://public.media.smithsonianmag.com/legacy_blog/rainbow-2.jpg Now if I told you what was staring back at you from that image, just inches from your face, you wouldn't believe me. And if you did see it, you wouldn't be around to believe it much longer. #HouseOfHorrors #YouTubeSpaceLA @legendary

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