“Scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered something that experienced ballroom dancers have long known: When dancers are in tune with each other, their brains may sync up, helping them move as one.
“The team found that when those dancers were moving together in time, the activity in their brains also began to look startling similar. Scientists call that phenomenon "interbrain coupling" or "neural synchronization.”
For that magic Sandi and I shared, I am eternally grateful. We laughed, loved and enjoyed being in each other’s arms.
That wasn’t all. We loved the movies where we watched “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid…The Sting…Liar, Lair….” and hundreds more. A week before she died, we watched Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson in “Song Sung Blue.” Over 20 years ago, we drove to Denver’s last drive-in theater. Of course, we watched the movie and made out like a couple of teenagers!
While she couldn’t talk in full sentences the last two years, the morning of her passing, after I gave her a full 30-minute body massage, which I did for seven years, I pulled her up. She looked at me, “I like you,” she said. “I love you Sandi with all my heart.” Those were the last words she ever spoke. That night before dinner, we slow-danced in the kitchen to Alan Jackson’s “Remember When.” That was our last dance together.
Through our 32-year love affair, we bicycled thousands of miles. We skied the big slopes in Colorado. We rafted the rivers. We sailed on the big lakes. We climbed 14,000-foot mountains. We camped out under the stars and shared many a blazing campfire. Nothing beats chirping crickets and the joy of hot chocolate under a starlit sky. And then, jumping into a warm sleeping bag.
Source: Rense.com