Have you ever wondered why we get carsick? The answer is a lot deeper than potholes.
How much deeper? Well, you get carsick because your brain assumes it's being poisoned. That's what neuroscientist and 'Idiot Brain' author Dean Burnett says.
You see, for thousands of years we didn't travel much faster than our own two feet could take us. As a result, the human thalamus – the part of the brain that processes motion – became tuned to those speeds. So, when running or walking, your brain feels in sync with your body's speed. This allows your vision and other senses to match. But when you throw an automobile into the mix, things get dicey.
Burnett says:
"What's happening there is the brain's getting mixed signals. It's getting signals from the muscles and the eyes saying we are still and signals from the balance sensors saying we're in motion.
Both of these cannot be correct. There's a sensory mismatch there. And in evolutionary terms, the only thing that can cause a sensory mismatch like that is a neurotoxin or poison."
And what does your brain do when it thinks it's being poisoned? It tries to get rid of that poison – hence, the nausea and desire to vomit.
What To Do About Carsickness
...aside from vomiting, of course.
Of course, motion sickness applies to any form of high-speed transportation; ditching cars and buying a transit pass isn't going to save you.
So what canyou do?
One of the things Burnett recommends is looking out the window instead of trying to use your phone or reading a book.
'You can see the passage and the movement going by," he says. "The brain's going – oh, look, things moving – I must be moving – and then sort of calms down the sickness response."
There are also some natural remedies for car sickness. Here are a few.