You are not the only one who has suffered this kind of pain. More than 90% people suffer this kind of torture at least once a week, and about a quarter of them experience it several times a day. Things that don't need much attention, such as waiting for water to boil or waiting for a red light, are more likely to attract the invasion of brainwashing divine comedy.
This phenomenon is a big secret of the brain. Scientists can't fully understand why those tunes are so easy to stay in our minds.
A psychological point of view holds that "brainwashing divine comedy" is a psychological image. Such images are either visible, such as when you close your eyes and imagine a red van, or audible, such as when you imagine a baby crying or hot oil sizzling in a pot.
Brainwashing Divine Comedy is a special form of auditory images, because their appearance is unconscious. For example, if you don't plug your ears and think hard about the song "Little Apple". Of course, or should I say, theoretically, you won't. It just intrudes into the music background in your mind and wanders around like an uninvited guest. "
Brainwashing Divine Comedy is mostly vivid, and they usually consist of a tone, not a so-called chord. An iconic feature of "Brainwashing Divine Comedy" is that they often fall into a cycle and repeat it thousands of times per minute. Memories are also the mission of brainwashing those "infinite cycles" in Divine Comedy. Those songs that have been played repeatedly recently are more likely to linger in your mind.
If repetition is almost a fuse, then perhaps we should blame the emergence of "brainwashing divine comedy" on modern technology. In the past hundred years, audio equipment has been popularized at an incredible speed, helping people listen to the same music over and over again. Records, tapes, CDs and those convenient MP3 players.
So are those technologies breeding all kinds of unique modern experiences, and the "brainwashing divine comedy" is only a product that appeared at the end of the twentieth century?
This can be answered by Mark Twain. 1876, just one year before the phonograph was successfully developed, he wrote a short story, imagining a rhythmic jingle secretly controlling the whole town.
This example, together with other things, shows that "brainwashing Divine Comedy" is a basic psychological phenomenon, which may only be strengthened by modern recording technology, but it is nothing new in this century.
So, yes, any great historical figure, from Shakespeare to sacagawea, hesitated when the "brainwashing divine comedy" occupied his head.
Apart from music, it is hard to think of anything that invades the brain and has such a wide range of influence. Why can music do it? Why can't watercolor get stuck in my head? What about those ice creams?
There is a theory that this is related to the way music is expressed in memory. When we are listening to those known songs, we always hear the next note we expect in advance. It is difficult for us to remember only one note. If you want to think about the pitch of "le" in Happy Birthday to you, you have to return to "le" from "Zhu". In this way, a piece of music seems to be a "habit". Just like once you start tying your shoelaces, you will unconsciously tie a bow before you stop. Once a word is mentioned, because, for example, someone says "two", and then naturally someone will sing "tiger" along with it, and then go on like this.
But most of this is just speculation. The fact is that we still don't know why we are so easily influenced by brainwashing divine comedy. But a better understanding of them will give us important clues about how the human brain works.
Maybe next time we will be trapped by the melody of Fruit Sister and cannot escape, then we will take this as the starting point of our scientific journey to solve the great mystery about basic understanding. In case of failure, well, just hum along. It's good anyway, isn't it?