A new optical illusion has claimed that what you see first will reveal your deepest and possibly unconscious fears in life.
The image invites viewers to look quickly and notice whether they see a smiling face or the moon.
Seeing one image indicates that your greatest fear is loneliness, which will prevent you from finding your ideal partner, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The other person shows that you are afraid to be vulnerable and share your emotions with others.
A new optical illusion asks viewers to identify the first thing they notice in an image: the moon or a smiling face
If the first thing you noticed was the moon, it means that vulnerability is your deepest fear at your core.
Expressing personal emotions is not easy for you and can cause you to close yourself off to others.
On the positive side, it also means cherishing every moment of your life and actively seeking adventures that challenge you.
You are an extremely passionate individual and feel emotions – whether good or bad – on a deep and intense level.
The smiling face is depicted by two birds flying over the moon to represent eyes and a tree branch below in the shape of a smile.
If you see the smiling face, it could mean that you struggle with self-confidence and have a deep fear of being alone.
This fear of loneliness has probably caused you to struggle to find the ideal partner who can meet your needs.
However, it also shows that you are a kind and compassionate person who goes out of your way to help others.
You strive to see the good in everyone and are deeply compassionate, allowing you to quickly forgive people who have upset you.
These types of optical illusions use visual tricks to reveal people’s personality traits or desires by analyzing how they perceive ambiguous images.
The type of illusion, as shown here, is called a figure-ground illusion, which forces our minds to switch from one image to another, meaning you may have noticed the cat first and the mouse a second later.
When we look at the world, we perceive information in small chunks so as not to overwhelm the senses, which forces us to focus on a main object while everything else becomes part of the background.