Most people have tried tickling themselves at least once — usually on the ribs, neck or feet.
And every time, the result is the same: nothing happens. No laughter. No loss of control. No ticklish reaction.
The reason why you can’t tickle yourself is one of the strangest and most fascinating brain–body glitches humans have.
Your brain predicts your own movements so perfectly that it turns off the sensation before it even reaches your consciousness.
This 30-second test shows exactly how that works — and reveals how your brain edits your own sensations.
Let’s begin.
Step 1 — Try Tickling Your Ribs with One Hand
Use your fingers to tickle the side of your ribcage.
Use the same speed and motion that usually makes you laugh when someone else does it.
What you should notice
- No intense tickle
- No reflexive laughter
- No involuntary movement
- No “surprise” feeling
And that’s because your brain blocked it.
This is the foundation of why you can’t tickle yourself.
Step 2 — Try Tickling the Same Spot with the Other Hand
Switch hands and repeat the motion on the same spot.
What changes?
Absolutely nothing.
Same pressure.
Same fingers.
Same movement.
Same lack of reaction.
Why?
Because your brain predicts your own movement with incredible accuracy, canceling the tickle before it happens.
Step 3 — Try Tickling Faster or Slower
Now experiment with different speeds:
- slow scratches
- fast finger movements
- random patterns
What you’ll notice
No matter how fast or slow you go, the reaction never matches the intensity of being tickled by someone else.
Your brain still predicts — and still cancels.
This is the heart of why you can’t tickle yourself.
Step 4 — Try Using an Object (Pen, Brush, or Soft Cloth)
Grab a small object that mimics the sensation of fingers.
Tickle your ribs, neck, or any sensitive spot.
What happens
Still nothing — or almost nothing.
Objects don’t help because the motion is still coming from your own motor system, and the brain knows exactly what’s coming.
The key concept
Your brain subtracts the sensation generated by your own movements.
This process is called sensorimotor prediction.

Step 5 — Now Ask Someone Else to Tickle the SAME Spot
Ask a friend to use:
- the same pressure
- the same speed
- the same movements
What happens
Now the reaction is instant:
- involuntary laughter
- sudden twitching
- reflexive movement
- loss of control
Same touch.
Different brain response.
This contrast is the cleanest demonstration of why you can’t tickle yourself.
Step 6 — Understand the Brain Mechanism Behind the Glitch
When YOU move your fingers, your brain generates a prediction called:
“Efference Copy”
This is a neural signal that predicts:
- force
- direction
- timing
- exact sensory feedback
If the sensation matches the prediction → the brain cancels it.
If the sensation does NOT match the prediction → tickle happens.
This explains perfectly why you can’t tickle yourself.
Step 7 — Test the Delay Trick (Milliseconds Matter)
Try this:
- Move your fingers toward your ribs
- But pause for a brief moment (tiny delay)
- Then tickle yourself
What you’ll feel
You may get a slightly stronger sensation, because the delay interrupts the brain’s predictions.
But still — it won’t be as strong as someone else doing it.
Your brain is too good at tracking your own movement.
Step 8 — Test With Eyes Closed vs Open
Tickle your ribs:
- once with eyes open
- once with eyes closed
What changes
Eyes closed → slightly more sensation
But still not enough to cause involuntary laughter.
Why
Vision gives your brain extra predictive input.
When it’s removed, prediction weakens slightly —
but not enough to fully restore the tickle.
Step 9 — Try Tickling While Distracting Your Brain
Do this:
- Move your fingers to tickle your ribs
- At the same time, count backwards from 20
- Or recite the alphabet
- Or shake your foot
What happens
Sometimes the tickle gets slightly stronger, because distraction lowers predictive accuracy.
But again — never as strong as external tickling.
Your brain is still in control.
Step 10 — What This Brain–Body Glitch Reveals About You
This simple test gives you incredible insight into your neurobiology:
1. Your brain predicts your own movements
It creates a simulation of what you’re about to feel.
2. Prediction = cancellation
If your brain expects the sensation, it lowers the signal.
3. Surprise = tickle
Tickling only works when the sensation is unpredictable.
4. Touch from others is always surprising
Even if it’s gentle — you can’t predict the timing perfectly.
5. Your nervous system protects you
Tickle reflex evolved as:
- a defense mechanism
- a social bonding tool
- a protection response to sudden touch
6. Your body filters your own sensations
You’re constantly touching yourself — clothing, skin, resting positions.
Your brain must decide which sensations matter and which to ignore.
This entire glitch — why you can’t tickle yourself — is a brilliant example of how deeply intelligent your nervous system truly is.
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