• @[email protected]
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        616 days ago

        I realized I was aphantasic just like the woman in the article. I always thought the minds eye was just an expression and I was shocked to find out people can actually SEE stuff if they want. I can draw but it takes a lot of trial and error and I use lots of references.

        • niftyOP
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          516 days ago

          That’s a wild experience, the range of neurodiversity is incredible

          • @[email protected]
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            616 days ago

            Since learning about it I have been trying to gain the skill. Attempting to create a cube or circle in my head and such. When I imagine things, it’s more like a list of details, not pictures. Sort of jealous of visualization, but I have above average memory due to qualifying everything. We are weird apes.

            • niftyOP
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              516 days ago

              I can visualize vividly and can create intricate details in imagined spaces, but my recall is average of real spaces. Like, I can walk myself in my head down to the street from where I am in my office, but I won’t be able to tell you how many steps are in the three flight of stairs. It’s not really a skill, tbh, and pretty useless. I think there are advantages to both types of neurotypes though. Sometimes I can’t picture my face well, but that’s more trauma related I think 😅

      • @Steamymoomilk
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        516 days ago

        Very intreasting and insiteful artical thanks for sharing!

    • @[email protected]
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      516 days ago

      Seriously I came here to post that. Mine isn’t characters, but I do visualize things in my head when I listen to music.

    • @[email protected]
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      216 days ago

      I don’t, but I have a hard (damn near impossible) time visualizing images that aren’t memories

  • @[email protected]
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    16 days ago

    Can y’all stop trying to convince me I’m autistic? Or give me a weighted blanket damn

    • @Steamymoomilk
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      16 days ago

      But the weighted blanket is SOOO COMFY

      Embrace the t-ism

  • @[email protected]
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    1716 days ago

    Told my teacher I preferred “the movies in my head” and earned myself a EEG to check for epilepsy as a 10 year old. No always explain my vivid imagination.

    • niftyOP
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      416 days ago

      Wow, people know more (and better) now, but there’s always someone doing it wrong still

  • Gormadt
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    1116 days ago

    That’s not normal?

    TIL

    But of course I’m not exactly neurotypical

  • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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    16 days ago

    As a kid, my method of passing time when I was told to wait a half hour or an hour was to just play back shows, with commercials, in my imagination because I knew they were 30-60 minutes long. Shit worked, too!

    • niftyOP
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      316 days ago

      I love that😄 How well do you do it now?

      • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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        16 days ago

        30-60 minutes isn’t that long to me anymore. I’m usually impatiently waiting months or weeks at a time now. Currently waiting for Shadow of the Erdtree to drop in 8 days. All I can do for these lengths is imagine that WaitMate is real.

        • niftyOP
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          316 days ago

          That’s so cool that you can do it longer now!

  • @akakevbot
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    416 days ago

    I used to see how many “videos” I could play in my brain simultaneously and still keep track of what was happening in each. Most I was able to be satisfied with was 3.

    Hadn’t ever really thought about whether other people did that or not…