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Autism and Memory - How does your memory work?

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  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2024
  • Autistic memory doesn't always work as planned. Sometimes it's great. sometimes I just draw a blank. What's your experience with how your memory works?
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    My name is Paul and I discovered I have Aspergers at age 30.
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Komentáře • 676

  • @LittleBallOfPurr
    @LittleBallOfPurr Před 3 lety +307

    Unfortunately, my brain has an anti-spam feature on people's names.

    • @ambcook
      @ambcook Před 3 lety +7

      me too

    • @David-jq7uw
      @David-jq7uw Před 3 lety +40

      same. I seem to only remember a person's name after I've interacted with them regularly for a while or made a strong effort to commit the name to memory.

    • @isray89
      @isray89 Před 3 lety +16

      SAME. I'll remember all these details about them, but not be able to match all the facts to a name.

    • @loverainthunder
      @loverainthunder Před 3 lety +3

      Same.

    • @o0OMouseO0o
      @o0OMouseO0o Před 3 lety +4

      Yup, and then when you explain it people go 'Yea I have that problem' and they dont understand you literally remember no names even ones that have been shouted at you 10 seconds ago.

  • @TheWhitePhoenix1
    @TheWhitePhoenix1 Před 3 lety +291

    My memory is like a set of scales that is weighed down on one side. I absorb information on special interests and specific areas to a near photographic level. I work in a warehouse and can usually locate items incredibly fast yet if you give me a series of instructions to follow I'm useless and need to write them down, I forget names, have face blindness struggle to remember certain numbers and are just useless with any sort of verbal instructions that take me out of my comfort zone.

    • @themoroccan369
      @themoroccan369 Před 3 lety +8

      The same for me

    • @virglibrsaglove
      @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety +12

      Me, too! Especially face blindness! I've never heard it said that way. I can't see faces at all in my mind. I can remember a photograph, but not a face I see in person. My dad is that way, too. When I meet someone who I like I flat out tell them that I won't recognize them if I see them again unless they say something to me. Then I'll know their voice. I've had people test that only to find out that I wasn't kidding. I really didn't recognize them. I didn't know it was common enough to have a name. Is that a common autistic thing? Face blindness?

    • @TheWhitePhoenix1
      @TheWhitePhoenix1 Před 3 lety +14

      @@virglibrsaglove face blindness is definitely a thing and there are different degrees, I'd say yours is more severe than most. Mine is like I will sometimes be unsure if it's the same person and maybe they changed their hair or something or maybe that's someone who looks similar. I'd say it's a comorbidity.

    • @virglibrsaglove
      @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety +9

      @@TheWhitePhoenix1 Wow! That's so interesting! At least I know I'm not as uncommon in it as I thought. I can recognize things like unusual glasses, or certain cloths, the way a person walks, their voice. I eventually learn to recognize people. But I can know a person for years and not be able to see there face in my mind.

    • @DevonExplorer
      @DevonExplorer Před 3 lety +11

      Exactly the same for me too, apart from the fact that the face blindness isn't so bad as some have. I can usually recognise most people but can't visualise them in my mind - almost but like a very out of focus photo - and if someone changes their hairstyle or starts wearing specs then I can't recognise them at all until they speak. A funny thing sometimes is that I can't recognise someone and yet know that I should know them. I'll puzzle over it for days then a week or two later I suddenly remember who they are, lol.

  • @BeatlesBiitch
    @BeatlesBiitch Před 3 lety +133

    I call this password protected memories! Because I need the right key term or password to access the memory--or a whole monkey chain of memories. This whole video was so relatable! I often come across either very knowledgeable or completely incompetent depending on how my recall is functioning in the moment.

    • @Torby4096
      @Torby4096 Před 2 lety +1

      And once I think of it I MUST say it!

    • @frankmariani1259
      @frankmariani1259 Před 2 lety +2

      Stuff that I'll know that I'll forget, I'll make a password to help remember it. The trick is to use a simple enough password that still somehow connects to the subject to remember. Keep it simple stupid. Sometimes a picture in your mind can be a password. ; - )

    • @adapederson6159
      @adapederson6159 Před 2 lety

      Yes.... incompetence is usually my reputation 😂😂😭😭

    • @prapanthebachelorette6803
      @prapanthebachelorette6803 Před rokem

      I think this one resonated most with me

  • @neilnetman3138
    @neilnetman3138 Před 3 lety +324

    The thing that annoys me most is when I'm trying to explain something to someone and I know a specific word I want to use right up to the moment I want to say it. Gone. I had it a split second before I was going to say it and it's gone.

    • @fdagpigj
      @fdagpigj Před 3 lety +16

      I have this as well, except that I usually just know that I know the perfect word for the situation, but I cannot remember it even before I have to actually say it, or write it down for that matter.

    • @stephenhookings1985
      @stephenhookings1985 Před 3 lety +3

      @@fdagpigj so write prompts and use that. Allow yourself the time to practice, don't get anxious that the word is gone - move on to the next parts then revisit and likely the phrase pops out. Sure not useful for dynamic conversation - but I'd you are Asperger's how many real conversations are you having? - I get into monologue - reminding people to tell me to shut the ++++ up is helpful. The worst part is folks don't want the details - but when you don't give it them those are the things that trip them up. Mind maps work well too.
      Best of luck - for me it is too many words clashing at once. I said in another reply that learning another language helped - I don't have so many alternatives so the flow is easier and clearer (plus slower).

    • @darbydelane4588
      @darbydelane4588 Před 3 lety +22

      Word retrieval is a big issue in autism.

    • @reggiep75
      @reggiep75 Před 3 lety +15

      @@darbydelane4588 - THIS... THIS is the perfect phrase I have looked for to try and get people to understand my issues with recollection and why my head is fried one day and perfect the next. Bad sleep, epilepsy and medication issues don't help either tho 😂.. I'm off to write this down before I forget it.

    • @darbydelane4588
      @darbydelane4588 Před 3 lety +3

      @@reggiep75 Do it, Reggie! You deserve to be understood!💪🏽💕

  • @lucasreboucas8123
    @lucasreboucas8123 Před 3 lety +151

    How many times when I'm going out, I closed my goddamn door and a few steps later I just can't remember if I locked the goddamn door or not.

    • @fdagpigj
      @fdagpigj Před 3 lety +10

      Every time I leave my apartment I have to check, I have my keys, everything else is secondary, although I also have to go through in my mind that I brought everything else I need too and have appropriate clothing and did everything I had to do, but usually I'm still a bit unsure.

    • @reggiep75
      @reggiep75 Před 3 lety +10

      I have a logistical system to ensure I remember closing my door, but at one time I used to force myself to go back and check it as double checking was better than no checking. I think it's that inherent self doubt that made me do that until I mentally trained myself to adhere to a small but regular set of instructions, the smaller the better, and now I rarely forget to lock my door now.

    • @then3995
      @then3995 Před 3 lety +5

      I have the same problem, due to a complete lack of episodic memory (probably related to my aphantasia). What helps me with that is transferring the information into semantic memory simply by mentally telling myself (as in, actually putting into words) "I locked the door".

    • @Gerwulf97
      @Gerwulf97 Před 3 lety +1

      Omg yes.

    • @bulldog6369
      @bulldog6369 Před 3 lety +2

      Me too i go back and check or i keep thinking i left it open or unlocked I have called neighbors to check for me.

  • @jordinburch9466
    @jordinburch9466 Před 3 lety +167

    Not sure if I’m autistic cause my parents don’t “believe” in it, (24 f), but my memory is absolutely horrible. There are YEARS from my childhood that I don’t remember, I’ve heard stories about myself that I don’t have any recollection of. Throughout childhood I could never remember small (but important) things. Like my entire backpack would get left at home atleast once a week while I was in school. As I get older, it’s other things. I could have a physical list with me at the grocery store, all things to get spaghetti, but forget atleast two items on my list every time I leave the house. Or last summer I left my drink on top of my car almost EVERY time I went anywhere. It legitimately pisses people off.
    I do really well when I’m repetitive, but also tend to repeat bad habits. And always wondered why I did these things....

    • @lucasreboucas8123
      @lucasreboucas8123 Před 3 lety +28

      I truly don't understand why you can't be sure of something that you are because of some other people opinion, even if they are your parents, you are the one whos living your experiences and emotions, not them. I belive that if you r here, you're probably doing some research on this subject and sooner or later you will have the answer if you're autistic or not.

    • @DeborahAnnsuperversatile
      @DeborahAnnsuperversatile Před 3 lety +20

      I have the same issue with my parents not believing in any sort of "disorders" at all. I am here researching for a reason also though.

    • @lauram7803
      @lauram7803 Před 3 lety +11

      It isn't any better if they knew something was off but never did anything about it

    • @DeborahAnnsuperversatile
      @DeborahAnnsuperversatile Před 3 lety +5

      @@lauram7803 yeah. That's what I don't want to do with my daughter.

    • @lauram7803
      @lauram7803 Před 3 lety +20

      @@DeborahAnnsuperversatile So in the last year, we've found out that my family knew something was not right with me and my partners family had a diagnosis for him but never told. So you spend your life wondering why people avoid you or that you can't remember things, etc. An explanation would have been better.

  • @francesbaker7233
    @francesbaker7233 Před 3 lety +75

    Often I interrupt others because if I don't say what is in my mind immediately and I get an input from someone/something else, it has gone. Very frustrating.
    And yet I have an excellent visual memory and I'm a 'super-recogniser'.

    • @darbydelane4588
      @darbydelane4588 Před 3 lety +3

      Yep. Me, too.

    • @virglibrsaglove
      @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety +8

      I knew someone like that. His constantly talking over me caused me to forget my own thoughts. By the time he finally stopped long enough for me to speak, my own eloquent thoughts that should have been expressed were gone. I ended up sounding like a complete dolt. And not enjoying the conversations at all. I told him that in talking over me he was basically replacing my part of the conversation with his own. And that if he continued that way I would simply shut down and stop trying to talk to him at all. Being on the receiving end of his speaking style was miserable. We ended up not being friends for very long.

    • @cogit8able
      @cogit8able Před 3 lety +1

      I blew the researcher away on that one. That’s the faces test isn’t it.

    • @francesbaker7233
      @francesbaker7233 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cogit8able Yes that's right. I also did a test on guitar fronts.

    • @danyelPitmon
      @danyelPitmon Před 3 lety +3

      I do the same thing so much to my embarrassment of interrupting people but if I don’t do the same thing I will forget what I am thinking at that moment and I hate being rude but I just have to get it out before I forget

  • @Astro-Markus
    @Astro-Markus Před 3 lety +159

    I am awful at remembering names. Even a few seconds after being introduced, names are usually gone. Possibly, I focus too much on the situation itself. Very embarrassing. Or maybe the person isn't interesting or relevant enough?

    • @GnuReligion
      @GnuReligion Před 3 lety +16

      Also have this problem. A little social anxiety, and I immediately forget people who have just been introduced, or even people I see all the time. First day at a new job or school is the worst. I like to SEE a list of names, so they can be committed to memory.

    • @anthonymorris6312
      @anthonymorris6312 Před 3 lety +2

      I write names down as soon as possible. Helps a lot for me. I decided to do that once and continue to make a point of learning names. I like to call people by their name when I see them again. Helps to reinforce the memory.

    • @anthonymorris6312
      @anthonymorris6312 Před 3 lety +6

      @@GnuReligion I love when people wear name badges. Sometimes I resort to asking someone else if I can't remember it.

    • @freddyberg7281
      @freddyberg7281 Před 3 lety +3

      I have exactly the same problem. It seems that all information that's not based on logic, like names, dates, phone numbers, etc., just won't stick.

    • @TheTallGirl
      @TheTallGirl Před 3 lety +7

      Oh names, that goes in one ear and out the other

  • @MrAtheistQueen
    @MrAtheistQueen Před 3 lety +44

    I can remember details about a conversation, such as where people were sitting, who said what, etc. In fact, when I'm trying to remember what someone says I often think about when I heard it, who said it, where I was, what they were wearing, etc. If I can't remember the situation, it's as if it didn't happen in my mind. So, people can ask me about something, and if I have no memory that can pin the answer to a visual representation in my mind, I have a hard time answering.

    • @justjust8953
      @justjust8953 Před 3 lety

      @Sun Flower that is smart!

    • @rickstark2963
      @rickstark2963 Před 3 lety +3

      I remember everything and every detail. The trouble is, I always remember what someone said or did, better than they do. -That's a great disadvantage at work. Especially with your boss.

    • @cthornton523
      @cthornton523 Před 3 lety

      Omg SAME! Nice to meet you, kindred spirit. 💖

    • @NeurodiverJENNt
      @NeurodiverJENNt Před 3 lety

      Same! When I listen to podcasts for example I can remember where I was or what I was doing. If I repeat that activity in the same spot I will remember where I was in the podcast that I was listening to and what was being said! Absolutely useless take up of precious memory space for me because it serves no purpose

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace Před 2 lety

      I might have a whole memory somewhere but it's not attached to anything so i won't remember it happened at all unless someone or something reminds me
      Like even if someone said "have you ever had an experience where...?" I wouldn't be able to think of anything. But if they said "remember when we did x and saw y?" I might be like YEAH! even though it's a perfect example for the question

  • @Astro-Markus
    @Astro-Markus Před 3 lety +73

    When I am in a flow, I function extremely well. But I lose track of time and can easily miss appointments. During the flow, my brain seems to be on autopilot. I frequently experience this during public talks. I can literally watch myself pulling up complete lines of thoughts while speaking and simultaneously formulating them in more or less coherent sentences. No idea, where this comes from. Yes, you can picture it like a chain of monkeys being attached to each other. This is really fun. But in other situations, I might be quite useless, because the fountain in my brain seems to be drained. See? More interesting metaphors.

    • @rickstark2963
      @rickstark2963 Před 3 lety +5

      I go on auto pilot where I do everyday, ordinary things: like brushing my teeth. So much so, that it has to be at the exact same time, same day, in the same way. When I do bigger things (like write a complex computer program), I get lost in it, and don't even hear people talking to me, or see them.

    • @magnuscritikaleak5045
      @magnuscritikaleak5045 Před 2 lety +1

      Yup me too man

    • @delphinewood7519
      @delphinewood7519 Před 2 lety +1

      Well put!

  • @Dustyonelife
    @Dustyonelife Před 3 lety +33

    Ah, bingo, this makes so much sense to me.
    My mind is a warehouse. I have to drive a forklift to search out the information, which I have chunked into like/similar knowledge (i.e. chili and pepper), and then the trouble comes when I have to work to find where is it stored...the search can be long and arduous. When I find the storage compartment, it opens pandora's box. The flow is so real. The stoppage of flow is painful. ONLINE or OFFLINE.
    On-point and then another day off point wow, yes! Thanks, great. Like a completely different person. Also, depends on what language I am working with as well as settings and areas of expertise. When I am tired, usually afternoons, I have porridge brain. Simple tasks are challenging..

    • @wolframstahl1263
      @wolframstahl1263 Před 3 lety +1

      Porridge brain is such a great term! I've got somewhat of a warehouse as well, but I've got a few bargain bins near the entrance I can usually rummage through to come up with something. The pandora's box and subsequent high flow-rate information spray is quite managable in my case, but close enough to relate to the feeling. Jamming the plug back in once the flood gates are open can be quite a bit of work!

  • @joeyvaughn2265
    @joeyvaughn2265 Před 3 lety +31

    You’ve just explained me, probably better than I could. I am diagnosed adhd, and believe I believe that I’m also Aspie. I have struggled for years to come up with the Illustration or some type of metaphor to describe how I am able to soak in all this information to only find that when I need it most I draw a blank. I am the guy that you ‘ do not depend on’ or can’t be trusted with certain certain objects. It’s come to the point that they have to write reminders for me on the white board in our conference room.

    • @dighyfveirfuveifbuv4420
      @dighyfveirfuveifbuv4420 Před 3 lety +7

      When I went for my assessment ,they told me that i was on the spectrum but not to worry about it because it's actually fairly common and I should seek an ADHD diagnosis instead.
      So I did but that diagnosis didn't address my social difficulties which is why I went to see them in the first place .
      So I did some research and identifed my problems as an ASD for myself and now I feel such a relief learning a bit about why I'm always on the outside of social situations .
      Through learning about myself , im better able to accept my lot and work with what I've got instead of focusing on my social failures and fighting the losing battle .
      Not knowing what was wrong with me almost destroyed my life . I wish they'd had something official for me as a kid instead of the speculation .
      It could all have been so different . It's been a fucking disaster tbh but it's good now .

    • @justjust8953
      @justjust8953 Před 3 lety +1

      I describe it as long term vs short term memory. I know the information is there, but I can’t retrieve it quickly

    • @thatswhatisaid8908
      @thatswhatisaid8908 Před 3 lety +2

      At least they are willing to make that adjustment for you.

    • @nursarahazhar
      @nursarahazhar Před 3 lety +1

      @@dighyfveirfuveifbuv4420 Glad to hear that you are okay. I feel the exact same way. Now I'm just planning if I ever have a kid on the spectrum or have any other disorders so that I can detect it as early as possible.

  • @OliverBatchelor
    @OliverBatchelor Před 3 lety +36

    I never saw this as autism related, but this is just my memory in a nutshell. The variability kind of sucks, it's the whole "stupid smart person" thing. In areas where I'm quite competent if you put me under pressure I will often crumble. Just like playing chess if I could handle the time pressure I'd be rated 200 points higher!

    • @laitarianplayz8080
      @laitarianplayz8080 Před 11 měsíci

      Nah

    • @cynamonstudio
      @cynamonstudio Před 9 měsíci

      Jesus. Since my two kids have been diagnosed with Aspergers it is time for me. AntiSpam memory? It is exactly my experience. Once I dont need certain information I just flush it. It could be a name of a town I visited last year or a name of a person I havent met for a while. And it has always been this way.

  • @tomchamberlain4329
    @tomchamberlain4329 Před 3 lety +41

    My memory used to be really good in an autistic way when I was a kid, as in I would remember names, details, numbers etc precisely. Or at least I thought I did. I was pretty terrible at English, Maths etc, all the school work where you learn by listening, reading or by rote. I think the difference was engagement, I'd remember perfectly details about something I cared about, or something I'd created, drawn, imagined etc. But information in language form, passed to me, not generated in my brain, was harder to process.
    I've got much worse as an adult lol. Think it's just getting old! I
    But I can be very good at learning by involvement, i.e. doing, making mistakes and learning from them, feeling, touching, hearing, trying, immersing. But trying to express ideas to people or communicate while working while I'm in that mode is almost impossible. They won't understand me most of the time.
    I have Aspergers. It's classic.

    • @Daisy-dp2ez
      @Daisy-dp2ez Před 3 lety +1

      I'm the same though i always struggled in school. When my mum would read me bedtime stories i could recite the last few pages of the chapter back to her the following night.

    • @Amy-pj1zl
      @Amy-pj1zl Před rokem +1

      My mind is like a Web or huge mindmap.. once someone mentions a concept or I see a particular phrase or topic in my environment, and I would immediately have a range of flowing thoughts like a mindmap spreading at 5x speed and all I can think or ramble about for the next 10 minutes is information related to that topic.

    • @tomchamberlain4329
      @tomchamberlain4329 Před rokem

      @@Amy-pj1zl I only get that or something like that, if the subject really grips me, emotionally or it relates to some feeling or physical sensation I want more of. Otherwise y brain is so indisciplined I'll have thought about 800 different things in the timeframe you mentioned

  • @stuartrushworth5487
    @stuartrushworth5487 Před 3 lety +17

    I have dyscalculia (an absence of numbers in my thinking) and I've just about given up on mathematics because of it. My long-term memory is very visual but my working memory cannot put sequences together, so following instructions is very hard for me. The course of my life has been very frustrating except for visual art, which I find is free from these barriers. I think that we ultimately have to search for those activities that are unaffected by the problems we have. A painting has no numbers in it and it relies on rules (or instructions) that are better off broken. In everyday life I make lists but I mostly rely on long and repeating music through earphones to provide a calm space. I also take a double daily dose of Vitamin B1. It does not aid memory, instead it reduces the mental anguish that memory gaps can cause. Autism and memory gaps is an odd combination because they are both absences. Generally I enjoy the present much more as I get older and I find the past is really a gallery of occasions when I have helped others or created something that was successful or worked. The rest I leave to those that prefer crowds and noise and who live in a culture I have never really visited.

    • @stuartrushworth5487
      @stuartrushworth5487 Před 2 lety

      @Sylphienne The visual memory is at the root of how I cope. When I try to remember a number though (I mean quickly) then it joins countless other possible numbers twirling around in my visual-mind that are slightly misted over. Where the correct number is, is beyond all searching for. I think all people who cope with these distortions in numbers or words or time-keeping have highly imaginative ways to navigate them. A visual memory is like living in a gallery.

  • @beneaththefells
    @beneaththefells Před 3 lety +47

    Sometimes when I stop doing something or think about something different than what I was thinking about all of a sudden it feels like hours have passed and what I was doing/thinking feels like a foggy memory. Does this happen to anyone else?

  • @josephmartin1540
    @josephmartin1540 Před 3 lety +9

    So much this that I can't even think of how to respond! And there are the times of remembering everything at once and becoming confused, then shutting down completely... it is as if my brain needs a teleprompter.

  • @BarryBazzawillWilliams
    @BarryBazzawillWilliams Před 3 lety +11

    I completely relate to this as a teacher I have been trying to slow down and leave pauses when I talk to a class; as someone with (I believe) and auditory processing disorder I know how important that is for my students. However this definitely disrupts my flow. I will get to a point when I am talking and I knew what I was going to say 10 seconds ago and then it's gone. Usually it will come back or I will have to figure out something to say but it certainly noticable to my class.
    I have also had the experience of trying to remember a place and not having the right bait/search term

  • @carol3662
    @carol3662 Před 3 lety +6

    I follow you Paul as I have a19year old son Nathan who has Asperger's. Nathan's memory is shocking and has always been that way. School was a complete nightmare as he would continually forget things. Over the years I have continued to encourage him to use his phone for prompts. He has literally just started to get things together. It has been very helpful to hear your take on it and read comments, as I know for sure, that it is part of his ASD and not him being lazy. It has generally been the opinion of other family members that Nathan has always expected others to do things for him and used his Asperger's as an excuse, which, of course, I have always contested. Feels good to be vindicated, and it will give me great pleasure in sharing your video with them 😁

  • @isaacw1689
    @isaacw1689 Před 3 lety +26

    I liked your description of sometimes having to speak really quickly to not lose the flow of thoughts that are getting you to where you are going, sometimes this happens to me, sometimes they literally come too fast to articulate, I will tell someone 'hold on' say like a dozen words which to them seem completely unrelated, but which are just things I can use as markers for myself like stepping stones to get where I am going, like if the alphabet came through my head so quickly that I say 'A, F, L, T, Z' then say what I was trying to get to. It often happens when I have an epiphany when I am talking about something I am excited about, but afterward I sort of reconstruct the thought for whoever I am talking to. I usually then get a 'how on earth did you get from what you were saying before to what you just explained?!' Usually if I ask whether they really want me to try to reconstruct the path rather than just the final thought they suddenly lose interest in further explanation, but I did once explain to my wife the 'tangential cascade' and she sort of stared like she wasn't sure whether I am more brilliant or more mad.

  • @whizzywoo582
    @whizzywoo582 Před 3 lety +6

    Lol and the award for maximum use of mixed metaphors goes to Paul :D I wish my memory was consistent - I did have a very traumatic event when I was a young mum that made my memory a bit all or nothing. I can be doing some training at work, have prepared well and have lovely notes, but something will happen (like someone forgetting to mute their mic or something), it feels like I blink and it's all gone - who am I, what is my name and why am I here! The more tired and stressed I am the more likely this is to happen. I'm trying to learn how to gather my wits so I can get it back together again more calmly - my instant reaction is to get flustered and then the harder I try to grab that thought back the more determined it is to stay at my fingertips. I think I just hate to look so 'not together'.

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard Před 3 lety +23

    Is it weird that I regularly fail to remember proper names? I sometimes can't remember the names of my favourite band or its members, or an album title even though I can tell you how they wrote or performed it in detail. Or one of my favourite authors, who's books I love . I ALWAYS read the names of characters in a book wrong. sometimes I can't remember the name of people I know well. The list goes-on.

    • @jaredbrooks7658
      @jaredbrooks7658 Před 3 lety +2

      This happens to me as well, constantly.

    • @richardmattocks
      @richardmattocks Před 3 lety +2

      Same here. My memory for names is dreadful. If I hear it incorrectly the first time, no matter how many times I’m corrected I’ll always think it’s the version I heard first. I write lists all over the place to keep track of things.

    • @TheWhitePhoenix1
      @TheWhitePhoenix1 Před 3 lety +3

      oh yeah names are like housemates in my brain, they're never at home the second I need them around. Leaving me look like an idiot fumbling around trying to remember and then the second the conversation moves on, there it is back in my brain.

    • @lucasreboucas8123
      @lucasreboucas8123 Před 3 lety +2

      If I'm reading a book, I have to always coming back some paragraphs to remember who's that character. My memory for names is that bad.

    • @Astro-Markus
      @Astro-Markus Před 3 lety +1

      Yup. I can relate. I always feel like an idiot. Hey, my favourite artist is ... what's his/her name again?

  • @victorhugotoledocofre1366
    @victorhugotoledocofre1366 Před 3 lety +53

    I'm a 47 year old autistic and I vividly remember every single detail of anything that happened in my life since approx. age 2-3 onwards, including the right day of the week, the right date, month and year, and many times the exact hour of the day it happened. I've had to learn to restrain myself from going into too much detail when talking to, say my 6-year-older brother who's a neurotypical. He really gets disturbed about it, especially when it comes to unhappy shared memories in our lives that I start reminiscing out of the blue. A big challenge for me; because, obviously, I don't want to hurt his feelings.

    • @GnuReligion
      @GnuReligion Před 3 lety +10

      Funny, I also have some specific memories from about age 3. Not exact dates like you though.
      I believe that normies more often have "adaptive" memories, where they recall things as they wished they were, reflecting favorably on themselves. My own memories might be described as "depressive realism."

    • @tmorelli1982
      @tmorelli1982 Před 3 lety +1

      Same. Paul doesn't resonate in the slightest with me as an autistic

    • @victorhugotoledocofre1366
      @victorhugotoledocofre1366 Před 3 lety +5

      @@GnuReligion "Depressive realism." Loved that!! Borrowed.

    • @GnuReligion
      @GnuReligion Před 3 lety +2

      @@victorhugotoledocofre1366 Well, I hardly invented it ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depressive_realism
      An odd truth about hue-manz, taught in Social Psychology: Mentally healthy folks with normal mimicry skills (human pack instincts) are not the most realistic.

    • @dighyfveirfuveifbuv4420
      @dighyfveirfuveifbuv4420 Před 3 lety +4

      I always thought it was odd that people couldn't remember their childhood properly.
      I don't remember everything instantly but when I think back , it's like I'm there and I can bring the memory out and describe everything about it , the objects , the tastes and smells , the thoughts I was having when the memory was laid down . The things that were said .
      People are always saying how good my long term memory is but my short term memory is pretty bad.
      I don't remember dates but then I don't really follow them ; A product of the eternal now of my ADD mind , I suppose .

  • @ArderiLazuli
    @ArderiLazuli Před 3 lety +17

    My memory is definitely a little wonky. I have an example just from today. I had my nieces and nephews over for a few days and when they left they forgot their shoes. They were leaving to see their grandparents who live an hour away, so we decided to meet half way at 4:30 so I can bring them the shoes. At 3:45 I remember I have to go and say to myself, "I'll just work for another 5 min and then head out." Well, 4:30 rolled around and I had not left my house yet, and was only reminded I had somewhere to be because of the phone call I got asking if I was still coming. This fortunately does not happen as often as it used to and this is the first time in awhile it happened in a semi important moment.
    Last time it happened, I forgot to show up for the first day of my old job, of all things! Thankfully wasn't fired on the spot, but most people will tell me I forget because I didn't care enough, but that's the farthest thing from the truth. In fact, it shocks me every time something like this happens because of how much I hate to disappoint people.
    Now I set reminders like crazy and keep myself to a schedule that I like because it seems to help, but on days like this when the schedule is broken is when the forgetfulness is prone to happen 🤷‍♀️

    • @mde6006
      @mde6006 Před 3 lety +1

      This is 100-percent me me... I absolutely hate when people say you mustn't have wanted to do it then then, because like you, I never want to hurt people's feelings and it's very often on on places to have really want to get to that I tend to mess up so royally :-(

    • @whosacleverbirdie
      @whosacleverbirdie Před 3 lety

      Have you got any diagnoses? Just curious x

  • @alexanderkennedy3736
    @alexanderkennedy3736 Před 3 lety +4

    I have very few memories before age 6, and with each passing year I remember the past years less and less the further away it is in time

    • @justjust8953
      @justjust8953 Před 3 lety

      Have you tried keeping a journal?

    • @kissit012
      @kissit012 Před 3 lety

      This is normal. Most adults lose mental capacity and memory with age

  • @myholisticnurse7914
    @myholisticnurse7914 Před 3 lety +7

    Haha. Fishing for connected monkeys in a search engine! So funny, because its true! Thanks for sharing your experience.

  • @tennotsukai87
    @tennotsukai87 Před 3 lety +29

    Does anyone remember words mostly just by the first letter? This happens to me a lot...

    • @tiddlypom2097
      @tiddlypom2097 Před 3 lety +6

      Yes! ...and so I mix up street names that start with the same letter. Or my directions will be something like "...then go up ...um ... B.... road." ... "No that other B road"

    • @OliverBatchelor
      @OliverBatchelor Před 3 lety +3

      @@tiddlypom2097 Yes, quite often I don't even pay any attention to the actual name either (because it didn't seem like an important piece of information)! Which makes describing it to someone else hard.

    • @fogweaver5633
      @fogweaver5633 Před 3 lety +2

      I'll often remember the prefix or base of the word, and go fishing from there. What's really bad is when I mix languages. It was a 'land' word. Land...land...aus land...out land.... ..... foreigner! (Definite Aspie. My languages play well together.)

    • @jedrashidul6952
      @jedrashidul6952 Před 3 lety +2

      Me! But I read & memorize dictionaries for fun when I was a kid so maybe that's why

    • @KryssLaBryn
      @KryssLaBryn Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah! Sometimes when I lose a word (usually nouns for some reason) I can manage to picture the item in my mind, and then sort of pull up the label that goes with it and "read" the label. It's really almost literally like actually seeing the word written down and reading it off my inner screen.
      But sometimes I just don't have the spoons for that (it takes a LOT of effort to force it out like that!) and I just end up saying something like "...you know. The cranky thing. Has a twisty handle. Opens cans. The whatchamacallit."

  • @ChristophersMum
    @ChristophersMum Před 3 lety +6

    Paul...I thank you very much for the encouragement that you have given me...just coming to terms with this at a late stage in my life.

  • @GeenieCherrybomb
    @GeenieCherrybomb Před 3 lety +3

    Omg! This is described my memory precisely! I just thought everyone was like that.

  • @minksrule2196
    @minksrule2196 Před 3 lety +6

    I have memories from when I was 3 years old, I even have one memory from when I was 2 but if I have a list of things to do or am given a list of instructions I will do one thing and then remember something else that I was planning to do and completely forget about everything else. I always get in trouble for not doing all my chores because I keep forgetting

  • @veragasteiger6647
    @veragasteiger6647 Před 3 lety +1

    This sounds so familiar, sometimes I go into rehearsal like an actor before I have to talk to someone - or make notes, altogether being happy, when it is over

  • @drsandy842
    @drsandy842 Před 3 lety +6

    This so common to many diseases especially psychological ones. My son is own spectrum and I see this in him but I have PTSD and have symptoms don’t rely one thing for a diagnosis

  • @LegendoftheGalacticHero
    @LegendoftheGalacticHero Před 3 lety +2

    Story of my life, excellent video. I think i'll use it to explain this to near ones

  • @sarahlogan2075
    @sarahlogan2075 Před hodinou

    Your triple mixed metaphor is perfect BTW. I only lose the words that I really need. This happens a lot but mostly if I'm tired, stressed in general, specifically anxious, or excited. I also substitute words like in your restaurant name example and mix up letters in other words. Things can go down hill in a flash as you mentioned.

  • @madao7865
    @madao7865 Před 3 lety +2

    Sometimes when writing, I stop mid word and omit the rest of the sentence, while being absolutely convinced I finished the whole thing. So much for loosing your train of thought.

  • @elizabethf8078
    @elizabethf8078 Před 3 lety +2

    Happens **ALL THE TIME**!!!! My brain is like the filing cabinet that belongs to Radar O'Reilly...The filing system isn't alphabetical, it's relational. So glad to meet another person who speaks in images/metaphors. Sometimes it's brilliant...occasionally it sucks monkey toes. Any distraction (especially self doubt) makes the information chain crumble.

    • @fogweaver5633
      @fogweaver5633 Před 3 lety

      Radar's filing cabinet, plus all its cousins. I think it's a 13x13x13 array, but I can never see the whole thing at the same time. Entropy increases along the x, y, and z axes. No telling what will end up in cabinet 13, 13, 13. I think it's currently occupied by the Flying Spaghetti Monster and assorted cryptids.

  • @reggiep75
    @reggiep75 Před 3 lety +12

    My mind is an odd one.. It's like a nuclear waste flask for some things (literally nothing is getting out or forgotten) and it's like a sieve for other things. I went thru a phase of writing down nearly everything what I did during various phases of time out of fearing I'd forget things but it was largely during periods of unemployment and didn't have a lot of things to fill my time. I also have an issue with deciding what I need to remember and what to forget as I'm not really sure the importance of things at times, hence the reason I hoard too much stuff I should forget or throw away.

    • @stephenhookings1985
      @stephenhookings1985 Před 3 lety +3

      @John O Kelly Is it because you get to learn all you want about that job then get bored and want a new challenge? Or because one day a random voiced thought is considered too radical and you sort of have to leave?
      I have been fortunate in early career to appear NT and work in science and technology so was given free reign to create. So each day was different. When I moved into software I was surprised at the requirements were not so demanding - just the underestimate of where things would go wrong - but I was ok at fixing other people's errors. I work in software security now - looking at abuse cases and that is super open ended - just right for adding variety. Sure the stuff I say has often got me into trouble - but once people realise you are not trying to be offensive - just brutally honest - especially if you are calmly sorting out a crisis then you get a little bit of slack.
      Hoping you find something that interests you and give you variety.

    • @stephenhookings1985
      @stephenhookings1985 Před 3 lety

      @John O Kelly software security might be interesting - determine how someone is going to steal you assets and working out how to thwart them (or catch them in a trap and contain them) is something that constantly changes. Difficult to get bored of that. Just a thought.

    • @reggiep75
      @reggiep75 Před 3 lety

      @John O Kelly - It's quite possible that you could overload having learnt a lot in a job, at that accelerated rate we are subject to, and your interest in it a job goes from 100% to 0% in no time. I'm fortunate to have a friend diagnosed with autism a few years ago, to compare notes with (as I'm in the early stages of an official assessment after a long period of self-assessment), who is a 0% or 100% person and his interest in some jobs and hobbies spiked and waned. He works in technology these days and thankfully he enjoys it as there's enough variation to keep him interested and his capacity to remember all manner of IP addresses, long server passwords, focus deeply on mundane tasks, offer innovative solutions and other things is quite handy.
      As for my line of work, I initially did graphic design that gave me a lot of variable jobs to work on and not get bored or lose interest. Later on I did print finishing that encompassed 4-6 different jobs on a regular basis. Ironically, I didn't leave my last job, I was just made redundant and without the routine there, I'm lost and the mental chaos starts to boil and issues arise.
      Tech jobs are favourable jobs for autistic types but some really have to be able to tune in to mundane work or opt for jobs with scope for innovation to keep you interested.

  • @DeborahAnnsuperversatile
    @DeborahAnnsuperversatile Před 3 lety +2

    I did not know that the memory being super good or super not good with extremes was an autism trait. I do that all the time. I go through a lot of phases. Thank you for pointing this out.

  • @bethanywalker5346
    @bethanywalker5346 Před 3 lety +2

    (Diagnosed on the spectrum a couple years ago) I once tried to recall the correct word for rear derailleur adjustment. I felt pressured to get it out of my mouth in under a minute and I felt like it would take the full minute to recall the word, so I said "twirly thing." It was more important to get the idea out then waste time getting the right word. My boss then looked at me and said "is this what I'm going to expect out of you back here in (bicycle) maintenance?" Yes... Yes it is.

  • @kellyschroeder7437
    @kellyschroeder7437 Před rokem +1

    Yup. I relate to keeping kinda quick pace of thoughts, speaking, listening otherwise it’s gone ….

  • @TheDjbutta
    @TheDjbutta Před 3 lety

    Absolutely hilarious maybe accidental advertisement interruption right as he was talking about not interrupting his stream of thought dialogue in order to not lose track of his thoughts! Love these videos helping me a lot

  • @MrAlec78uk
    @MrAlec78uk Před 3 lety +1

    My memory works just how you explained it and in three different metifors. 😁

  • @Tymbus
    @Tymbus Před 3 lety +3

    My thoughts jus t continually make connections between things/events that are obscure to anyone listening. I know it appears as if I am changing the subject and sometimes come across as rude. I have been accused of "changing the subject" when I feel that I am on-topic. Memory is a part of this. Thinking for me is a bit like a pinball machine, a single thought sends my mind pinging off between things pas, present and future.

    • @virglibrsaglove
      @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety

      My mom is like that. She often makes no sense to the rest of us since we don't see the path in her mind that got her to that point.

    • @rojahvidbjerg16
      @rojahvidbjerg16 Před 3 lety

      Yes my thinking, memory’s and understanding are somehow only associative and somehow not in my conscious control ( no I am not saying that others control me don’t worry) my I can’t access stuff but there are stuff in there, but it only works when something somehow reminds me out of the blue. And almost never when needed. It is horrible and it makes my brain and me very unstable, insecure and unable. And I really don’t know how ore why this is so, because it doesn’t just happen sometimes with something but it happens a lot more, than the opposite. Even when I practice and think I really got this! Nope it is not online when needed. And when I out of the blue remember something it is totally like a door opens then the next door and the next door and all the other doors opens step by step in a kind of line or chain. The weirdest is that it seems to be a lot like this , my to children’s brains functions too. I hate being stupid and at the same time not being enough stupid to let go of finding a more understandable reason/ solution to my very strange and life ruining difficulty.

  • @kandihamble8800
    @kandihamble8800 Před rokem

    Aaaahhh! My memory is so spotty! I've had to start writing things down so I could remember when it's my turn. I like all of the analogies, they made complete sense.

  • @danielfinch362
    @danielfinch362 Před 3 lety +8

    My trick for accessing the memories on the tip of my tongue is to go through the alphabet, its a reasonably successful method of retrieving such memories.

    • @ChristophersMum
      @ChristophersMum Před 3 lety +3

      I do this with names...😁

    • @danielfinch362
      @danielfinch362 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ChristophersMum yes I relate to that. I'm terrible with names, even forget those close to me lol.

  • @cherylfairbank
    @cherylfairbank Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much! This is spot on for me. Executive function that is lightening fast on all cylinders does reverse when brain register hits “utter overwhelm”. Too much sensory input causes interruptions in the brain circuitry- then, comes the semi and/or full blown meltdown.

  • @thankfullfortruth4964
    @thankfullfortruth4964 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you, Paul, your videos really come in handy for sharing with my very intuitive, neurotypical friend. You are gifted in sharing truth with dignity and clarity. Memories that are linked to emotional charges that are negative exhaust my energy. A good day is when they do not come to mind or I learn a new perspective that transforms my understanding, and can "let it go", consider it resolved. You are my Rock when you explain just what I experience. You see me😊🎈

  • @brandonfbomb_2327
    @brandonfbomb_2327 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for helping me to explain what's going on in my brain. I realized I was autistic( I like to refer to myself as an autist) roughly 3.5 years ago. I'm learning how to streamline my thought variances into useful contributions and accepting the limitations in relationship settings. Your insights are invaluable and I feel you're giving the best real world information available. Please keep up the good work. For this video, I'm a watching jeopardy champion, yet can't remember my partner's appointments. Long comment short, you're doing great work

  • @reggiep75
    @reggiep75 Před 3 lety +6

    There are times when I'm like the search engine that can't get the answer, terminology or name I need and a classic case of this in being able to see an actors face but my recollection of their name or the film in question is non-existent. So I have to go back thru other films I recall them being in, which other actors were in, what year and finally having went back 4-5 steps I can go forward with my newly furnished info and get the film I remember and with other actors, and yet I remember the movie logo, text and intro and yet the film name is like a broken mirror, in front of me, that I have to put back together.
    Needless to say Wikipedia and Internet Movie Database have been my saviour many a time when trying to recall a film to recommend to someone to watch and I've only watched the film 10-12 hrs ago 😂. I have to laugh otherwise I think I'd just cry. In other situations, I find it best to forget it and tell myself 'Forget this for now and relax and we'll remember it later!' Once I've defused the situation, I can remember it later but I think that's come from years long of mental training.

  • @David-jq7uw
    @David-jq7uw Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing. I'm very happy to have found your channel. I've been working with medical professionals for more than 3 years now to find out why I've had so many problems with fatigue, depression, focus at work (open office environment for many years), and sporadic melties.
    I discovered your channel several months ago, and I am grateful for you sharing your experience. It has helped me to recontextualize many aspects of my life and given me a better direction to pursue with my doctors.

  • @benis3551
    @benis3551 Před 3 lety +1

    You can enhance this by storing it better in the first place. Memory is order + imagination. Memory techniques are really helpful, especially if it's critical information for stuff that is important to you.
    Story technique, loci method, Major System, memory palaces etc.

  • @jackiebuttnor8410
    @jackiebuttnor8410 Před rokem

    I am absolutely loving your mixed metaphors! And am now floored as you are describing how my memory gaps on a regular basis.
    It is so incredible to hear someone else describing things I always thought were just me being very weird. Thank you!

  • @clairenew8283
    @clairenew8283 Před 3 lety +2

    I believe that my 17 year old daughter may be autistic for a vast array of reasons and she was saying today how often her friends tell her that they've spoken about something with her and that she doesn't remember the conversation. Also the same thing happens when I've talked with her about certain things. That being said she can recall very clearly other memories from many many years ago.

    • @mwilliamson4198
      @mwilliamson4198 Před 3 lety +1

      For what it's worth i also showed many signs when i was in late teens, early twenties, (41 now) but i wasn't ready to accept anyone else's diagnosis. I knew everything lol. Of course on reflection it could have saved me years of addiction and wandering in the dark

    • @clairenew8283
      @clairenew8283 Před 3 lety

      @@mwilliamson4198 Hi Mark, My daughter was recently diagnosed with Tourettes Syndrome and she is now being forwarded to have an assessment for Autism after giving the medical bodies her history. One thing I found very interesting was that they said Autism and Tourettes Syndrome generally go hand in hand. Hopefully we'll get an appointment soon as they told us it could take 3 to 6 months for her to be seen x

  • @yoinksscoob4889
    @yoinksscoob4889 Před 3 lety +8

    I have the stereotypical autistic memory, weirdly detailed haha, especially with special interests, however I also have hyperphantasia so that may help

  • @galamander_1327
    @galamander_1327 Před 3 lety +1

    I bring lists of topics for work meetings, friend hangouts, learning sessions, you name it. Some NTs get freaked out by the mere fact I have a list. (Why, though?) If I don't come with a list, I won't remember much at all until everything is over. I also jot down questions before I raise my hand.

  • @jimmaier233
    @jimmaier233 Před 3 lety

    Exact same thing. The fluctuation between brilliance and useless like a fool the next day (tech field)... my whole life ! I have huge gaps of competence, where it doesn't hold any interest to me, or it's s.th. others do naturally, that I just don't get and am naturally bad at. Memory, same thing. Due to your videos, I became aware - huge revelation. Aspergers goes back in my family, a long time. My mother, her father, his father.. back to 1880, it's so interesting. The behaviour is so obvious in my family, that it's easy to recognize. Such a shame, nobody was aware earlier. My sons are also on the spectrum. It explains so much. Thank you !!!

  • @BullScrapPracEff
    @BullScrapPracEff Před 3 lety +4

    I've always explained my memory as fly paper. Things will stick, but I have no control over what will. Grandparent phone number, I've got that even though they've all been dead for decades. Work ID number from 20 years ago? Yep right there. Plot from a book I read when I was 12? Yep. What I did this morning? No clue. I can extrapolate from my habitual nature but...nope.
    An appointment I made for sometime in the future, not a chance. Flypaper catches every speck of dust, fluttering insect, blowing leaf; but flies not so much.

  • @ianlopes7485
    @ianlopes7485 Před 3 lety

    all the time man!!! my memory works pretty much as you described. i am too tired to describe it myself but ot was very helpful and funny watch you. total identification on this regard!

  • @delphinewood7519
    @delphinewood7519 Před 2 lety

    Your videos help me understand myself. I bet you wish you had a dollar for every time that’s been in the comments. Keep going. You’re helping so many people. Thank you. 🙏🌵🌵🌵☀️

  • @JinAndSodaTV
    @JinAndSodaTV Před rokem

    I LOVE that combined metaphor at the end 🤣🤣
    Wanted to add really quick.. about the "I completely forgot my question, I know it was a good one.." and it's this:
    That happens to me even when im having a deep, intellectual conversation with someone.. and what I've found to be really helpful was to keep a small notebook or notepad around (I mean, I pull them out when deep conversations start happening.. i dont mean I have a notebook opened all day every day for every convo 😅), and I jot my question or input down really quick so I won't forget. I also preface the person I'm talking to like "sorry, im just writing this down real quick so I don't forget.. but continue please 😇"

  • @veanncantu2169
    @veanncantu2169 Před 3 lety

    Omg I love you explain things so well and show me that it's my brain not me being stupid or just have bad habbits

  • @stacygreene2104
    @stacygreene2104 Před 3 lety +1

    My memory is much like a fish net. Some things, it catches incredibly well, almost eidetic in most cases. Some things slip through like the water, retaining nothing of the ocean in which it was just immersed, save for maybe an occasional, and very rare, tiny bit of moisture clinging to the fibers of the net. People get so mad at me for forgetting things, and it happens so often, it's just become part of my identity. Thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge and also for being articulate in a way that I could never hope to be.

  • @AndiKnittel
    @AndiKnittel Před 3 lety +1

    My memory works very well when it comes to remembering and reciting song lyrics.

  • @sashajoachims5840
    @sashajoachims5840 Před rokem +1

    You described my memory eerily accurately, although my favorite analogy is that it is like a Rolodex with all the cards shuffled together, everything is in there but whether or not I retrieve the right card at the right time is a matter chance. Although lately it has been getting much worse, to the point I am losing the words for everyday common objects and names of people I interact with all the time. I don’t know if it’s burnout & will come back if I get over the burnout or if it’s aging but it’s pretty frustrating & depressing & making work pretty much impossible. I couldn’t figure out why I am having so much trouble speaking, writing and working. Thank you for your videos, I have struggled with what I assumed was depression & social anxiety and anger management all my life. I have masked without realizing what I was doing or what the consequences of that could be. Sometimes I felt bipolar and would get so mad & sad because I could tell something was wrong in my head but I didn’t know what. I joked about having ADHD/ADD and being on the spectrum and have some familiarity with non verbal/developmental disabled autistic characteristics but had no real understanding of how autism presents and progresses in verbal & intelligent adults, that it is different for women and can get worse with age. Your videos describe my life’s experiences so accurately it gives me chills, I thought I was the only freak that felt this way and that has to work this damn hard for every thing I have but it turns out I was completely right about being on the spectrum and probably should have looked into what that might mean actually mean a long time ago. Thanks to videos from you & a few other people I am 99% certain I am autistic and am having a severe episode of burnout from a lifetime of pushing myself so hard. I test well above the cut off at which 70-80% of autistics score on all the self tests I have taken so far. Life might have been a little easier if I had realized what my needs were and started taking care of myself a long time ago! Thank you so much for helping me see that I am not alone or crazy and that I don’t have to push myself so hard & it’s ok to do what I need to do to feel good, or at least not feel bad. Blessings, be well & many thanks!!

  • @jesuismanu
    @jesuismanu Před 3 lety

    I’ve been looking into getting myself tested for a bit now. And what you’re explaining here rings so true and that’s why I am so afraid to actually be tested because I will forget what to say, what are the important points and they’ll just say what everyone else tells me: there’s nothing wrong with you.
    And here’s the thing, I can’t bring myself to make a list, to just write it down and I don’t know why.
    Thanks for the videos, they are helpful to recognise myself.

    • @xoxoLeony
      @xoxoLeony Před 3 lety +2

      I've begun that list and now I'm entirely overwhelmed when I look at it and it's all scrambled up and all over the place. I dread attempting to put it in order somehow.

  • @JoanColeMassage
    @JoanColeMassage Před 3 lety

    your filing cabinet and sticky note analogy - so true

  • @Manuel-jy8ih
    @Manuel-jy8ih Před 3 lety

    It's really nice for me to read all these comments because I see I am not alone with my thoughts

  • @christopher4262
    @christopher4262 Před 3 lety +2

    I had a buddy tell me once that some days I was the smartest person he knew, and then other days was I just, not.

  • @Barcreature
    @Barcreature Před 3 lety

    Your analogy was amazing.
    I literally have conseptyalized the process of remembering things as a search engine - I tell people that I have sent the request and it will come to me in a bit.
    Because when I feel the memory is there - after a 'request' is sent, associations and 'related' things come at the back of my mind, closing in on the thing I am actually trying to remember.
    So your wording just hit home for me! Thank you :)))

  • @shanerooney4982
    @shanerooney4982 Před rokem

    Hi thank you so much for this. This has happened to me on numerous occasions and I only now understand why. It usually happens in work meetings and once happened in a job interview. Needless to say I didn’t get the job and friendly members of the interview panel asked me afterwards exactly what you said there-“what happened , you are normally so confident….” . I put it down to nerves at the time but looking back it was due to my Autism which I didn’t know about at the time. Thank you

  • @ekoester862
    @ekoester862 Před 3 lety

    I am so pleased that you talked about experiencing a thought gap. I have had exactly that thing happen to me in classrooms for my entire life and never seen it happen to someone else or had it explained from someone else's perspective. At this point in my life it happens most often when I am trying to verbally navigate social emotional dynamics. If I can keep up with myself when I talk, I can often do it. I have memories and feelings and words inside me and I can find them and draw them to the surface to use for communication purposes - like a string of concepts. But sometimes I loose the string of thoughts or I pause, even sometimes to catch my breath, the bottom falls out. For me, the process of the bottom falling out can be like getting hit by an ocean wave. It is a thudding shock to my body and then I have a loss for words (to be able to speak them, to be able to actually understand someone else's, or both) most often combined with the sudden difficulty / loss of ability to move my body. The things that are most likely to help me recover are closing my eyes or letting go of sight focus, having the people around me look away from me, and (like when knocked over by a wave) working to let go of the need to get my "feet under me" and instead focus on relaxing my body. I also was so happy to hear you explain the autistic experience as "liking" living in the extremes. I have known that I live in a a body with unusual parameters since I was a small child, but it has been life changing for me to understand that I enjoy and prefer living in a self that experiences mostly extremes.

  • @fnscomedycrew
    @fnscomedycrew Před 3 lety +11

    I'm not going to remember to watch this when it becomes available :(

    • @complexsonicz9239
      @complexsonicz9239 Před 3 lety +5

      On the screen you can set a reminder for yourself, just make sure your notification volume is on.

    • @ryn2844
      @ryn2844 Před 3 lety

      Here's a reminder notification for you, it's available now :)

    • @fnscomedycrew
      @fnscomedycrew Před 3 lety +1

      No need to do anything. The CZcams algorithm reads your subconscious nowadays.

  • @evelynherrera2281
    @evelynherrera2281 Před 3 lety

    Excellent description of my memory, sometimes I get to use everything in my "files " but sometimes I even forget last names of my colleagues, they think I'm joking, It's kind of frustrating. Thanks very much, from Lima Perú

  • @fopdoodler9427
    @fopdoodler9427 Před rokem

    Wow... I didn't know what my autism was, but thanks to you I am getting at least some inkling of what my problems are and why I am having a hard time taking tests at my current university. Thanks for the amazing videos.

  • @cory99998
    @cory99998 Před rokem

    Yes, learning is like a highly connected filing cabinet. Everything is logically ordered and locked into crystalized systems where one thing leads to the next. This cannot be forgotten as it is the nature of the logic structure.

  • @psalm275
    @psalm275 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much, Paul. My life finally makes sense to me. You explain things so well, and I love how comfortable you are with who you are. You have given me so much hope. God bless you.

  • @dcarbs2979
    @dcarbs2979 Před 3 lety +1

    I always tend to remember how many things I need (e.g. items on a shopping list, things to do today), but forget what one or some are, so I will know how many I have forgotten, but not what.
    Other times, if things are in sequence (one that makes sense to me but not necessary by any logic), then pretty much everything gets remembered to some degree and that can be true for thousands of items (e.g. a stock inventory), I can remember at least one fact about literally thousands of items (e.g. title, where it is stocked, how many in stock, changes since I last saw it). If someone does something to disrupt that sequencial thought pattern, then any new material that needs to be remembered, doesn't get remembered. Almost no new information is absorbed, but the old memories of the previous state remain.

  • @cheerfulgirl8835
    @cheerfulgirl8835 Před 3 lety

    Your explanations are ‘gold’ in understanding my son!! Thank you!!

  • @DTrecording
    @DTrecording Před 3 lety

    The filing place analogy really resonates. I can recall data exceptionally well because it's easy to organize and associate. But episodic memories and even faces I'm not intimately familiar with, I don't have a good way to organize, store, and retrieve that kind of information.

  • @reggyreptinall9598
    @reggyreptinall9598 Před 3 lety

    Your a legend, glad to see your still doing well and still putting out wonderful content.

  • @moriontax
    @moriontax Před 3 lety

    Man, you hit it on the nail! I can say my memory is exactly like a filing cabinet that sometimes can be unorganized when I have too many files (or memories) to take care of/hold on to temporarily that everything gets cluttered and all of a sudden, my memory is shit and I'm triple backing over everything I do! It's exhausting when I get my NT co-workings crying to me and complaining at me for this!!! Worst part is they're too ignorant to be told different. I'm glad I heard my memory isn't shit for no reasons at least! Thanks man!

  • @craigsetf
    @craigsetf Před 3 lety

    Your description is fascinating. I'm undiagnosed, but I've wrestled with my focus my whole life and its effects on my ability to recall information. Sometimes it's there, sometimes it's not. Just depends on what my attention gets stuck on.
    Throughout my life I've managed my memory by learning through association. By connecting new information to old memories, new information isn't stored as separately defined memories. Instead I'm just updating old memories. Connecting all memories together, almost as one big memory, story, or filing cabinet.
    When I recall things related to what I'm engaged in, I typically already have the relevant memories available in the moment. But that changes as my focus is grabbed. I lose my train of thought from time to time where I'll go from describing quantum mechanics in detail and then forget what I'm talking about mid sentence completely. 😂 Feels almost like a subconscious part of me is controlling my attention and, as a result, which memories are the most salient in the moment.
    I've learned to mostly control my obsessive tendencies but it's just frustrating when I lose control. Especially because I'm often really interested in what switches my focus as well. It can make it hard to stay focused on 1 thing when working for long periods. Although that part is probably true for most people.
    A weird practice I'm still experimenting with is working on at least 2 projects at a time. Whatever they are, I find you must be genuinely interested in both or it won't work. Whatever the project may be, work on it and have your secondary project ready and in the back of your mind. If your focus drifts it will most likely drift to the other project in the back of your head rather than something random and less productive. This usually leads to me flipping back and forth between the 2 projects and helps keep me from getting side tracked after only working for an hour or 2.

  • @Saba-LouAKhan
    @Saba-LouAKhan Před 3 lety

    I also use the filing cabinet analogy and generally describe my menory as being highly selective, sorted by the categories ‘factual’ and ‘emotional’.
    For instance I can nearly perfectly recall lessons from school regarding my focussed interests (in the natural sciences) but will completely (and I mean COMPLETELY) forget some conversation/encounter with someone from school whom I didn’t deem particularly interesting. To the astonishment of my highschool friend with very good emotional memory, who can hardly belive I could’ve forgotten as I seemd so bothered by the instance in the moment.
    These videos are just pointing out and naming more or less everything about me spot on. Sincere thanks.

  • @jessicapippen4737
    @jessicapippen4737 Před 3 lety

    I have used the same metaphors for years. I was amazed the minute he started explaining this subject because I felt like no one else really every understood or believed that this problem exist. Thanks for making me feel a little less crazy. :-)

  • @mrmukura
    @mrmukura Před 3 lety

    I like the analogy about the inbox overflowing.

  • @tiiaj7589
    @tiiaj7589 Před 3 lety

    This is probably my favourite video of yours. As you know, I see in pictures. I’m realizing how very much more than I even thought before. I have to translate everything into some kind of visual aid in order to commit it to memory. Even the filing system has to be visualized in my mind. There’s really a whole process line, come to think of it, lol. With my little minions going through the days input and analyzing it to determine its destination in the file room. Sadly, the minions are either bored or overworked, because they’ve been slacking terribly lately... 🤔
    Anyway, loved your mixed analogies. That’s s pretty much exactly describes my brain’s inner workings too.

  • @lukeoldfield7940
    @lukeoldfield7940 Před 3 lety

    This was really good and highly relatable. My memory focus is exactly like this - either razor sharp with streams of information at my finger tips or it goes completely blank - I particularly liked the part about the stream of consciousness being interrupted meaning you lose all flow of information. It is almost like you have to go back and start from scratch to re-formulate the whole idea of what you wanted to convey again?

  • @BR-yy3ko
    @BR-yy3ko Před 3 lety

    What you described, speaking quickly before you forget so you don't completely go blank 👍
    Remembering your thought and then trying not to interrupt before you forget it again 👍
    Very frustrating 👍

  • @danitrevisani
    @danitrevisani Před 3 lety

    Perfect explaination! I related myself exactly!

  • @karenb5616
    @karenb5616 Před 3 lety +3

    Hmmm...I have a great memory for every detail about the plants I sell and grow and for learning languages. A photographic memory for numbers and maps. And a terrible memory for most other things. I literally have thousands of notes on my computer to refer to later. And I need timers and reminders all day long. And yes, word recall is excellent at times and horrible at others.
    Not sure if I’m Aspie yet but every video points more and more that way

  • @michaelf.537
    @michaelf.537 Před 2 lety

    Great video! And one of my favorite parts is in the comments where everyone has a metaphor for how their brain works :)

  • @kellyschroeder7437
    @kellyschroeder7437 Před rokem

    I call it microfiche of my mind. So relate to this. Feel like there is a boulder in the way when I’m trying to remember and recall or even express something ….💞💙🙏🏻👊

  • @acid-mask
    @acid-mask Před 2 lety +1

    My memory is VERY visual. I remember things written not spoken - UNLESS I repeat.
    If someone brings up an adjacent topic it can establish a logical link to other memories I wouldn’t access otherwise

  • @valide1
    @valide1 Před 3 lety

    I find it particularly interesting that you highlighted that us autists tend to be very black and white/on the extremes of things. I recently was talking with my psychologist about extremes and she posed a question to me about if I would be more comfortable surrounded by other neurodiverse people. My answer was that neither fully neurodiverse or fully neurotypical societies is where I belong, that ideally I find I function best when I can be centrist and visit both sides of the spectrum at my leisure. In a way it seems not black and white but as we discussed it it became evident that it is absolutely the same pattern of black and white extremes thinking except for me the two extremes are being fully committed to division or fully committed to equality. That kind of off kilter focus of mine is what actually leads me to function very well in social situations we've realized as I can appreciate angles from all extremes and find the common thread with most people as a result.

  • @LittleBallOfPurr
    @LittleBallOfPurr Před 3 lety +6

    I say "It's on the tip of my brain"

  • @folwr3653
    @folwr3653 Před 3 lety

    Very, very relatable! Thanks!

  • @hamdihammami5218
    @hamdihammami5218 Před 3 lety +5

    Hello everyone :)

  • @jalissasnyder7382
    @jalissasnyder7382 Před 3 lety

    This was completely on point! I have compared my brain to a complex filing system, too, or like the library filing system. That's why I have to write EVERYTHING down as soon as it enters my conscious awareness because if I don't, then I forget... and if I want to speak with a professor, I have to write down what I want to talk about because otherwise, I forget. I feel like I have to write a speech if I want to say anything coherent because otherwise I'll forget and feel like a mumbling fool!

  • @dieferman
    @dieferman Před 3 lety

    Hey, first of all, thanks for all the great info you have put out on your videos... I just autodiagnose around a month ago. I'm 47 and I do feel relieved seeing how all those things I have experience throughout life do have an explanation.
    I do feel identify with your way of explaining how your memory works. I been criticized since early age for speaking too fast, so throughout the years I've been masking it... But it is difficult to slow down when your brain is running so fast.
    I have always write too slow and just tell people that while I write a word, I can speak 100 words. And while I say a word I have thought of 100 words. That's why I don't even take notes. I've rather pay attention to what someone explains to me, interpreted, related to previous knowledge and store in a nifty way that info so I can easily recall the idea later whenever I needed.

  • @sir_no_name1478
    @sir_no_name1478 Před 3 lety

    Nice analogy, I feel like that to with the file cabinet. The ABC list method from f. Vera Birkenbihl helps me personally to open all file cabinets needed for a certain tasks at very low costs