Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Mentalcaps

Do any of you have handicaps, or perhaps I should  write mentalcaps? Is there something that your brain doesn't process as well as most brains? I might have many mentalcaps, but I am thinking of one in particular this morning.

I seem to have a perceptual handicap in that I lack the ability to picture things that are not physically there in front of me. It’s not that images don’t float through my brain, say when I am reading or daydreaming, but I can’t fix on them.

I often try to have a short nap in the afternoon. It sometimes works, but they are always brief, about ten minutes if at all. It is in the stage where I am beginning to nod off that my brain sometimes presents me with a very clear image. I tend to see strangers, people whom, as far as I can tell, I've never known or even seen. They are suddenly and inexplicably present in my head.

On a recent day, I clearly saw an elderly woman, like no one whom I could  recognize, It took her a few seconds to resolve clearly, and then I could see her in detail. But as I began to say to myself, “Oh let me have a good look at this woman whom I can see clearly,” she began to dissolve. As soon as my conscious minds interfered, the picture started to fade around the edges, and she was soon all gone, and I could not bring her back.

On another day, my vision was that of a different lady. She was mature, pleasant and more middle-aged. She soon faded too.

In both cases, I could tell you more than I have about what I saw, but even as the image remnants pass through my mind, the details fade. The older lady was gray-haired, the younger blondish. The first was sitting, the second standing. The first was pale (I might have even seen her in black and white) while second was rosy-cheeked, wore glasses, and was standing.

As you can see, the visions are powerful enough to leave impressions even though I can't recount too many details for you. Once again, the harder I try, the more difficult it is to visualize them again. Otherwise, they might temporarily float by in a certain amount of detail. It's hard to explain, and I am doing it poorly.

I guess it makes sense that I am a more of a visual learner, but even when the parts are there for me to see, I may not see clearly how those parts fit together. This makes me a poor handyman. Once I realized this about myself, I pretty well gave up and left it to others. Sue can put things together much better, and we can hire out for other jobs. And don't ask me to draw something without a picture in front of me, not that I can draw well in any case, but I don't stand a snowball's chance without a reference.

Somehow, I have managed life despite this limitation, and I suppose that most of us are limited in some way. For example: I have probably known three guys in my life who could simply not carry a tune in  bucket. That must be frustrating, and I am glad that I can at least do that — not well and not in a way that anyone would want to listen, but I can more or less at least land near the notes, or I could at one time before my voice became a little less reliable.

Do you have a limitation that limit you to some degree? Can you sing? Draw? Do arithmetic? Spell? Organize? I imagine that you can read and write well enough if you're here, but some struggle mightily.


36 comments:

  1. I can't understand what is being said when multiple conversations are going on at once. For some reason, when there are multiple conversations going on, everything just cancels out into a Charlie Brown wah wah wah sound. It is only with extreme focus and looking directly at the person speaking that I can sometimes keep things sorted out enough to understand. I suppose that is why I dislike crowded environments like busy restaurants, bars, etc.

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    1. Many voices are hard for me with my hearing problem. I pretty well gave up at meeting friends at McDs for coffee.

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  2. Technology baffles me. I figured out how to blog but not much else. My husband looks after any technology in our home. He inherited the fix-it ability of his father and grandfather too but not for carpentry.

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    1. It comes easier to some. I am in the middle. I can often help Sue and others, but I require help sometimes as well.

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  3. Very interesting. I do wonder where those ladies came from. Of course, we are all great store houses of memory, whether we actually remember them or not. I think some of those random, unnoticed memories sometimes just float to the surface in dreams or daydreams . I have a pretty good visual memory but I'm one of those who can't carry a tune in a bucket.

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    1. I am thinking that it's a bit like AI with my brain piecing bits of images together.

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    2. It is a common phenomenon known as hypnagogic imagery.They are visual or sometimes auditory hallucinations that occur at the threshold between wakefulness and sleep. I used to hear the sound of a light grinder audio on and off between sleep and waking. It was not as harsh as the usual grinder but more melodic.

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    3. Thanks for the hypnagogic imagery comment and name.

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  4. Technology, as Marie said. But also, I think my biggest handicap is that I don't see myself as doing anything well. It doesn't matter what it is. It doesn't matter what I do. I always find myself mentally replaying things in my mind and thinking that perhaps I should have done this, or that... That feeling of failure sometimes derails a project before I even start.

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    1. I don't excel at anything either.

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  5. No singing for me, unless I'm alone lol. I did not inherit my mom's artistry with drawing - but my daughters sure did. I get frustrated very easily with technology. If it would only work the first time.

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    1. I do sing alone a lot, and even then I cringe. It doesn't stop me though.

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  6. I'm not spatial so parking, judging distance/space and what will fit are a mystery to me and something about which I have no confidence.

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    1. I am fairly spatial, but I have thrown in the towel with // parking, especially on our main street with cars waiting behind while I fumble around.

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  7. Just so you know, having been a special ed. teacher for 25 years, 'handicap' isn't politically correct anymore. It's a disability. From the days when disabled beggars would put their caps out for money. /2 cents
    My late client started having hallucinations before she died. 😆 Just so you know!

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    1. I wouldn't go as far as to think they are hallucinations. 😎

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  8. I find math very intimidating. Fortunately, with modern devices I can just have the device solve my problem for me and it's actually good mental exercise to do small math problems and count things so I'm working with it. This is an interesting post. Thank you AC, Aloha

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    1. Math seems to be a common issue. I can generally to that to a reasonable extent.

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  9. I used to be a good singer. A wonderful singer, doing lots of musicals, some cabaret. And then I got sick and it has changed my whole ability to sing, to reach for the notes, to hold them. It is one of the few things in life that makes me really sad. Math has always been a problem. I'm ok with arithmetic but the rest of it gets a little convoluted. I do have trouble telling certain numbers apart, much like dyslexia -- 6 and 9, 3-5-8 especially. I just have to be careful!

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    1. Oh, that is a pity. I was never a good singer, but my voice struggles more than it did. Or it seems that way to me.

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  10. There are many skills I struggle with (mechanical thinking, sports, etc), but what often disables me is my melancholic disposition.

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    1. So many abilities and dispositions amongst us.

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  11. I think my disability is long term memories for conversations and events. I'm not a storyteller like some of my siblings.

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    1. Storytelling is a gift that I do not possess.

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  12. I can find words to write with, but I cannot put them together to speak at length.

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    1. Me too. I can take my time when I write.

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  13. I usually wake up in about ten minutes for my nap. I don't have anything that wakes me. My eyes pop open and that's it.

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    1. 10 is just about my nap limit. I've tracked it over the years, and it is pretty consistent, but I have had a few longer outliers, and they have tended to leave me groggy.

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  14. It's fascinating how everyone experiences the world differently, and it sounds like you’ve really reflected on your perceptual challenges. It’s not uncommon for people to have limitations, whether it’s in visualizing images, organizing thoughts, or even practical skills like drawing or building. Your experience with the visions that fade when you try to focus is really intriguing, and it makes me wonder how different brains process sensory input in unique ways.

    We all have our strengths and weaknesses—maybe it’s singing or math or even just managing time. Your honesty about your mental "handicaps" is refreshing, and it’s great that you've found ways to work around them. Life seems to be about recognizing those areas and finding other ways to thrive. I just shared a new post you are invited to read: https://www.melodyjacob.com/2025/03/devils-pulpit-finnich-glen-liars-spring-outlander.html. Have a lovely Thursday!

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    1. I expect that even the brightest people have their weaknesses.

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  15. Interesting post. Don't think my dreams have ever had strangers in them, but quite often friends and relatives from the past, some who have died. I always wake up with a little empty feeling inside, the hole in my heart reopened.
    The older I get, the more I seem to need absolute peace and quiet to do anything remotely brain-taxing. I used to pride myself on being able to juggle many tasks at a time, but now I just need to focus on one thing at a time!

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    1. I've had those kinds of dreams on occasion.

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  16. Interesting, and made me think about my 'disability', in my case an inability to remember the difference between metric and imperial linear measurement = metre to yard, and kilometre to mile. Get it wrong mostly, and worth a post, so thank you also for the idea.
    Hey, melt is coming. Our neighbours all have sap and are boiling.

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    1. I look at the forecast to try to pick a day to go to Wheelers, but it keeps changing.

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  17. I have aphantasia, ie no visual imagination. I found it quite puzzling to learn that most people are able to visualise or create mental images and that I was the odd one out. It really funny thought that my dreams are very visual. I am also utterly unable to name a piece of music, with the exception of a few tunes that were formative in my life. Alas, I am just fine. I do wonder who the ladies are that you are seeing!

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    1. Yes, the American Robin is migratory, and they tend to return too soon for their own good. They dine on worms and bugs, and they really don’t exist yet.

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