(no title)
mh0pe | 4 years ago
I have a solid and clear recollection of the good, which is useful from a business management and engineering career perspective. Literature retains on the first pass, which is very useful in operations for manual/business requirements/security framework ingestion, and I don't need to keep a TODO list or agenda (but still do for transparency's sake to my reports and superiors). Having an excess of information readily available gives a lot of opportunity to drive impact, and has allowed me to move vertically in my career very quickly. There's a feedback loop of retaining information, which presents me as more qualified to offer support to my peers, which puts more people in my direction soliciting input and building a positive reputation. With that, I made leadership in my early twenties, and it feels like it took less effort than some others to get here, based on what I've heard from other people.
Unfortunately for me and I'm sure others, I've been through a lot, and all of that retains just as well. It's not an active decision to retain. I'm not going into much detail on those events, but I've encountered about a dozen substantially negative events in my life, and having the information for those who've needed it has been helpful when necessary. It's been empowering to revisit those moments from a different angle as I've worked through those challenges.
All in all, not to be too cliche, but it's both a gift and a curse, but one I'm grateful to have.
Cd00d|4 years ago
I see the downsides. Before my accident I had a backlog of resentment events that I revisited internally very frequently. It may be the change in memory or my own maturity and change of perspective with age, but I can no longer remember those things that I held on to and resented so deeply, and I'm grateful for that. I think I still remember the real traumas, but a lot of what I forgot was just piddly stuff where I was lacking empathy for the other side's predicament.
I did have a hard time re-learning how to learn. I lost my stellar memory function in the summer between high school and college, and had never learned to study - I just reflected on what had already been presented instead. I had a very hard time figuring out how to study, and had a thing against taking notes (I felt it was better to be engaged with the lecture than trying to re-read it later). I started taking notes in graduate school because I couldn't keep up with many lectures and needed a way to walk through what had happened later.
I now takes notes obsessively. I keep a paper notebook at hand 100% of the time I'm working and every thought or follow up goes into it. I've developed a shorthand that makes this work seamlessly. Funny enough, I now distrust people that aren't taking notes when we're discussing importing things lol.
That said, I do miss the days of massive recall.
malux85|4 years ago
One other downside I have had is that it can be enormously frustrating when you can remember conversations perfectly - word for word, exact tones, even the time, day, weather, clothing during the conversation, and you deal with people who say “I never said that”
It’s like actually, you bloody well did and I remember it exactly.
Then if I tell them I have perfect recall, and then say the conversation exactly, you said “x” and I said “y” and you said “z” like that - a verbatim reproduction of the conversation - suddenly Im the bad guy - nobody ever says sorry, they just argue more or debate interpretation.
I’ve been reading Cicros books and that has helped me with delivery and better social integration
But I do feel a definite pang of frustration and a burst of anger when people even forget that I have perfect recall!
Ok rant over
One positive of my memory has been remembering source code, I seem to have an easier job reading an entire codebase and keeping all the classes, interfaces and data structures in my working memory, so I seem to have a much faster ability to get started, and also I seem to be able to handle large refractors easier than other programmers - am I am enormously grateful for this gift, and know it’s largely luck that I have it and I try and help other programmers as much as I can - I’ll offer to do the large refractors or hunt down those weird, difficult bugs.
So yeah, like the poster above says, blessing and curse
jozvolskyef|4 years ago
psfourplusone|4 years ago
curation|4 years ago
calciphus|4 years ago
"Of course I know what you wore on our third date and what you ordered. How couldn't I? It's important! Am I not as important to you as you are to me?"
Only after spending time and putting in the work with a partner who had their own memory issues did I actually bring this up to them and a therapist. I recall a conversation where I told them it was OK that they had forgotten what we ate on our first date or what I was wearing, because I didn't want to be resentful over unimportant things. The therapist asked me if I remembered most of our dates - where we went, what we wore, what we ordered, movies or shows we saw, etc. I remember being confused - of course I did! Who wouldn't?
My therapist explained that this was really uncommon, especially in the scale of years and decades. I had never considered it before that. It changed how I interacted with the world and I wish I had known sooner.
mordymoop|4 years ago
mh0pe|4 years ago
akomtu|4 years ago