Although I don't "see" it in terms of pictures. I just "know" what the lay out of the room was like. This seems to be one of my best forms of memory.
Once I've been some place, I can't "see" how to get there but at each step along the way I recognize things and know which way to go next.
This is interesting. Do you know your MBTI personality type? It sounds to me like an 'S' trait (as opposed to an 'N' trait), but I could be wrong (still learning the MBTI stuff).
Are you frequently aware of which compass direction you're facing? Like...I'm usually aware of which direction is North. I hardly ever get lost, even when driving/walking in new places (where visual memory might not be so helpful).
Do you study the layouts of places you're in? When I visit someone's house, I automatically start putting together in my mind how the different rooms are laid out, and how they're connected to each other...not just through doorways, but behind walls and above ceilings and so on. For me, it's both a visual and a kinesthetic experience. I
feel the spaces around me (what room is above me, what room is on the other side of a wall even if there's no door directly to it, which walls are exterior walls, etc), and I also visualize the spaces I can't see, even spaces I've never seen (like the bays inside walls and the wiring and plumbing there, or the layers of framing and insulation and everything).
what you're describing as remembering in the form of pictures and video clips, where the present version of "you" is outside the version in the clip is the way my T says most people remember normal memories. I remember pretty much everything like I'm reliving it and the idea of being able to watch myself kind of freaks me out.
Now I have a new "interview" question for people who let me pick their brains, lol. This is interesting.
So...for "most" people...do they see memories as if they're happening on a TV screen in front of them? Is there that much distance between them and the memories?
For you...do you experience things in live time from that same "inside of you" perspective, or do you experience any sort of displacement during the live experience? If you do experience displacement, is that perspective retained in the memory?
For me...during the live experience, sometimes I see the event through my own eyes, but from a distance, as if I'm looking through a window from inside. Sometimes I'm more present than that, but at those times, there is a
ton of information to process, so it's almost like my "self" has to disappear in order to process all of that information. And sometimes, I experience more displacement in the live experience. So at those times, it's like I'm positioned just behind myself, off to my right side, and a little bit above myself. So in those live experiences,
as the events are happening, I see myself from outside my body and observe what I'm doing and how I'm acting and how other people are interacting with me. (I understand this to be dissociation, but I could be wrong.)
So then...when I look back at my memories, I see them again from whatever perspective I experienced them. If it's a memory where I was "inside" myself but looking through a distant window, that's how the memory resurfaces. If I was watching myself from behind me, that's what I see again. Like...I can remember one event in particular last spring where I knew I was severely dissociated during the experience--I didn't feel like I was there at all, but that it was my mom standing in my place, and I was clearly standing/floating outside my body-that-looked-like-her. When I think back to that event, I still see it from that displaced perspective.
At the same time, I think that what you described as seeing the memory like on a movie screen...I think I can see some memories from that perspective as well. But that's a more vague, secondary experience of memories. I might see it that way if I'm reporting to someone else the things I did...very surface-level thought. If I dig into the memory at all, though, I'm back into the perspective from which I experienced it.
Have you been able to write a narrative about your memories? It doesn't have to be a difficult memory, just...what did you do yesterday? Like maybe...make a bullet point list, or write it like a story. Or if you can draw a little...draw a stick-figure comic strip of what you did yesterday. Maybe that would help give you a more objective perspective of your memories?
He's also like be to be able to "remember" what it feels like to be younger and older than I am. So far, I can't do it.
This has been one of my thought-hobbies for a long time. It helped keep me alive through my senior year in high school because I could imagine myself as an adult having children and being grateful to my younger self for sticking around to make that possible. I even imagine my kids as younger and older. It made those late-night feedings a little easier if I could visualize the adult version of my child standing there watching us...somehow being aware of how I interacted with their infant self (and wanting them to feel safe and loved in that experience). I've always loved time-travel sci-fi shows and movies, and how those stories challenge the whole concept of a timeline. (
Live, Die, Repeat is a great movie! And
Star Trek (especially TNG and Voyager) is a great TV series for time-travel episodes.)
I guess you've tried things like writing a letter to your younger or older selves?
I can't seem to do any kind of pictures (yet).
So do you think in pictures at all then? I've read that 20-25% of the population has essentially no visual thought.
My friend described an example to me. She said if she looks at a table with a bunch of stuff on it, she can't picture the table clean. Because there is no image in her head of it being any different, the mess on the table doesn't bother her that much (but it does bother her husband). So to clean it, she has to pick up an item, and talk to herself, "This is a cup. Cups belong in the kitchen." Then she puts the cup away, and picks up another item, "This is a book. Books belong on the bookshelf," and she puts it away. Then she looks at the lamp, "This is a lamp. This lamp belongs on the table." So then she knows to leave the lamp where it is.
However, a more visual person like me might look at the table, then create or recall an image of the table being clean instead. Then I keep adjusting the situation in front of me (picking things up and moving them off the table) until the live image matches the image in my head.