Melkor
*Silent antagonist*
Do you find that you have particular difficulty with remembering people?
As in, you meet someone who you encounter frequently but in short bursts (or just new acquaintance), and you find that in addition to forgetting their name and face when you try to think in privacy, you find it difficult to pick them out of a crowd.
It always seems to happen to me in work or Uni, when I speak with someone who's been in my class for almost two years, and then they ask something of me, or I of them. Something simple like returning a borrowed pen or a promise to meet somewhere. I often find I forget who borrowed my pen, or who wanted help with this, that or the other.
It's especially bad in work when you stand and talk with a customer for half an hour, then go to get them something, and on returning you suddenly realise that you can only recall their sex and rough age, and so have to run about asking all the people of that type for a glint of recognition...
I usually get it wrong about four or fives times before I get them.
In addition, sometimes my memory becomes a little corrupt, replacing memories of fictional characters with real events and vice versa, or confusing two people who have the same hairstyle, similar voices or facial structure.
For example, my old art teacher, my old regional manager, and the fictional character from the extended Halo universe, Dr Halsey (Who I had only read about) all had identical visual memories. Not only that, but the actions and perceived personality of each began to meld. If my manager was tough on me, I'd be wary of my art teacher, if Halsey was particularly witty, I'd find my manager more endearing.
I didn't particularly mind this, as my art teacher was pretty straight forward and dull, but for some reason when I grew to love Dr. Halsey for all her quirks and heroism, I started to appreciate my art teacher more, and become oddly attached to her.
It actually helped me form bonds with people by substituting their bland or just evasive personalities with those of the intertwining memories.
I don't know... Perhaps it's just a downside of being imaginative.
Anyone have the same thing? I suspect it's probably a normal human phenomenon and I'm just overreacting.
As in, you meet someone who you encounter frequently but in short bursts (or just new acquaintance), and you find that in addition to forgetting their name and face when you try to think in privacy, you find it difficult to pick them out of a crowd.
It always seems to happen to me in work or Uni, when I speak with someone who's been in my class for almost two years, and then they ask something of me, or I of them. Something simple like returning a borrowed pen or a promise to meet somewhere. I often find I forget who borrowed my pen, or who wanted help with this, that or the other.
It's especially bad in work when you stand and talk with a customer for half an hour, then go to get them something, and on returning you suddenly realise that you can only recall their sex and rough age, and so have to run about asking all the people of that type for a glint of recognition...
I usually get it wrong about four or fives times before I get them.
In addition, sometimes my memory becomes a little corrupt, replacing memories of fictional characters with real events and vice versa, or confusing two people who have the same hairstyle, similar voices or facial structure.
For example, my old art teacher, my old regional manager, and the fictional character from the extended Halo universe, Dr Halsey (Who I had only read about) all had identical visual memories. Not only that, but the actions and perceived personality of each began to meld. If my manager was tough on me, I'd be wary of my art teacher, if Halsey was particularly witty, I'd find my manager more endearing.
I didn't particularly mind this, as my art teacher was pretty straight forward and dull, but for some reason when I grew to love Dr. Halsey for all her quirks and heroism, I started to appreciate my art teacher more, and become oddly attached to her.
It actually helped me form bonds with people by substituting their bland or just evasive personalities with those of the intertwining memories.
I don't know... Perhaps it's just a downside of being imaginative.
Anyone have the same thing? I suspect it's probably a normal human phenomenon and I'm just overreacting.