• 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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          2 months ago

          That is insanely fascinating! And it’s super cool to me that you found ways to work with it, to the point where you didn’t even notice you had it! Ever since I learned about this a few years ago, I’ve been wondering if a childhood friend had it. She always had to draw or find pictures of things before she could decide if she liked how they look. One time we had to pick a flower that we liked from a provided list of flowers. We’d all seen them before (common flowers to our residence), but she had to look up each one in a book, before she knew which one she liked. I was describing them to her, so she wouldn’t have to look them up, and she knew that this was the red one that grows outside the school and that one was the blue one that grows in the park and so on, and she still had to look them up. After your comment, I’m almost positive she had it and no one knew. The human mind is fascinating!

        • HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth
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          2 months ago

          you might think “oh yeah that is a terrible idea to put these two concepts together” whereas me i can’t tell that

          You know what’s funny? Even though I can visualize things internally, I imagine it being better than I can make it in real life. Especially woodworking, I end up making mistakes at the design level. When two pieces of wood don’t sit flush because I bungled the proportions in my mind, oh it’s the worst.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Always wanted to ask, do you read fiction? It’s like watching a movie for me, can’t imagine reading would be any fun otherwise.

      • marzhall@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Also have it, the fun parts of fiction for me are the dialog and (being a scifi nerd) the thought experiments. Most of my reading focuses heaviest on what’s being said by the characters - which, luckily, happens to be where most of the meat occurs anyway. Long descriptive sections just kinda go by like white noise, though I try to catch and remember any important notes that may be referred to later, but more as concepts - e.g., “big wall” as a concept, not an image. If you ask me for the physical description of a character in a book in which they have been physically described, odds are high I’d come up empty, but I could probably give you a solid summary of their character as they have acted and based on what they’ve said.

      • leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        Seeing a book like a movie seems extremely limiting to me.

        There’s so much more depth to books than to film. Limiting them to the visual aspect would be like ripping off 90% of the pages.