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__Elijahahahaho
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03 Jul 2024, 5:55 am

I saw an autistic man once describe how he was being taught a lesson, but
he wasn't told to "store" the information, so he just forgot it.
Once he understood which information he was supposed to keep, though, he was very good.

I find that I am the same way, very explicit and economical about what I remember.

Also quite lazy, but in a smart way I think - lazy about stuff that doesn't matter.



Edna3362
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03 Jul 2024, 6:45 am

I might be.
Because remembering every detail is too exhausting for me.
Doesn't help that my memory issues got worse past teenage years.

So I only took the essentials.
Paraphrasing every sentence in my head instead of recalling it all in verbatim.

And most of my problems are coming from language comprehension. So recalling it all in verbatim is not only exhausting but also redundant and useless.

Everything else is poor verbal processing.
I can be reading something, over and over, and will not register because of how I may interpret it.
Poor verbal short term memory and recall would also make me a terrible auditory learner.


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FleaOfTheChill
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03 Jul 2024, 8:13 am

It's not lazy, it's highly efficient. That's how I justify such things anyway. My memory is crap so trying to retain a bunch of unnecessary stuff is going to be nothing short of problematic and counterproductive for me.



ToughDiamond
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03 Jul 2024, 4:40 pm

Yes I'm a bit of a memory-miser. I usually just write things down rather than try to commit them to memory, because my memory isn't perfect.



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03 Jul 2024, 6:18 pm

I have a tendency to struggle when learning about things that I find boring. My notes are all over the place and if I'm really lacking in motivation the notes might just become hastily drawn visualisations instead of words. Especially if I've forgot the word for an object, then I might just draw a quick shaky outline for reference. The notes I write in my ideas notebook are by far the most chaotic. :lol:

I also tend to mentally logout. What did I learn from that session? Excellent question. Too bad you missed Work me, Free Time me has never met her. However, if you allow me to put on formal clothes and sit in a formal chair, then suddenly I remember. I am now in the correct mode for this question.


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Sweetleaf
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03 Jul 2024, 7:08 pm

__Elijahahahaho wrote:
I saw an autistic man once describe how he was being taught a lesson, but
he wasn't told to "store" the information, so he just forgot it.
Once he understood which information he was supposed to keep, though, he was very good.

I find that I am the same way, very explicit and economical about what I remember.

Also quite lazy, but in a smart way I think - lazy about stuff that doesn't matter.


I certainly always used to zone out a bit, during teacher lectures once I had the 'necessary' information. But that was still a bit problematic as sometimes I'd be so zoned out I'd miss out on directions for assignments...and more than one teacher thought I was being a smart-ass when I would say 'hey teacher what did you just say, sorry I missed it'. and I guess as an adult I can see how it could come off that way. That said though during parent-teacher conferences they would say that even though sometimes it seems I was not paying very good attention I still was seeming to retain enough information to do well enough on tests and such.

Except for in math, but when I got diagnosed with autism in my 20's they also told me I have some sort of unspecified learning disorder with math so that might explain my struggles there. Cause yeah for math it did kind of seem like in one ear and out the other, like I just for the life of me cannot really retain enough math information to do well on a test. I tried often times to get help from teachers, even would stay for after school help then when I tried going to college(I ended up dropping out because of PTSD reasons), I could not even pass remedial math even with a tutor. The only way I can pass a math test is if I can keep notes on how to do the problems and even then it's very difficult and at best maybe I'd get a satisfactory grade but not a great one.


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04 Jul 2024, 1:28 am

When I was young I used to absorb information like a sponge. I just remembered easily, and had an easy time of it at school as a result (though I was always stressed out worrying that I wasn't going to do well on tests). Now that I'm old I don't remember anything. I even have trouble watching detective shows on TV or streaming, which I do all the time, because I don't remember the characters' names and I lose track of who they are talking about. It would be great if I could just remember the relevant stuff and let the rest slide by.