@scintilla Having had similar feelings, I wonder if I should just rename my suspected SDAM to HBS – heartless bitch syndrome 😉

I’ve added aphantasia to the tag pile below because (a) I’m also aphantasic, and (b) there seems to be a lot of overlap between aphantasia and SDAM

I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s also a link to ADHD’s ‘time blindness’ (bad name, but it’s the best we’ve got that’s in common use)

#SeverelyDeficientAutobiographicalMemory #SDAM #aphantasia #ActuallyAutistic #ActuallyADHD #TimeBlindness #TemporalAgnosia

‘… But you are wrong to say that we cannot move about in Time. For instance, if I am recalling an incident very vividly I go back to the instant of its occurrence: I become absent-minded, as you say. I jump back for a moment. Of course we have no means of staying back for any length of Time, …’

So said the Time Traveller in the first chapter of HG Wells’s science fiction classic The Time Machine: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/35/pg35-images.html#:~:text=But%20you%20are%20wrong,for%20any%20length%20of%20Time

I was reminded of this when I heard Brian Levine talking about SDAM in this Aphantasia Network AMA session: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zvam_uoBSLc

‘In my work we always talk about the feeling of mental time travel, or re-experiencing. So I’d want to know, do you feel like you’re actually travelling back in time, like you were there?’

I wonder if the idea of ‘mental time travel’ came directly from Wells

I’m even more curious to know if that’s what it really feels like for most people: is this another one of those things I thought was a flowery metaphor but turns out to be much more real? 🤷🏻‍♀️

#SDAM #SeverelyDeficientAutobiographicalMemory #aphantasia

The Time Machine

I was just having a discussion with @lauravivanco about aphantasia and SDAM: https://mastodon.scot/@lauravivanco/110729611947017752

I am aphantasic and have a very different kind of autobiographical memory from that of other people I’ve spoken to

But then this occurred to me:

Why should I accept Brian Levine’s 2015 (yes, 2015!) coining of the term ‘*severely deficient* autobiographical memory’ for this aspect of my neurotype?

Being Autistic, I’m pathologised by the medical model as having a ‘autism spectrum *disorder*’

And being an ADHDer, I apparently have an ‘attention *deficit* hyperactivity *disorder* (yeah, get two Ds in there, why not!)

Yet many Autistic and ADHD activists who subscribe to the social model of disability and the neurodiversity paradigm are making inroads into persuading at least some academics and clinicians to treat us as disabled, not disordered, not deficient – just a different kind of human, not humans that have gone wrong

My aphantasia/SDAM (I have a strong hunch they go together) may have strengths and weaknesses in comparison with the imaginative capacity attributed to the mythical ‘normal’ person

But because it’s out of the ordinary, it has to be called *severely deficient* by the gleeful (probably) neurotypical researcher, doesn’t it!

In 2015!

Still!

#aphantasia #SDAM #SeverelyDeficientAutobiographicalMemory #neurodiversity #SocialModelOfDisability #ActuallyAutistic #ActuallyADHD #NothingAboutUsWithoutUs

Laura (@[email protected])

@[email protected] Since you're the only other person I know with #aphantasia , I thought of you when I came across this article about how to improve your memory: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/apr/08/is-your-memory-struggling-here-are-10-ways-to-boost-recall It says "The more senses that can be recruited, the more likely you will be able to form a long-lasting memory, as more areas of the brain are involved." So "hmm," I thought, "not good for me!" And then I looked around and there's an argument that aphantasia's a memory disorder https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/elegant-arguments/202211/is-aphantasia-memory-disorder

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