• SelfHigh5@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I have a blurry photographic memory.

    What I mean is that I can remember where/what an item looks like but can’t read it. This was especially lame and stressful in nursing school because during a test I could recall exactly where in the textbook or PowerPoint slide the answer was, but couldn’t “read” it from said memory. Stuff like “it was in the yellow shaded an the lower inner quarter of the page, second and third billet points” or “halfway down the page, highlighted in pink, and next to it was a graphic of the Krebs cycle” Not as helpful as you might think.

  • Charzard4261@programming.dev
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    6 days ago

    I have extremely sensitive hearing. I can tell when there’s an animal scarer nearby.

    This brings me to Microsoft Teams. You might have seen people mention that their dogs know when someone joins the call before they do. That’s because they introduced “ultrasonic howling” to detect if they’re in the same room as you, and mutes their mic.

    It hurts like fucking hell with headphones on.

  • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I can count almost perfect seconds. Most people think they can count seconds until they try to prove it.

    Like, give me a stopwatch. I can count seconds to within an average of .05 of a second.

    I can do this consistently over a long period of time, i gave up counting when i tested it.

    It’s because i used to have 3 clocks in my living room, and they all used to tick at different times. I guess from when the battery was connected and it would create all these different rhythms.

    After many years of hearing these rhythms and noticing the different rhythms that would be made as we changed the batteries over time, i ended up being able to tap the rhythm out on a table/in my head etc and now its just ingrained into my head.

    taTA ta… taTA ta… taTA ta…

    Absolutely useless.

  • rpl6475@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    I can ‘flex’ my Eustachian tubes and ‘open them’ at will, e.g. equalising pressure when ears need ‘popping’ on planes. I’m sure it isn’t that uncommon but no one ever knows what I mean when I say it.

  • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I can smell fear. I always thought that was normal, because it’s used idiomatically, but the first time I said something in a group of people, they looked at me like an alien. When someone’s anxious, their sweat smells more metallic to me, like amphetamine/coke sweat (which makes sense).

  • tomjuggler@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Picking stuff up with my toes. I use the two big ones like chopsticks or just scrunch something up with all of them together. My toes can spread out as wide as my fingers, so it’s easy to manipulate things with them. Also, I am very well balanced on one leg, probably because of doing this for so long.

    This power is more and more useful as I get older and find it more of a chore to bend over, with my beer belly getting in the way (I’m almost 50, it’s a sign of success!). If it’s below my waist I’m going to pick it up with my foot 50% basically.

    I live in a warm climate and hardly ever wear closed shoes luckily, I know some places it wouldn’t be practical…

  • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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    7 days ago

    I can’t stay angry; I have multi-sensory aphantaisa, this comes with not being able to re-experience emotions.

    I remember that something made me angry, but I can’t relive the emotion. It lets me dispassionately examine the past to see what made me angry and thus work through the trigger and try to reduce it in the future.

    There is the downside to this, it is on all emotion, so I also can’t re-experience happy emotions either.

  • vvilld@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    My mouth doesn’t have the receptors to detect capsacin, the chemical that makes spicy food burn/hot. I can eat the spiciest food imaginable and it will not burn my mouth at all.

    That said, those receptors exist in other parts of my body. Very often while I’m sitting on the toilet I’ll realize my dinner the previous night was particularly spicy.

    Also, after more than 1/3 of a century of eating spicy food indiscriminately, my stomach lining has taken quite the beating.

  • perfectly_boiled_pizza@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I have abnormally good colour vision.

    I have no idea what to do with this.

    Found out when studying photography. We did some colour tests that get gradually harder. You are supposed to fail at some point. I kept on passing all of them. My “regular” vision is just normal though.

  • 2ugly2live@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I used to be able to tell if a TV was on or not. I can’t really explain it, but it was like I could vaguely hear/feel it? I don’t know, I was a kid. My grandma would play her games without sound sometimes so she wouldn’t wake people up (and probably to play without a kid hanging off of her), but I evolved to counter it. 😂

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    5 days ago

    Hyper-compartmentalization. Everything can be falling apart around me, high stakes, emergency, danger, but I just proceed calmly and steadily toward the goal. I am a rat in a maze, and each decision is just an ab node in a tree. I make best guesses and don’t shoulda woulda. If I can’t make it and everything is horrible, that was the outcome, I did the best I could with the knowledge/data given, or I put in what I felt was right, and if I’m wrong, oh well.

  • GreenCavalier@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    I have super sensitive hearing, so while I can hear the faintest of noises, it also means loud noises are overwhelming and painful.