• Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m one of the 5-10%. I always sucked at verbal memory tasks. Didn’t know some people have an real, interpretable internal monologue until a few years ago. I thought thinking nonverbally was the default. I even specifically remember watching shows and movies where you listen to a character’s internal internal monologue and thinking “this is dumb, that’s not how thinking works”. Turns out it is, and I’m just in the minority! Now I make an effort to manually start an internal monologue when I’m doing anything that requires a lot of verbal processing, like listening to instructions at work. It helps, but I can still tell that I have a deficit compared to most people when it comes to those things.

    • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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      2 months ago

      Your anecdote seems to support that it’s a learned behavior/skill, which tracks for me. I have a very active internal dialogue that’s difficult to turn off. I say dialogue instead of monologue because I often make up “other voices” that bounce ideas off each other, and this generally happens without my conscious effort. I think I developed this because as I was growing up I was encouraged to pray regularly, and I was very fanatically religious as a kid so I did so as often as I could. I prayed silently so often in fact that my thoughts were basically a constant one-sided monologue directed to god. Whenever I would daydream or let my imagination wander I would imagine god responding, and eventually the constant monologue became a dialogue. I would work out problems or make decisions by having conversations with an imaginary god. When I stopped believing in god the second voice never went away, I just started recognizing it as my own.

      • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Okay, now I have to know if religious individuals are more likely to have an inner voice. That just makes sense!!!

        • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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          2 months ago

          Perhaps! I also think internal monologues can develop just from learning to read and write silently. Having an inner voice makes it easier to absorb the information in a book or to plan out your writing in advance.

          • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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            2 months ago

            Having an inner voice makes it easier to absorb the information in a book

            I think all of our brains are wired different and the different wiring leads to advantages in one thing but it’s probably a disadvantage for others. For instance I have no inner voice but my reading speed, with comprehension, is well faster than nearly anyone I’ve ever met. I can even sometimes recall precisely where on a page a given word or phrase was located, even years after reading the material. However I’m almost entirely unable to imagine a 3 dimensional object and rotate it in my “minds eye”.

            • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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              2 months ago

              That does make me wonder if maybe I use my inner voice as a bit of a crutch when I’m reading, but I think it helps me infer tone and get immersed in what I’m reading. Perhaps I am sacrificing some reading speed but I do believe it helps me with comprehension and memory.

              Though I will add that it’s more the concepts that I remember than the words themselves. Give me a quote and I couldn’t tell you what page and where on the page it was, but I could tell you what was happening in that scene, what happened before and after, what the character was feeling and why they said it, who they said it to and so on.

            • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              I have an inner voice but I don’t use it when I’m reading, which is maybe why I am a very fast reader.

              I tend to use it when pondering on things. That said I just noticed that when composing and cross-checking this text for posting, I also used it.

              Curiously, nowadays my inner voice is not just in my own mothertongue but can be in just about any of the languages I know enough for basic conversation. It’s probably related to, because my foreign language skills are so advanced (I can speak about 7 languages) that I’ve long stopped translating to my native tongue in my mind and concepts just translate directly from those foreign languages. Also, I’ve lived in a couple of countries and as I would eventually end up mainly speaking the local language, my inner voice would also, eventually, end up also using that language.

              • MeThisGuy@feddit.nl
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                2 months ago

                very interesting because I moved back to my home country 5 yrs ago after living abroad for 24. still think in my secondary language after being alone with my thoughts long enough

                • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  Yeah, I have a similar experience of still thinking in a foreign language even though I’ve been back in my homeland for years after 2 decades abroad.

                  I suspect my thinking language still being generally English is probably because I keep getting exposed to English-language media. I’ve noticed that, for example, if I think about my time living in The Netherlands or are exposed to Dutch-language media, my thinking often switches to Dutch.

            • Today@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Same on remembering exactly where i read something. I used to be a fast reader - out of practice. Maybe it’s being able to skim instead of hearing every word?

      • lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        There’s actually a theory that back in ye olden times when inner monologues first started, people thought it was God talking to them because it was a new phenomenon and that didn’t have any way to understand that it was some kind of evolution of consciousness, not a god.

      • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I am trying to wrap my head around this. So if you are just walking down the street alone, watching cars go by, not reading, there a voice? What would it even be saying?

        • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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          2 months ago

          Yes, multiple voices, probably debating what I’m going to cook for dinner later. At this point I might be going a bit too far anthropomorphizing the voices, it’s not like actual separate personalities, they’re all me. It’s more like perspective taking. I’m engaging in a conversation with myself and the different voices will take different stances. For example I might have a “lazy voice” that just wants to eat leftovers and a “craving voice” that wants to cook tacos. I decide what to do by having the voices hash it out.

          As I’m describing this it all sounds very intentional and like I’m playing pretend, but it really is just automatic.

          • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            I guess I have something similar, but it’s all just nonverbal feelings. I don’t argue with myself about getting up in the morning, I just feel comfortable, lazy, frustrated, determined, and rarely tell myself “get up” but that’s the only voice part.

      • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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        2 months ago

        Whoaaaa that’s so interesting. I grew up silently praying in the daily as well, and also tend to have dialogues going on in my head. Also a stream of unsolicited advice, which is less pleasant… But I’d probably miss it if it went away.

        • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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          2 months ago

          Learning to get over religious shame and guilt took quite some time for me, and I still have to catch myself sometimes when an inner voice says things I no longer believe/agree with. Part of getting over that meant cultivating other voices. When one voice bites another bites back lol.

          As a plus I’m very good in a debate.

    • Elextra@literature.cafe
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      2 months ago

      TIL. I’m one of the 5-10% as well!! I have not noticed a deficit in verbal memory… I’m more interested reading the comments and learning today that people have inner voices?!?

      • lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Yes! You’ve seen TV shows where people are thinking words in their heads or whatever…based on reality!

        • Today@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I think of cartoons - some people have word bubbles for ideas - some of us just have a lightbulb.

    • troglodytis@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      You get to think in ways that other people can’t. You actually have a super power. Don’t sleep on that! You rock

    • multifariace@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I’m with you. Your movie reference really helped solidify it. I assumed I was one of the lonely minds, but this made it clear.

      Some things that seem associated with this are my constant cravings for social interaction and intellectual conversation. I can’t give it to myself. I have never understood how people can just do nothing. I never had an invisible friend as a kid. There are many things people say and do that could be explained by having personal voices. There are many struggles with communicating to others that have already had a conversation with themselves before I can share a full thought.

      • Today@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I drive my office mates crazy because the thoughts in my head just come out of my mouth, especially if I’m bored or nervous.

    • lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      “It helps, but I can still tell that I have a deficit compared to most people when it comes to those things.”

      I was totally gonna ask you about this until I got to the end! It seems like thinking without any kind of internal monologue would be incredibly abstract which might be good for some things but it would probably suck ass for trying to remember or understand extremely detailed instructions and things like that! I’m so curious what it’s like to think the way you do and I wish I could flip a switch for a little bit to experience it because it’s kind of hard to really imagine what I would be like.

      • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        It’s strange because while we can use words to describe our thought processes, understanding how someone else thinks isn’t really possible since we only have one frame of reference (our own minds) and words can only go so far in describing cognition. We can only observe differences in task performance and speculate as to the underlying causes on a cognitive level, maybe make some correlations here and there in the process. So weird!

  • MudSkipperKisser@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’ve seen this conversation come up so many times and I’m never not fascinated by it. I have a nonstop internal monologue, it can be exhausting really. But I can’t fully wrap my head around thinking without it

    • Fire Witch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 months ago

      I have ADHD, it’s like having talk radio permanently on in my head. Often times I’ll have an internal monologue playing on top of internal background music.

      • EmptySlime@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        I have ADHD too but in my case I don’t actually “hear” any of the thoughts. But they exist similar to how you describe. At any given time I can feel multiple different thoughts kind of floating around. When music gets stuck in my head I don’t so much hear it in there as I feel the presence of a song. So I have to talk out loud in order to keep from losing the thread of what I was thinking about.

        • rhombus@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          I’m the same way, if I don’t talk out loud or write my ideas down I can’t think straight. Without an inner monologue my thoughts just feel like a jumbled abstract soup I have to manually untangle by speaking. I also get songs stuck in my head, but I’ve always explained it as feeling a particular part of the rhythm, or almost feeling the lyrics in my mouth like I’m speaking them.

    • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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      2 months ago

      I too have an internal monologue. I was high on mushrooms and I thought to myself “What would it be like not have an inner monologue?” Then I had an existential crisis on top of an already emotional workout trip.

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 months ago

      What happens to your monologue when you’re not thinking about it though?

      When your senses provide information about tastes or sounds, isn’t that a kind of thinking without the monologue?

          • Today@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Try playing tv or radio in s different language. There’s still the sound but you don’t get sucked in.

            • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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              1 month ago

              i’ve found “space music ambience” to work very well, it’s stimulating but not too engaging. Voices don’t work for me no matter what language it’s in, because i’ll try to interpret it.

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            i’ve had similar issues with sleeping myself, and i’ve found oftentimes having something playing in the background will help. Literally anything for my brain to focus on without expending so much energy i’m focusing directly on it. White noise might help, i’ve found rain and thunderstorms particularly good for that itch. I used to watch yt to fall asleep, and still do on occasion, but that doesn’t seem to work as well anymore.

            Lately i’ve been pulling up a yt video and trying to doze off about when it ends, and that seems to work pretty well.

            when i’m not doing a variant of that i’m usually doing some sort of pseudo meditation where i actively focus on nothing. That works if i can keep at it. That or not sleeping at all, because my shits fucked up lol.

          • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2 months ago

            I struggled with insomnia a lot.

            Podcasts and audiobooks helped me immensely. I have wireless headphones but I don’t “wear” them, I just rest them on top of whichever ear. I turn the volume down to a level where I need to concentrate to hear the words. It’s exceedingly rare that it takes me more than 15 minutes to fall asleep these days. Staying asleep is another story though.

          • DeVaolleysAdVocate@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            keep your eyes open in the dark; do all the things that trigger your master and tissue specific circadian rhythm like cooler temp, no food before bed, no blue light for hours before bed; blah blah blah

        • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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          2 months ago

          I wouldn’t describe it that way, no.

          I’d like to preface this by saying that I’m not some kind of mindfulness / meditation guru and have no business trying to explain such things to anyone else given I have such a poor understanding myself.

          I think really I’m just talking about feeling feelings. The monologue might be reporting on sensory inputs “that spoonful of peanut butter has a very sticky mouthfeel!” but there’s an underlying feeling. You can kind of feel the feeling and disregard the chatter.

      • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        For me, my inner voice is muted when I am focused on something, like working on a task or playing a video game.

        The second I stop focusing, the inner voice starts.

        If I do nothing, it’s usually a song that is stuck in my head.

        As for other senses, for me, it is the same as focusing on a task. When my senses are activated, the inner voice stops.

        If I am reading something and I know thr voice of the person that wrote that, I automatically read in their voice and it is extremely hard to read in my voice.

      • yokonzo@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Mine is constantly whatever song my brain has decided is that days hit. Most of the time im able to tune it out but that doesn’t mean that 100% that songs playing over and over audibly in my head, it just varies how loud it is at that moment

      • MudSkipperKisser@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        It doesn’t shut off, I think visually and through the experiences of the senses in part too but the words always accompany the images/senses

    • Shadowq8@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Same, sometimes I even move my mouth when I talk to myself if I am too engaged in my internal dialogue. Freaks my wife out sometimes.

      • efstajas@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I think that’s pretty normal to some extent, I remember reading that you can kinda see people’s inner monologue on a head MRI based on tiny movements of speech organs. Take this with a massive grain of salt, no idea where I read that and too lazy to find it right now lol.

        Personally I definitely notice every now and then that when I activate my inner voice I also slightly move my tongue etc. as if I was saying what it says.

    • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 month ago

      It’s fascinating to me, too.

      I have seen everything by now: People who think that only sociopaths have an inner monologue. People who think an inner monologue would be useful, but can’t quite lean in on the concept. People who are confused that some people don’t have an inner monologue. People getting angry at me for even “questioning” the inner monologue, as if it was holy.

      • MudSkipperKisser@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It’s an interesting exercise in trying to understand the experience of others while removing our own biases. Doesn’t always go so well I guess! So how do you think?? I really can’t tell from your comment

        • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 month ago

          The brain structures develop to help us navigate through the environment. So of course, at times where an inner monologue is helpful, we will probably have one.

      • korazail@lemmy.myserv.one
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        1 month ago

        This is a really interesting question. If I were a researcher, I’d try to go chase this topic, since it seems to be fairly quantifiable.

        Like Mudskipper, I can replay music in my head but it has a few caveats: I don’t really process the instruments… I remember the pitch/volume/etc but primarily of vocals. I also replay with the original singer’s voice and not my own. Replaying a few songs in my head now and I can’t even focus on the instruments if there were vocals unless they are critical to how the song works, like a bass drop. If I try to replay music that is instrumental, I get verbal recreations, like someone performing the song acapella. If i focus hard, I can hear instruments instead, but that requires thinking about it. This matches how I ‘sing along’ with instrumental pieces in otherwise verbal songs. It might just be that the backing music isn’t retained, so I can remember the melody, but not, say, a bass line unless the bass is being highlighted.

        Are there people who CAN’T replay music in their heads? Are they immune to ‘ear-worms’ or do they just perceive it differently?

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I recently learned that some people do hear a voice in their head. Some see pictures too.

    • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      So, if you study a map of a building, noticing that it has a kitchen at a certain place, then in go inside the building (without the map), and someone says “go to the kitchen,” how do you know where the kitchen is? How do you imagine the paths, rooms, hallways to follow?

      If I told you “a pink and brown dog,” you can’t “see” that dog in your mind at all?

      • iamdisillusioned@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        The map would be tough. If someone showed me the map and said, go to the kitchen, I would try remember, turn left then right then its around to the left. I would remember it in words, not visually.

        Brown and pink dog…in my mind I see a hazy face of a poodle with fluffy pink ears. I can’t see the full dog. I can’t walk around the image and explore it more. Its just a hazy partial visual that flashes in my mind for a moment.

      • cynar@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Not op, but I have a very weak ability to visualise. The data is more abstracted. A map is a set of spacial connections that define an area. My brain has learnt to pull that from a map. What I can’t do is recall the map to figure out additional information. If my brain didn’t think it was relevant when I looked at it, the information is likely gone.

        There are definitely pros and cons to it. I’m not limited to what I could visualise, when thinking. This lets me dig deeper into more complex ideas and patterns. It also makes other tasks a lot harder. I struggle a lot with faces and appearances.

        As for the dogs, I have an abstracted “model” in my mind. The size and breed of the dogs is undefined. There are 2 dog entities in my mind. 1 brown, which is quite generic, the other has pink attached to it, that cross links it with poodles etc.

        I can personally push it to a visualisation, but it takes significant mental effort, and the results are unstable.

          • cynar@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            It’s spacially based. It makes more sense in 3D. It’s just as compatible with echolocation as visual data. (The soundscape of a room tells you a LOT about your surroundings). I believe it’s based within my visual system, just stripped of the superfluous visualisations. Interestingly, I can actually map mathematics into the same structures.

            I’m doing a piss poor job of explaining it. Language lacks the nuance to describe it well, and I lack the skill to bend it into shape.

            • MeThisGuy@feddit.nl
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              2 months ago

              next question: how many times would you have to walk a new space (like a house) to remember it?

              • Today@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                I can remember the layout and draw it, but can’t see it in my head. Building layout is very concrete and is easy to know things like ‘My office is at the end of the hall on the third floor.’ When asked to describe a person I’m limited to very basic descriptions - short/tall, heavy/thin, black/white. My coworkers were making fun of me recently because i described someone as tall, maybe white, possibly red hair.

              • cynar@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                I can remember it fairly quickly. My spacial sense is particularly good. I can easily get a sense of negative space (hidden rooms etc) as well as good predictive skills. My personal problem is when maps get large or don’t overlap. It’s either mapped well, or not. It can take me a while to join up multiple smaller sub maps in my mind. (Think office or stadium sized spaces).

        • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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          2 months ago

          I’m not the OP either but my brain seems to work the same way that yours and theirs do. I’d say you did a good job of describing how it works for people like us.

          One difference though is that you don’t seem to have the visual recall that I do. I don’t have a “photographic” memory but I could probably recall the hypothetical map as a visual object and examine it for additional information that I didn’t notice the first time.

          I can personally push it to a visualisation, but it takes significant mental effort, and the results are unstable.

          You may actually be better at this than I am. Describing my results as “unstable” would charitable. I also don’t get dog breeds, just amorphous and blurry blobs with rorsarch like colors slapped on them.

          • cynar@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            I also don’t get dog breeds, just amorphous and blurry blobs with rorsarch like colors slapped on them.

            That’s akin to what I get. The core structure is there, but it’s almost a sense of what should be there. It’s akin to seeing things out of the corner of your eye, while overtired. Your brain tells you what it is, and you accept it, it doesn’t necessarily match what you are actually ‘seeing’.

            I ‘know’ how dogs move, I ‘know’ their body structure. I can force that down to a single image, but it wants to be so much more. All the senses of ‘dogness’ compressed into a single entity.

      • realitista@lemm.eeOP
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        2 months ago

        I definitely have both. I can even visualize things with my eyes open. I switch back and forth between modes depending on the content I’m working on in my head.

        • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I can even visualize things with my eyes open.

          Are you able to build complex visualizations while maintaining eye contact with someone? Once the concept becomes complex enough, I have to break eye contact with them (usually staring at nothing above their heads) and unfocus my eyes. Once I do that, the sky’s the limit on how complex the mental visual can get and be abstracted, but something about staring at a face (reading realtime facial reactions?) consumes the part of my brain I need for the very complex visuals.

          • realitista@lemm.eeOP
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            2 months ago

            That sounds pretty similar to me. I have to really be focusing to do it, if I were looking at someone and trying to do it, there would be a lot of competing sensory information. I could do something but it would keep getting broken up by distraction. It definitely works best just in a nice quiet room.

        • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 months ago

          Same. I thought it was that way for everyone. I can have a full conversation in my head while visually building something in a 3D mental image.

        • PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          So kind of like Werner Herzog then, who once stated that he never, ever dreams. But he keeps having visions with his eyes wide open, in broad daylight, all the time. He describes them in his terrific book “Of Walking in Ice.”

          • realitista@lemm.eeOP
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            His thing sounds different. I do dream (often prolifically), and when I visualize with my eyes open it tends to be something I’m trying to visualize such as a new paint color, furniture placement. I’m pretty good at it, my visions usually work out pretty well when taken to action. I’m imagining them more than really seeing them, but I’m able to do it well enough to accomplish the tasks I need to visualize.

            • Today@lemmy.world
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              I’m so bad at furniture arranging and color matching. But I’m excellent at stacking boxes or other items in a small space.

      • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        So, if you study a map of a building, noticing that it has a kitchen at a certain place, then in go inside the building (without the map), and someone says “go to the kitchen,” how do you know where the kitchen is? How do you imagine the paths, rooms, hallways to follow?

        I know this isn’t true of everybody with alphantasia, but what I do in this situation is I get lost. I can’t visualize walking through the space while I study the map, and I can’t bring the map to mind when I’m actually there. Some people with aphantasia have no trouble finding their way around, so I think in my case it must be that I’m missing some innate sense of direction as well that visualization might have helped me to compensate for, if only I could.

        If I told you “a pink and brown dog,” you can’t “see” that dog in your mind at all?

        Correct. I’m not 100% on the aphantasia spectrum, so if I think about it then I might get the briefest flash of some dog, like an afterimage at best, and I can’t hold it in my mind, or manipulate it, or see any details or color. It’s not even really a complete outline or anything either that flashes for that quarter-second.

        When I read a book, I don’t know what the characters or places look like. But I have always been able to draw really well. So it’s really a mystery how this all works.

      • EmptySlime@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        For me it’s even weirder than that. Those pictures exist in my mind and I can “feel” them there but the conscious part of me that’s supposed to see them can’t see shit. I can describe to you the things that are in them or even draw them out as they exist in my mind, but I can’t see them. The part of me that’s giving directions? It can “see” the map of the building and my position in it just fine like it’s staring straight at a live minimap, but the conscious part of me that should be able to visualize that stuff? Nothing. I close my eyes and try to visualize that dog and I see nothing but black. But I can feel the presence of the image that the part of me that does the mental conjuring of images is making.

        It’s like turning the monitor off on a computer. Everything is still running even though you can’t see it.

      • Today@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        There’s a kitchen off the hallway just past the bathroom on the left. No magic path to follow. I hate those video games where you just wander around! I can’t see a dog - i don’t know what kind of dog, size/shape of its parts, what parts are brown, what parts are pink, … If you said poodle or German shepherd, and i focused hard i could get sort of a loose wire frame outline.

    • Fubarberry
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      Only 1-3% of people lack the ability to visualize images in their head.

      Somewhat related, I recently realized I can’t really remember the taste of food at all. I can remember the texture of the food, and whether I liked it or not, but not how it actually tastes. For example, I know I like chocolate but I have no desire to eat it most of the time because I can’t remember anything about the taste except for the texture. But once I start eating chocolate and have the taste lingering in my mouth, I find myself craving more of it until the taste fades and I forget what it tasted like again.

      • Today@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        When I first learned that other people see and hear, I started asking around. From My polling, about 30% of people either don’t hear or don’t see. I’ve only found a handful of people who don’t do either. I read some articles that say you can train the visual.

      • Today@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Oh man! That is a perfect example! I have not able to understand the voice or the picture… Like you actually hear a voice or you see an image??.. But I totally understand the taste - almost like the shadow of a taste in your mouth for something that sounds good. I guess that’s why what people say, “what do you have a taste for”?)

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      I have some very loud voices in my head. One is intentional, like when I read or write things out I hear my own voice in my head. At least one of them just talks shit to me all the time. It’s not like schizophrenia “I hear voices”, it’s just a thought that I’m not actively having. When my depression gets bad it’s gets really loud so I drown it out with music and books.

      I can’t see pictures in my head.

      On another note, I’m pretty sure religious nutjobs really hear their own inner monologue and think it’s a god talking to them. That’s why their god always agrees with them.

    • PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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      The mind of an artist perhaps? I can see vivid film grade depictions of whatever I want in any style I can imagine.

      Its quite frustrating when I know my hands could never produce what I see in my mind.

  • danekrae@lemmy.world
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    “Weirdos. I don’t have an inner voice”, most people thought, using their inner voice.

  • movies@lemmy.world
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    Some inner voice talking to me all time sounds fucking awful haha

    • realitista@lemm.eeOP
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      If it’s a different person than you, then you have a different issue ;-).

    • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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      Eh, it isn’t all the time for most people, and it isn’t hard to shut down for most people either.

      The key is that it isn’t a separate entity, it’s just your own mind using words to ideate. Like, you can see the sky and just enjoy the blue, or you can think about the blue in words, if you have that inner voice. People without that voice still have a way of processing and thinking, it just isn’t in words, it’s more abstract.

      The few people I’ve met that don’t think in words do seem to have difficulty in expressing the experience to others though.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        As someone with an inner voice, I can’t even imagine how I’d think about abstract concepts without words. Like, how does “I love freedom” or “I wish all people could be free” happen without words? Maybe this is a learning disability of mine, and explains why interpretive dance doesn’t make any sense to me.

        • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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          I didn’t think this “not using inner voice” thing applied to me, but the way I read the article maybe it does. If the inner voice is truly a voice using grammatical spoken language it sounds crazy limiting.

          As someone with an inner voice, I can’t even imagine how I’d think about abstract concepts without words. Like, how does “I love freedom” or “I wish all people could be free” happen without words?

          None of this is in words when I’m thinking about it. I’m putting words here to describe the concepts , thoughts and feelings, of each step but none of it is words when I’m thinking it.

          Freedom

          • limitless choice
          • peace and comfort
          • patriotism (to the extreme, ironic terms freedom being used as a method of control)
          • anti-freedom = slavery or being controlled
          • personal experience with making free choices
          • historical learning about situations where they didn’t have freedom
          • personal luck in being born in a (mostly) free country
          • imagining being born and living in a place without freedom
          • fictional examples of lack of freedom, like sci-fi dystopia
          • empathy about those that don’t have the same things I do
          • sense of justice about equality
          • memory of muscles used to make my mouth and larynx say the word “freedom” FREEEEEE — DUUMMM

          All of the above only takes a second or two of actual elapsed time.

          Words that come out:

          “I love freedom. I wish all people could be free”.

        • Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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          2 months ago

          It’s like an instinct. You get the meaning behind the words without the words needing to be there.

        • snooggums@midwest.social
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          Interpretive dance is about expressing feelings without words. Mimes convey a ton of meaning without words. Both use motion and body language in ways that not everyone is familiar with, kind of like speaking a language. Other things people do physically, like shaking hands, bowing, and hand gestures have regional meanings like verbal language does.

          Non-verbal communication can be hard, but then again speaking different verbal languages is a barrier too.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s not “some voice” talking “to you”, it really just feels like your thoughts are words, if they’re “word adjacent thoughts”.
      Like, thinking about how to phrase that first part, it felt like I was reciting the words I was thinking of typing, not like someone else was saying them to me.

  • Crack0n7uesday@lemmy.world
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    The FBI did a study and most serial killers don’t have an inner monologue… You can add that to the TIL.

    • Eccitaze@yiffit.net
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      God, same. One of my little annoyances in life is that my internal voice is a goddamn motor mouth and I literally CANNOT stop it.

      I can stare at a white wall and watch paint dry, and my monologue will start philosophizing about watching paint dry, where the phrase came from, why I’m doing it (to try and silence my internal voice), then go on a wiki walk about how trying not to think about something makes you think about it more and the classic example of telling someone “don’t think about a brown bear” makes them think about bears, then I’ll start thinking about bears and my monologue is suddenly halfway across the world.

      Put me in a sensory deprivation tank, and my internal voice starts ruminating about how Daredevil uses these to sleep, then goes off about fight sequences, and then superhero comics, and whoops I’m halfway across the world.

      Even when I’m paying attention and listening, my inner voice is still motoring away, it’s just that it’s mirroring what is being said to me instead of going on its own wiki walk halfway across the world (though sometimes someone will say something that makes my internal voice go “wait a second, that makes me think of…” and then I stop listening while I go on a wiki walk).

      I have ADHD, in case it isn’t obvious yet.

    • DudeImMacGyver@sh.itjust.works
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      You can, but it takes work for some people. Various meditation can help, but require patience and diligence.

      I’ve learned to turn it off and on mostly at will and frequently just play music in my mind when I want to listen but can’t use headphones or a speaker.

      • delirious_owl@discuss.online
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        2 months ago

        Usually its a song. But sometimes its more than one song playing at once. And sometimes there’s a narrator speaking over the music

  • Foofighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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    Now I am reading everything alout with my inner voice instead of just skipping over it. I’ve entered manual reading mode. Great. Thanks.

        • lobotomo@lemmy.world
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          It’s not. Especially if you suffer from anxiety or depression.

          Imagine constantly having a (your) voice reminding you of all of the shit that stresses you out.

    • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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      You know what, I can’t roll the R and neither can my inner voice and I hate it for that. I have a speech impairment in my freaking inner voice.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Every time?

      No.

      Easy example; picture an item in your head. Now flip it.

      No language necessary or really even applicable.

      But to learn that some people never have an inner dialogue…? That sounds so weird.

      • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Some people can’t picture an item in their head, or can barely do so and wouldn’t be able to flip it.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          Yeah complete aphantasia is crazy.

          The point is that no-one does that sort of thinking with language, as it’s not really applicable.

          • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            I was really confused when you said picture an object then flip it. When people say picture something I always assumed that was a way to say think about the thing. I guess because I can think about things, obviously, but I can’t picture them. Their wouldn’t be a thing for me to flip if someone asked me to picture an object which left me wondering, wtf do you mean flip it.

            • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Picture a teapot. Picture it turning over so you can see the other side. Sort of like that.

              • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                I guess my point is that I can’t picture something in that way. Picturing a green apple vs a red apple. I don’t actually visualize anything. I can think ok it’s a sour apple or sweet apple but I don’t have a visual to modify. The teapot I would just be thinking ok the teapot is upside down, theirs nothing I can visualize that would change. I have tried really hard, especially when I miss loved ones, I wish I could bring about images of them in my mind really badly.

                • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  Faces are hard for me too, but not impossible. It’s like AI. It’s easy to get a “teapot” but it takes more work and focus to get a specific individual.

              • MeThisGuy@feddit.nl
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                2 months ago

                guess the upside of it is is that if you see something traumatic you can’t revisualize it?

                some things can’t be unseen doesn’t apply for everyone? must be nice

                • mrcleanup@lemmy.world
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                  Maybe. One way to process trauma is to re-visit it until it becomes more familiar and less of an extreme experience. Seeing it in your mind may make it more real, but it also means you can just picture a teapot instead if you need to get away from it.

          • DriftinGrifter@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            2 months ago

            i can imagine textures and tastes and stuff and geometry relatively complex but when i try to imagine colors all i get is a flat color diagram or an empty room with only one colour

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            it’s wack, shits even weirder when you dream.

            My dreams often get retconned into the real world, unless my brain immediately determines them to be bullshit. Which is uh, unsettling.

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        oh my friend, you have made the most relevant mistake in the book, may i introduce you to aphantasics? People who are incapable of visualizing something in their mind.

        • EmptySlime@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          It’s hard to describe for me. Cuz I don’t actually “see” anything I try to imagine. If I close my eyes and try to visualize say an image of a desk at a window all I see is darkness. The image exists, I can I guess I’d say “feel” it there and i could even draw it. But I can’t “see” it. Like the part of me that’s making the picture is drawing it on a live stream but the part of me that should be seeing the stream has the monitor off.

          Same with the whole internal monologue thing. I don’t “hear” the words in my head or “see” them written out in my imagination but I kinda just “feel” them there. It poses a problem when my mind really gets going because there will be often like half a dozen different distinct thoughts I can feel in there. So I end up having to talk to myself out loud in order to keep from losing whatever thread I’m trying to follow.

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 month ago

            i like to separate it between visualizing something, and conceptualizing something, because if someone says a visualize a sphere, you know what a sphere is, you simply don’t need to visualize it in order to conceptualize what it should look like, thus leading to a “pseudo image”

            but if someone were to say visualize the tread pattern of an all weather tire, you probably wouldn’t be able to do that very well, since you likely don’t have a very solid conceptual understanding of what it looks like.

      • Ookami38@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Yeah, those things are still almost entirely word-baaed for me. Low level aphantasia, I can’t form a very clear picture in my head, but my inner monologue does a lot of lifting.

    • Today@lemmy.world
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      Apparently. I first learned about this last year when a co-worker told me to listen to my inner voice. I said, " oh yeah, like Sybil or Jiminy cricket?" I thought she was kidding. Then I thought she was crazy. Then 2/3 of my office said they hear it too. People who hear don’t believe that other people don’t, and vice versa. People are always trying to trick me into saying I hear something by asking me how I know the sound of my husband’s voice or recognize a song, or get a song stuck in my head. When I have a song stuck in my head it’s just the urge to sing it and there’s no music. I can recognize actors by their voice sometimes, but I cannot do impressions or accents at all!

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        you can’t recognize voices without an internal monologue? I see no reason that shouldn’t be a thing people would even consider. Voices are like identifying unique patterns. They’re incredibly easy, and we’re trained to do it from birth. Similar thing for songs, although in that case i think it’s more a sense of auditory “muscle memory” as the auditory experience illicits previously excited paths through the brain, leading to the same experience as last time, which allows you to define it independently.

    • Moghul@lemmy.world
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      I can’t look at text without my inner voice reading it to me

      I can come up with answers or solutions to problem without it, but it’s there for a lot of stuff.

    • bitchkat@lemmy.world
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      Sometimes yes, like right now. I can sense myself saying the words I want to type in my head. Its really like a voice talking to you but I can hear what the sentence will sound like if I read it out loud.

  • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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    It has its uses, helpful for remembering a short sequence of numbers for instance, or practicing a specific dialogue line that is going to be important, like for a job interview or something where you want a solid and confident delivery. But generally speaking I prefer it quiet, makes it infinitely easier to pay attention to my surroundings.

    Meditation is basically the practice of learning how to turn it off at will. Can take awhile, it doesn’t always seem to like being quiet. It also turns off other times though, like when you’re suddenly startled for instance.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        Yeah it confused me for so long

        Instructor: “what I want you to do is stop thinking”

        Me, internally: okay, done

        Instructor: “I know that may be the hardest thing to ask, but I want you to quiet your mind”

        Me, internally: yep, already did it

        Instructor: “once you learn how to stop the constant parade of thoughts in your head and just listen to the world around you, you will find great peace”

        Me, internally: I do that all the time what

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            Yes, neither one is difficult for me but I gather it is for people with a monologue.

            • Today@lemmy.world
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              I don’t have words in my head but i still have thoughts that keep me awake. I’ve been practicing turning off my thoughts to sleep better. I focus hard on relaxing each body part for 3 breaths starting with a foot.

    • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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      How fo they read silently to themselves? 🤔

      The same way as listening to someone speak. There’s a thread of consciousness that takes in visual data and is translating the written word into a string of syntactical concepts that is then processed analytically.

    • AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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      I was really surprised when I found out that people imagined voices when reading. Wouldn’t they be sped up voices? People read faster than speech. It’s so confusing…

      • decivex@pawb.social
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        I think the inner monologue is more there to “support” the processing of information rather than being filtered through it entirely.

  • 018118055
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    I have a non-verbal inner voice which gives meta-commentary on my verbal inner voice. If I want to think about what I’m thinking, that’s what is going on.

  • Emmie@lemm.ee
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    I always thought only mentally ill people (schizophrenic) have inner voice(s) that is until I learned everyone else has so it’s me that I am not normal lol

    I feel like it makes grammar harder tbh. I have to edit shit again and again if I want it to look good for you nerds.

    • Meansalladknifehands@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      When I read stuff, my inner dialog reads it back to me, you don’t get that? Like in the movies when a someone is writing or reading a letter.

      • Emmie@lemm.ee
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        I see images when I read ,like in movies’ I see a theatre, someone reading a letter I see old man reading a letter on a xix century chair with a gray beard and cigarette and focused gaze, jumping from image to image like this and more unspecified ‚ideas’. When I solve a problem I usually use those kind of mind lego bricks to build something in mind and test it. It’s all imagination based.

        I guess I may like books more than average person. I feel like if reading was accompanied by inner monologue it would be slower instead of just direct words to images so to say but at the same time I often lose details when reading or don’t remember them at all considering the action feels like a movie in the head

        I have to read professional books or physics slightly different and often twice same thing but I guess that’s normal when the topic is more complex that it’s hard to form an image connected to the equations and get all these things in head properly connected to form understanding which for me means building some imaginary concept of it from the mind Lego bricks that is logical and won’t collapse. No idea if it is typical way of things or not.

        • Meansalladknifehands@lemm.ee
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          I would guess it’s normal for your imagination to draw what you read, but I guess people have different levels of imagination. I myself don’t imagination stuff clearly, more of a haze. People who are naturally good at drawing, I would guess have strong imagination, where they can picture what they’re drawing in clear details.

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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        When I read stuff, my inner dialog reads it back to me, you don’t get that? Like in the movies when a someone is writing or reading a letter.

        So, it’s like you’re reading twice? Like you’re perceiving it with your eyes/occipital line and then your inner dialog verbalizes it for you? Or all in one shot?

      • efstajas@lemmy.world
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        How does this work? Like you sometimes can’t control your inner voice, it just says things to you on its own accord?

        • The Snark Urge@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          For me it’s like there’s another me inside my head who just talks at random. I can usually control it, or maybe it controls me, or maybe it is me, or just a part of me. I think a lot of who I am as a person consists of the words bouncing around in my head and my relationship with them at any given time.

    • SparrowRanjitScaur@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      My understanding is that among other issues schizophrenics view their internal monologue as not being their own thoughts, but rather an external voice. Take that with a grain of salt though, because it’s just something I vaguely remember reading on the Internet at some point.