You say “apple” to me and I’m #1, glossy skin, insides, all that

And how in the hell does one navigate life, or enjoy a book, if they’re not a #1?! Reading a book is like watching a movie. I subconsciously assign actor’s faces to characters and watch as the book rolls on.

Yet #5’s are not handicapped in the slightest. They’re so “normal” that mankind is just now figuring out we’re far apart on this thing. Fucking weird.

EDIT: Showed this to my wife and she was somewhat mystified as to what I was asking. Pretty sure she’s a 5. I get frustrated as hell when I ask her to describe a thing and she’s clueless. “Did the radiator hose pop off, or is it torn and cracked?” “I don’t know!”

EDIT2: The first Star Wars book after the movie came out was Splinter in the Mind’s Eye. I feel like I got that title. What’s it mean to you?

  • CaptainBlinky@lemmy.myserv.one
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    2 hours ago

    I’m definitely a 4. The shape is there, but even that’s work for my brain. I know what a thing looks like, but I can’t see it. Also, I think a lot less people are #1 than they think. A #1 is someone who can make photorealistic art from the picture in their brain. I’m guessing that’s like 1% of the people if not less.

    • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      I can “see” my wife’s face, down to the pores, but I couldn’t put it on paper. That’s a whole 'nother skill. And yes, the combination of traits are probably more rare than 1%.

    • Winged_Hussar@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Question for you - when you say it’s work is it more like:

      It’s a challenge to summon any imagery in your mind’s eye

      Or

      You can picture a vague hazy apple, but it morphs / distorts into other things?

      • tuff_wizard@aussie.zone
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        6 minutes ago

        The second one. I read somewhere that when you want to fall asleep you should try to picture the perfect apple, with the lighting, colours and everything. Like meditation for people who don’t want to meditate.

        I gave myself a headache trying to keep the shape of an apple in my mind.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      From what I’ve heard, people farthest on the left of the scale can not only picture an object but rotate it too, often while remembering what the non visible sides would look like. The best example i can think to describe this is rotating a rubix cube without mixing up the patterns/colors.

      • tuff_wizard@aussie.zone
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        2 minutes ago

        I’d say I’m a 4 at best but when I did some iq test as a kid (with an actual psychologist) I scored really highly on the spatial reasoning and can often imagine how things go back together or how the should fit when repairing something. But if i try to visualise something it’s usually taken directly from a memory, rather than created in my head…if any of that makes sense.