What is it for?

  • @[email protected]
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    1391 year ago

    Not everyone does, I’ve had a lot of conversations with a lot of people on this topic.

    People’s thought processes range from monologue to dialog to narration to silence to images to raw concepts without form.

    I personally do not have a constantly running monologue, but rather have relatively short bursts of thought interspersed with long periods of silence.

    • I always find this conversation fascinating and it makes me wonder in what other ways people may experience the world differently.

      I do have a constant internal monologue. Every word I read is spoken in my mind. My thought process is, to my awareness, me talking things out in my head.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Yeah, I also “hear” the words in my head as I read them, and that goes for everything.

        I kinda wish I thought in shapes and colors though. While my imagination is okay, I get the feeling it’s not as… vivid or Shar as others imaginations are.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Me to. This is the first time I think about that. Everything I read or write gets spoken aloud.

        When I am hearing a book or a podcast there is silence though, because when there is someone else talking, my inner voice would interfere.

        Fascinating.

      • kase
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        21 year ago

        That is so interesting. Thanks for sharing!

    • @[email protected]
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      351 year ago

      I don’t have one at all. Spent ages thinking that it was just a figure of speech, but when I found out I became fascinated by it.

      The current theory is that at some early point in our evolution we literally had a voice in our head, not unlike how some forms of schizophrenia present.

      It’s called the bicameral mind.

      https://gizmodo.com/did-everyone-3-000-years-ago-have-a-voice-in-their-head-510063135

      In my day to day life it makes little difference however, despite being an avid reader and writer I struggle tremendously to read aloud.

      I don’t know for sure but I suspect it is connected.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        In the article they bring up many questionable aspects of this idea, which also seems to lack in scientific support.

        And so the bicameral mind remains a highly controversial idea

      • Björn Tantau
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        81 year ago

        In my day to day life it makes little difference however, despite being an avid reader and writer I struggle tremendously to read aloud.

        Thanks, I actually wanted to post that as a question. I would have thought that reading silently would be harder.

        • @[email protected]
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          121 year ago

          I worked as a typesetter for years. I have a rather speedy reading pace (it isn’t inate, rather through practice)… but I do wonder if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

          I’m also fascinated if other folk perform accents in their head whilst reading? Do different characters sound different or is there one ‘voice’ that acts as a narrator?

          • Björn Tantau
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            121 year ago

            For me different characters have different voices. The narrative is either the voice of the character whose perspective is currently shown (which can lead to conflicts if I don’t know the perspective at the start) or it is how I imagine the author to sound like or my own voice.

            • @[email protected]
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              91 year ago

              I won’t pretend in not a little jealous of that. I can only imagine the texture that adds to a novel. Plus, it’s like a form of creative collaboration… You are present in the text… How cool is that?

          • Ada
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            121 year ago

            Do different characters sound different or is there one ‘voice’ that acts as a narrator?

            Neither. I think of the idea of the words, rather than hearing the words in my mind. Which is to say, though I can read a sentence and string together the words I read in my mind, the l there is no voice to those words, no gender, no accent, no volume etc.

          • RiverGhost
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            51 year ago

            I do read extremely fast in my native language (Spanish). Feels like entire sentences go straight into concepts and my brain builds a whole world based on what I’m reading.

            However I started reading in a verbalized way with my second and third languages (English and Swedish) because I was completely useless at pronunciation, while reading at a high level. So I had to learn the sounds and they started invading my reading, which I sort of resent.

            But the verbalization is still very mild; faint, monotone, non-enunciated.

            Some people talked about poetry and I hadn’t considered that my absolute lack of poetry-sense could be related. People have told me about the metrics and whatnot and it really doesn’t click. I have to sort of analyze a poem and explain it to myself in prose, and I imagine that defeats the purpose of poetry?

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              And there’s something else I’m interested in. When you think, do you think in a mixture of those languages? Or do you actively translate? Is it a conscious thing?

              • Hjalmar
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                21 year ago

                I natively speak Swedish but I’ve studied and used English for 4-5 years so I speak English fluently and would consider myself bilingual. I can think in either English or Swedish and I can mix sentences in Swedish and English freely. But I never think in a language that’s really a combination of those languages (what we would call svengelska in Swedish).

                I’m also studying french and German but I’m not fluent in any of those languages. When using those languages (or at least German) I think in a language that’s truly a combination of that language and Swedish/English. I use words from all languages and construct sentences as I would in Swedish (reverse word order for questions, no weird German thing with adjectives at the end etc). This of course becomes a pain as soon as I have to express a thought to someone else.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            I do wonder if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

            Hadn’t thought of this…what’s your take on poetry, especially meter-forward? Like, Robert W Service or Robert Frost, I feel would be less interesting if they didn’t have their beat.

            I don’t do voices or accents when I read. Everything is in the same ‘voice,’ which isn’t quite the same as my spoken voice. My internal voice enunciates much better and slightly lower pitch. It’s more like the voice I wish I had than the voice I do have. :)

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              Interesting you brought up Service… Grew up reading him as he’s from my home town.

              I do like poetry, but I’m much more inclined to concrete work, or something closer to what William Burroughs was after.

              The shape rather than the rhythm.

              Never thought of it that way. Though I still adore Service for the narrative.

              I like that your internal monologue is an idealised voice.

          • NaN
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            31 year ago

            I am pretty sure it does. From what I’ve heard people that essentially “read out loud” inside their head tend to have a have a slower reading pace. I don’t think Anauralia is necessary to not do that, either.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Oh yeah, often I’ll even have a specific person in mind playing the character: an actor, someone I know, etc. I often don’t even realize that I’m doing this

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

            Poetry instantly comes to mind. I have a very different experience when I silently read poetry vs. reading aloud or listening to someone read it aloud, especially when the poem is written with rhythm in mind.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            it depends on if I heard a voice of that character before for example Batman is always Kevin Conroy and the joker is always Mark Hamill. another usecase is if I listened to the audio book then start reading a text book. Ray Potter shows up alot.

      • NaN
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        61 year ago

        Out of curiosity do you visualize in your mind? Like if I say a stapler can you conjure one?

        The people with both Aphantasia and Anauralia fascinate me.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          I’ll chuck in my answer since I’ve been asked this before too.

          I don’t “see” a stapler. I perceive a future state where the pages are stapled. This does appear visually in my mind but not a a a picture of stapled pages rather a set of symbols that incorporate the task “to staple” into the other things that I am concerned with at the point of thinking about that task.

          “Set of symbols?” Is probably your follow up question - yes, geometry or iconography that describe the path from here to that future state where that pages are stapled.

          That’s the best I can do. None of this is literally narrated in my mind, however typing this out to you each sentence is “auditioned” as I imagine I am speaking it to you.

          • NaN
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            21 year ago

            That is fascinating! And different than I’ve heard described elsewhere by either the “non-visual” or “non-verbal” thinkers. I think I am pretty generic, when I think of a stapler I literally see a red swingline stapler floating in a void like in a 3d modeling program (that stapler specifically due to the movie Office Space, and therefore I also own one).

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                Makes total sense to me that you think this way then.

                I teach middle school and I think mostly verbally with pictures thrown in.

                “I should staple this” plays in my head and I have a dreamlike image of a stapler I’m looking for, or perhaps its location. If I focus, I can make those pictures very vivid, but usually they aren’t in my day to day.

                I talk to myself in my head literally non-stop. It’s a full day dialogue with myself - which I suppose makes it a monologue. But it’s pretty involved with a lot of back and forth.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  It’s so interesting. I imagine your experience is something like Venoms relationship with Eddie Brock which cracks me up!

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Absolutely. My day job is as a conceptual artist (seriously, the hours are good and I get to travel). Visualising objects is a large part of that. I’ve also worked in video game level design and found thinking in terms of 3D space pretty easy too. Just no words in there, or specifically, no voice.

    • @[email protected]
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      251 year ago

      That sounds heavenly. Mine will not shut up. And when I’ve run out of current problems to worry about, I start thinking about all my past fuck ups an embarrassments. And that’s just in the time it takes to a simple activity. When I’m at work it is constant flipping back and forth between my anxious thoughts and doing my work and worrying about how I might be fucking up my work.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I truly wish there was someone who could properly diagnose me. I did take a RAADS test a while back but I didn’t have a psychiatrist to bring my results to, so I go undiagnosed and likely will forever with the current health crisis. I don’t know if I can go on something like that without a proper diagnosis. I can’t even find a family doctor unfortunately.

          But I appreciate the tip 😊 thank you.

      • celeste
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        21 year ago

        Yeah this is similar to my experience. Some stuff gets done without that monologue, but I’m not completely without it.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Insightful, I’ve found that most people change their answers at least slightly after having time to observe their thoughts for a while, we are geniuses at believing our own conjectures.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Yep, I don’t, either. I think mostly subconsciously, then in raw concepts, then images, then words. I have to actively translate what I’m thinking into language in order to consciously understand it myself or communicate it, but I do better if I externalize the language through writing or speaking.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        We’re very similar, I think. That externalisation as a way of understanding in particular.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I have a mixture of types of thought processes. I mostly think in pictures and play things out in my head like a silent movie, but sometimes I have a monologue. Sometimes I think in a way I can’t describe with words.