• rumba@lemmy.zip
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    7 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.

  • banazir@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    I can sometimes see auras around people. It’s fascinating stuff, but the strain of it can cause debilitating pain.

    Western medicine calls it “migraines”, but what does science know?

  • Leg@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    I’m able to predict when Holes, starring Shia Labeauf, is about to air on Disney Channel. If I have a strong desire to watch the movie, odds are it’s about to air. I was able to do this for years.

    I no longer watch cable tv. This power is vestigial. Nowadays when I have a strong desire to watch Holes, I just watch Holes.

  • Fingolfinz@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I can smoke more weed than you’ve ever seen. Also I have a photographic memory. But I like the weed thing more

  • AlolanYoda@mander.xyz
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    9 days ago

    I can hear CRT screens. They emit a high pitch noise that nobody else in my family can hear, I assume most people actually can hear it but never noticed it. My family used to think I was crazy or had tinnitus (jury’s still out on both) until they tested me by making me close my eyes and tell them if the TV was on while turning it off and on at random, with sound off. It was a weird test from my perspective, since I could hear it fine anyway. So far I haven’t noticed a decay due to age, but if it had little use when CRTs were widespread, it’s now completely useless.

    • Spendrill@lemm.ee
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      9 days ago

      I used to be able to tell what refresh rate they were set to because everything below a certain point flickered. I’d ask people why their screens were flickering and they couldn’t see it.

      • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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        9 days ago

        Now that is a superpower. I’ve always thought the ability to see fast was such an interesting skill.

        Think about it: you could go to the Olympics in a skillful sport like fencing or boxing, and defeat every opponent without much formal training simply because you can see them telegraph their moves. No anticipation or planning required, you just watch them come to you.

        Do you do any competitive sport?

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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          9 days ago

          I used to be able to do this as well until I got into my 30s and my vision naturally degraded.

          Was quite good at FPS games, paintballing… the first time I went to a rifle range for an introductory shooting class, the instructor suggested i look into a shooting scholarship due to my exceptional fine motor control and visual acuity… I had very fast reaction times in martial arts (Karate), but being naturally timid and having a skinny twink build kind of cancelled that out.

          The reality is most people think you are delusional, and if your family/friends are authoritarian, they’ll try to get you mentally evaluated as seeing hallucinations.

          Its less Superman and more Xmen being persecuted for being different.

        • Spendrill@lemm.ee
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          9 days ago

          No, I have very poor hand eye co-ordination. Every time I have tried to play table tennis people have been on the floor laughing at how poor my reactions are. My eyes are just very sensitive to light.

      • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        When I lived in Canada for a year and then moved back to Europe I saw CRT TVs flicker for the first week I was back home. Even on so called 100Hz CRT TVs I saw flickering. Got used to 60Hz CRT screens so 50Hz CRTs were very noticeably

        • Spendrill@lemm.ee
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          8 days ago

          Yeah, if my memory is correct the flickers stopped completely for me at around 80hz. I’m talking about monitors here rather than TVs.

      • x4740N@lemm.ee
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        8 days ago

        You might want to get yourself checked for Autistic Spectrum Disorder because I notice CFL tube (fluorescent tube light) flicker if I pay attention to them when no one else does

        Some people with ASD are more sensitive to things other people don’t notice

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          8 days ago

          Mate, there are so many things that suggest I am on the spectrum now that I have given up keeping track of them all. I’m not sure that at my time of life there’s anything that can be done for me even if I did get a diagnosis.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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      9 days ago

      I too have significantly more sensitive hearing than seemingly just most people, and can hear and often get annoyed by high pitched but low decibel sounds, very often caused by electronics, off balance high speed fans, etc.

      Got gaslit about it by my family as well.

      You may wanna look into an autism diagnosis, autists often have this kind of thing going on.

      You’d think it would be called super hearing, but instead its often everyone without heigtened senses calling you delusional.

      Same thing happened to me when I described seeing the entoptic blue field phenomenon to my family, but not knowing the fancy name for it because I was 11. Family got very concerned I was hallucinating, the reality is I am just more attentive to reality than they are.

      • quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        So that has a name! Hahahaha There’s no way I can memorise that, I’ll keep call it “eeenergy” instead.

        Good to know what it is in case someone wants a serious answer.

      • AlolanYoda@mander.xyz
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        8 days ago

        Out of all the ways I’ve ever been told I may have autism, this is certainly the most unexpected! At a certain point I should probably get a diagnosis.

        In my family’s defense, they did believe me as soon as they tested my hearing (after trying to trip me up several times, without success), so I never felt gaslit, I just felt proud of my hearing hahaha.

        Yeah, I didn’t mention this in my previous post but it was annoying, for sure. I would listen to this annoying noise, nobody would hear it, and I’d eventually discovered that somebody had left the TV on.

        That phenomenon is also something I saw, but never really gave it much thought, I just assumed it was just something our eyes did

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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          8 days ago

          Well I’m glad you have/had a supportive family instead of a dysfunctional awful one like me.

          I’ve been forced through an ever evolving series of mental health diagnoses by my family until after 20 years of the wrong meds for misdiagnosis… yeah turns out I am autistic and have ptsd/cptsd from my insanely narcissistic and manipulative and mentally unstable family.

          Turns out once I get the fuck away from them, I can actually manage fairly well on my own. Oh and theres the whole got two bachelors degrees simultaneously and am very good at a multitude of tech/programming/db admin/data analysis type stuff, and I was making more money than my entire immediate family combined until their most recent attempt to declare me insane for disagreeing with their (objectively wrong) econonomic and political opinions (my degreees are in econ and poli sci, none of them have any degrees).

          … Anyway, there’s much more to an autism diagnosis than just the heightened hearing/seeing/touch sensations, but that is a fairly significant component of it.

          There are some decent, long form, like 200+ question tests you can take online from actual medically endorsed autism awareness organizations… if you think you may actually have it, take one of those and then take your results to a psychologist.

      • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        My brother and I always enjoyed going out to the woods together when we were young because you couldn’t hear everything humming out there. I still enjoy it for the same reason.

        My hearing isn’t even that great because I’ve spent years around loud noises (industrial and concerts) without hearing protection. But I can still “feel” cheap chargers, bad screens, and florescent lights.

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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          8 days ago

          A whole lot of poorly configured or cheaply made electroninc appliances or chargers … yeah I can often literally hear when you’ve plugged something in wrong, it makes a high pitched whine, because it is overamping.

          Also, if you’re near high tension power lines?

          You have to be pretty darn close to be in danger from actual electromagnetic effects.

          But… that hum? The buzz?

          Turns out that that is actually what causes a lot of long term health problems in people sensitive to it.

          Literally the sound, not the EM field, makes you agitated, stressed, on edge, and if that is just your baseline for 20 years, that constant stress accumulates and basically ages you faster, and can cause mental health problems.

      • nargis@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        entoptic blue field phenomenon

        Thank you. You’ve solved a mystery that bugged me since forever lol. Yay, I am not crazy. I legit thought there was something wrong with my eyesight all these years, or that they were just weird floaters. Thank you so much, friend. Relate hard to the sound stuff as well, it’s nice to know it happens to other people al well.

    • Cram42@mander.xyz
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      8 days ago

      Welcome to the world’s most useless club.

      Used to be able to walk down the street and know who’s home watching TV by the whine (sort of like an extremely high pitched white noise).

      Now CRTs are gone I’ve since realised I also have tinnitus and am constantly hearing that same sound in my left ear.

      (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻

    • Fluke@lemm.ee
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      9 days ago

      Diagnosed autistic?

      It’s very common for us 'spergs to have a very high frequency cut off on our hearing, all the way to old age.

      I’m 43 and can still hear the bats chirping when they’re hunting insects in the twilight round the gardens. People think I’m making it up, until I point the bats out, tracking them by sound until they flutter high enough to see their silhouette against the sky.

      CRT TVs and monitors used to annoy the hell out of me. The high pitched whine of the flyback transformer that runs the motion of the electron beam makes a very distinctive hiss. Like someone else on here, I could tell what refresh rate your monitor was running in by the noise it made.

      That, plus an abnormally high flicker fusion frequency meant I had migraines every other day when I was working. :-/

      • brap@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        Interesting, never knew that. I’m in my 40s and can still hear the annoying high-pitched whine from the speaker outside a shop near me that’s designed to keep kids from hanging around.

        • Fluke@lemm.ee
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          9 days ago

          Ah, the “Mosquito” device.

          I have strong feelings on those things. Strong enough to drill holes in one while up a ladder wearing a visi-vest.

          Side note: It’s amazing how invisible you become while wearing a high-vis vest and a hard hat.

    • Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org
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      9 days ago

      think I was crazy or had tinnitus

      When you have tinnitus, then you will know it. And then you probably can’t hear that CRT screen anymore.

      About “crazy” I don’t know ;)

    • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Approximately 15.5KHz. Not out of range for healthy human hearing. Most of us are damaged by noise pollution and blood pressure issues by the time we’re adults and high frequency sensitivities drop off first.

      If a CRT is on in a large space with volume off, I can still hear it a bit, but mild tinnitus masks most of it.

    • x4740N@lemm.ee
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      8 days ago

      You probably should get yourself checked for Autism Spectrum Disorder and so does anyone else who experiences anything similar

      Some people with ASD have a sensitivity to things neurotypical people don’t notice

      Autism is a Spectrum Disorder so not all autistic people have the same symptoms and you can’t self diagnose yourself, you need to see someone specialised for that

      • Fluke@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        I can still hear the bats pinging for insects round the back gardens. I was 43 last week :-p

    • Synapse@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Some power-supplies also do this high pitch noise too and it bothers me a lot. Most people can’t hear it.

    • DogWater@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Yeah I think everyone used to be able to hear that. Elementary school videos all the kids could hear of the teacher left the TV on in our class rooms.

  • adam_y@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    I can fall asleep, near instantly, at will.

    I call it my time machine function.

    • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      I envy you so much. Yours is an actual superpower. My ability is the opposite, I can wake up from an alarm no matter the circumstance, slept only 3 hours while completely drunk? Still wake up instantly and start doing things, I’ve never missed an alarm in my life.

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          8 days ago

          We need to learn the fusion dance, we would be unstoppable! (To be clear, I can wake up and be ‘functional’ whenever, doesnt mean I get good rest nor wake up happy)

      • adam_y@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        You an I… We are either going to form an unstoppable super team or… You ate going to end up as my nemesis.

        • Dagnet@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          You sleep a lot and I do everything? Doesnt sound very nice to me, tho in FF14 there is a quest chain where one guys is always awake and his ‘wife’ sleeps for him because of a magical item.

      • Spaniard@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I can sleep at will and wake up at will. Like I am traveling early so I have to wake at 4:30am no problem!

  • SelfHigh5@lemmy.world
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    8 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.

    • booly@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      I have a watered down version of this, but I’m a lawyer so it’s very very valuable. If I get a question I might not know the answer to, if I’ve read it somewhere I usually know roughly where to go back to get it. And since lawyers mostly look things up instead of trying to memorize everything, a powerful “indexing” memory is valuable in the profession. At least in my practice.

    • pelespirit@sh.itjust.works
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      Same. Also, I can see things from when I was an infant up until now. All of my past memories are like normal childhood memories, there is no cut off before 2 or whatever everyone else has. It’s not every single memory, but the ones that stick out in your mind like every other memory from your past.

  • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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    My boyfriend can smell when someone drank alcohol hours (or even days!) later. He seems to smell it in a person’s sweat, so we suspect he senses some kind of metabolite.

    As to me? In-person I seem to emit a comforting, trustworthy aura. Children and stray animals approach me like they just know that I’m a safe space for them. As a result, I’ve acquired quite a list of no-kill shelters in my phone. I also ended up working in children’s therapy.

    Adults who share my wavelength can also recognize it in me, and I can recognize it in them - we’re drawn to each other in the same “inherently trustworthy” way. I suspect it’s an aspect of neuro-divergence.

      • KittenBiscuits@lemm.ee
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        8 days ago

        Well yeah, they’re saying it’s their super power, not their minor power.

        Or are you saying attracting minors doesn’t count toward Disney Princess credentials?

      • rpl6475@lemmy.ml
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        8 days ago

        Especially if they use it for evil. This could be a fork in the road for their origin story! Controlling animals to do their bidding.

    • flicker@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 days ago

      I also have that aura, and I am here to lend credence to being able to see it in others, and them seeing it in me.

      I have this cute phrase for when it’s not just that aura but also the obvious background of trauma, “We have so much in common! I’m so sorry.

    • ivanafterall ☑️@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      I’m similar. Ever since I was a kid, my mom would notice that “babies love me.” They really do. If there’s a baby nearby, it’ll probably love me and I’ll probably be making faces at it, etc. I think it’s partially the beard, but it was true pre-beard, too.

  • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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    8 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).

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      8 days ago

      One time I had to wait in line behind this guy who had a very strong metallic odor, it was making me sick. I’ve smelled it a few times since and recently smelled it on my mother. Not sure if it’s a drug. Probably not fear. Very interesting though.

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        8 days ago

        To be clear, I can’t differentiate between fear, anxiety, stress, and stimulants, except for intensity. It might be any of those if it smells a little like a battery. The first time I noticed it on someone else, it was someone with a crush on me who had to spend all day with me, so not exactly fear, but nerves.

        A sudden change in BO can indicate all sorts of things though, from Parkinson’s to diabetic shock to sepsis, so you might want to let her know.

  • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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    8 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.

    • can@sh.itjust.works
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      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.

      Even one clock ticking in a room is enough to drive me mad. I’m not sure if having three would be better or worse. Adding some rhythm to it might help actually.

    • TheOakTree@lemm.ee
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      8 days ago

      I’ve spent too much time staring at the clock, full of anxiety, watching seconds pass. I’ve internalized the rhythm, just like with a song.

      It’s a cool trick, sometimes. People get a kick out of me calling out the microwave timer from across the room.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      My resting heart rate is very close to 60bpm, so I can use that as a reasonable timer to “wait ten seconds.” If I’m up and moving around or even playing an intense video game it’s no go but I can do it sometimes.

    • ThinkBeforeYouPost@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      I have a similar good sense of timing, but not to that precision, based upon a childhood experience with shower length.

      My parents were frustrated with how long I would shower, so I brought an egg timer in to help myself keep track of time. Over a year or two of this habit I developed a very good sense of timing in 5-10 minute intervals.