Small Memory Losses

Loosing Spaces Of Memory

Memory is not just remembering the name of the President or what you ate for breakfast. It is remembering your train of thought, where you are, where you are going and why, and what you are doing at any given moment. It is remembering how to put a sentence together, spell a word, balance your checkbook, turn on your computer, and what someone has just said. But many men and women complain that they are sometimes unable to do these things. They are suddenly rereading things over and over in order to get the meaning, not finding things that are right in front of them, stashing their socks in the freezer, calling their sons by their husband or wife’s name, and becoming clumsy, awkward, and, for lack of a better word, “ditzy.”

You need memory to hold on to your thoughts and ideas long enough to organize them. But if they slip away like quicksilver before you have the chance to arrange them in a logical sequence, your ability to communicate your thoughts to others breaks down.

Does the following sound familiar? “I used to be able to store the whole task in my head from start to finish, with one thought progressing to the next. I could count on being able to have a thought and hang on to it while I was thinking the next thought and the next thought, and so on, in branches all over the place. That doesn’t happen anymore. Now when I start thinking about a task, I have the original thought, go on to the next thought, and then branch out maybe into a few more, only to find that the original thought is gone. So then I have to go back and start with the original thought, but then I go there and lose it again. I keep going around in circles with my thoughts. It’s very hard to think something through. I can’t hold on to the thought long enough to get through a line of reasoning. It’s like my memory span has been cut short.”

Memory retrieval also slows down as we age, but this doesn’t mean the memories aren’t still there. We just need to work at it harder. Often, the information we are looking for is the name of someone or something - a place, a book title. As one woman puts it, “The lapse of memory gnaws at me for hours, sometimes days; it’s like struggling to open a locked door. And then, when I’m not even trying to remember, the door flings open and the name pops into my head and I feel so relieved.” Somehow, all that time our brains are trying to locate the memory.

Source: http://www.self-help-book-reviews.com

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