{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "For the longest time I thought I was just terrible with names - I was decent at remembering faces, but I'm just constantly in...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/94865494888/", "html": "<p>For the longest time I thought I was just terrible with names - I was decent at remembering faces, but I&rsquo;m just constantly in situations where people come up to me like &ldquo;hey, [kontextmaschine]!&rdquo; and I&rsquo;m like &ldquo;uh, hey&hellip; you!&rdquo;</p>\n<p>Eventually I realized I was pretty decent with people I&rsquo;d met online, or even people I knew in meatspace but had seen on Facebook (as I&rsquo;ve mentioned, when I joined fb there were maybe 6000 users and a thousand of them might conceivably come into my field of view on any given day). I thought through that and realized I store names in my memory as text, not sound.</p>\n<p>(So that&rsquo;s one thing nametags are useful for - it&rsquo;s less that I won&rsquo;t remember your name if it&rsquo;s not always staring me in the face than that having your name visible when we first meet helps me to put it in memory to begin with.)</p>\n<p>I guess that visual-over-auditory thing is part of my character in general. If I know a lot of random shit relating to any given situation it&rsquo;s because I read very quickly and I&rsquo;ve spent from 6 to 16 hours a day reading basically every day since I was 5. By contrast music is a lot less important to my life than a lot of people I know, I mostly use it as background noise, and usually favor less lyrical stuff - classical on KUSC, ambient, the same happy hardcore mixtapes I&rsquo;ve listened to for going on 15 years now, where the lyrics were never very complicated or important even when I was listening for the first time.</p>\n<p>I guess standing against that is my fondness for Taylor Swift and country/pop-country in general, which is very much about the words.</p>"}