ghostie
Active Member
Hello.
I was recently diagnosed to be on the spectrum with what would have been Asperger's. One thing I learned about during the diagnosis process was a mental phenomenon which people have begun calling Aphantasia which is where the person cannot see mental images. This is a condition from which I suffer, though I am not willing to say I have Aphantasia because in the last month or so since I found out, I have been able to make some, albeit rudimentary, progress towards viewing mental images.
It's a strange feeling, I can conjure the image, that is to say I know I'm thinking about a thing, I know what the thing looks like, I can pull the image into my head, it just never comes into focus beyond anything more than a dark blur.
I have had a few experiences through meditation or deep focus on imagery that were in full colour, and a few of them were even fairly clear in focus if not detail. It gives me hope that it was a number of, admittedly odd and self-defeating, rules that I placed and then strictly followed on my thinking patterns that stunted my brains development when I was a child and that with practice, my brain can begin to develop this ability.
I'm very interested in this topic for reasons that go far beyond the ability to see things. I feel that I have a brain that was meant to think in images instead of words (I know it sounds ridiculous coming from someone who can't even see images) and that my inability to see the images that my brain is conjuring is very detrimental to my ability to think and function.
Anyways, I was curious if anyone else had any experience with this as the professor who is researching Aphantasia is exploring a link between Autism and Aphantasia as sometimes they can come together. This is something that I have a hard time really putting into words how important it is to me and well yeah.. thanks for reading.
I was recently diagnosed to be on the spectrum with what would have been Asperger's. One thing I learned about during the diagnosis process was a mental phenomenon which people have begun calling Aphantasia which is where the person cannot see mental images. This is a condition from which I suffer, though I am not willing to say I have Aphantasia because in the last month or so since I found out, I have been able to make some, albeit rudimentary, progress towards viewing mental images.
It's a strange feeling, I can conjure the image, that is to say I know I'm thinking about a thing, I know what the thing looks like, I can pull the image into my head, it just never comes into focus beyond anything more than a dark blur.
I have had a few experiences through meditation or deep focus on imagery that were in full colour, and a few of them were even fairly clear in focus if not detail. It gives me hope that it was a number of, admittedly odd and self-defeating, rules that I placed and then strictly followed on my thinking patterns that stunted my brains development when I was a child and that with practice, my brain can begin to develop this ability.
I'm very interested in this topic for reasons that go far beyond the ability to see things. I feel that I have a brain that was meant to think in images instead of words (I know it sounds ridiculous coming from someone who can't even see images) and that my inability to see the images that my brain is conjuring is very detrimental to my ability to think and function.
Anyways, I was curious if anyone else had any experience with this as the professor who is researching Aphantasia is exploring a link between Autism and Aphantasia as sometimes they can come together. This is something that I have a hard time really putting into words how important it is to me and well yeah.. thanks for reading.