Why There Are Only 50 People in the World With This Type of Brain

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  • Опубліковано 23 гру 2023
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    About Thoughty2
    Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British UA-camr and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos about science, tech, history, opinion and just about everything else.
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    Editing: Jack Stevens

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,7 тис.

  • @reversefulfillment9189
    @reversefulfillment9189 7 місяців тому +3480

    When someone says they'll knock some sense into you, just go with it.

    • @internetlurker1850
      @internetlurker1850 7 місяців тому +7

      Imagine getting your ass beat so hard you become a mathematician

    • @imperiencypher5584
      @imperiencypher5584 7 місяців тому +111

      HA! There's still a week to go but this may well be my favorite original (non-political) comment on UA-cam for 2023 - Well played! 👍

    • @chiphand
      @chiphand 7 місяців тому +43

      Like boomer smack tv get them working.

    • @0MNIDaSher00
      @0MNIDaSher00 7 місяців тому +27

      Ahahaha-
      That's very clever 👁️‍🗨️

    • @davidjrthekingsir
      @davidjrthekingsir 7 місяців тому +22

      I see what you did right there

  • @mikeyKnows_
    @mikeyKnows_ 2 місяці тому +128

    At the age of 31 I was in a motorcycle accident and got severely injured and bumped my head but I was wearing a helmet. Before this accident I could never concentrate, would day dream, was a failed student through every grade from 1st - 12th. After this accident I was able to retain large amounts of information and it gave me the confidence to go back to school and graduate, today at 39 I'm on my way to be a professor of energy technology. I'm no savant by any measure but it "woke up" my brain to be more efficient.

  • @colletteprops8708
    @colletteprops8708 6 місяців тому +261

    I met Kim Peek and his brother twice.
    Once in like 2ndor 3rd grade and again in my later teens.
    The 1st time, I'd given him a small card with an Irish blessing on it.
    Kim looked at it for about a SECOND, repeated the greeting back to me, asked my birth date, and told me what day I was born.
    His brother said they would keep the card as a keepsake but Kim would always remember it and me.
    I was small and believed in magic but as I got older I doubted he would really remember me when he came to my then school.
    Kim shook my hand and repeated my name, dob and day of birth, then gave me my own Irish blessing. I cried. They each let me hug them and I'm Kim's biggest fan and he's my best friend.❤

    • @user-hq4jz6lc9d
      @user-hq4jz6lc9d 3 місяці тому +12

      Kim passed away in 2009, didn't he? It's cool that you got to know him.

    • @trevordaviesable
      @trevordaviesable 2 місяці тому +4

      I think my son has this syndrome by recovering from covid.

    • @notmetagaming
      @notmetagaming 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@trevordaviesable what

    • @julios782
      @julios782 2 місяці тому

      @colleteprops8708 shutup

    • @Teslijah
      @Teslijah 2 місяці тому +1

      @@trevordaviesablethis is crazy

  • @aprilcorrales5597
    @aprilcorrales5597 6 місяців тому +151

    I was in prison with this woman....that was in a really bad car accident which afterwards her brain worked differently....she couldn't do a lot of things she knows she used to be able to do but gained other talents....her artwork was most amazing....she could to scale shrink or inlarge images. Portraits were uncanny but her short term memory.... horrible. Beautiful spirit she has

    • @Jennifer-pb9nd
      @Jennifer-pb9nd 2 місяці тому +2

      any artist can "scale, shrink or inlarge images." It's actually rare for an artist to do anything at the exact size that it exists in reality. Even then, they are generally converting a 3D structure into a 2D one which seems to be a miraculous feat. not really though, you just replicate the exact variations in light pattern that your eye actually sees without thinking about it and it will turn out perfectly (because to will also register roughly the same way to any eye that can see and therefore be recognizable as what it is). It's the thinking part that gets in the way. If your friend cannot remember, she probably has less thinking to get in the way.

    • @Atreyuwu
      @Atreyuwu Місяць тому +2

      @@Jennifer-pb9nd "any artist can "scale, shrink or inlarge images." If you think that's true, you haven't met many artists lol.

    • @carolanndenton5933
      @carolanndenton5933 11 днів тому

      @@Jennifer-pb9nd exactly like a child, the less life events ,are way way easier to recall than an older person that has lived and experienced a whole lifetime of memories

  • @DH89715
    @DH89715 7 місяців тому +805

    My 15 year old boy diagnosed with Savants autism. He is walking calendar and he can memorise almost everything from the song’s title to the meals he had 10 years ago and the dialogues or conversations he had years ago too… sweet boy and blessing to my family

    • @mysterypasta7245
      @mysterypasta7245 6 місяців тому +33

      That’s really cool!

    • @kyssedbyfyre915
      @kyssedbyfyre915 6 місяців тому +48

      My Son is like that too, photographic memory, does columns of numbers easily in his head,and spouts off EVERY logo to EVERY make & model of automobile, in a glance. He's been tested, has a really high IQ, was labeled as "gifted" in elementary school,again in middle, again in HS. I think brains are just fascinating. Are our Sons so different? Their performance is similar, after all.

    • @rachelhernandez2178
      @rachelhernandez2178 6 місяців тому +3

      Great video. I really enjoyed it!

    • @youdonegoofed
      @youdonegoofed 6 місяців тому +6

      cap

    • @cjwojoe
      @cjwojoe 5 місяців тому +14

      I had a really good friend in high school. He could talk to a person for about ten minutes. About seemingly innocuous small talk. Nothing about dates. At the end of your short introduction conversation and a little small talk he could tell you your exact birthday. He couldn't explain how he did it. I could never figure it out even though I observed a lot and tried to figure it out. Kid was super awkward and struggled in many classes. But we banded around him to make sure no one messed with him.

  • @BoatRadio
    @BoatRadio 7 місяців тому +347

    6 years ago I was in the US army, I was injured pretty bad I broke my spine in 16 places and my pelvis and I hit my head really hard. I used to love working out and I always had to be around people and after it I was a completely different person. I dont like people, I dont do things anymore, I find interest in things I never thought there was ever a chance I would like? I used to arm wrestle in math class and now Im learning quantum mechanics for FUN. I have learned how to speak Chinese although there is literally NO use for that where I live. And I have taken a very strange appeal to gravity and super conductors, magnets etc. The down side though is I have become EXTREMELY short tempered and angry at the world when I dont need to be. The likelihood this is anything to do with the video is probably slim to none, but I felt like it was relatable. Thanks for reading this far if you have.

    • @Ace-ns9co
      @Ace-ns9co 6 місяців тому +10

      Thanks for telling your story 😀

    • @aaanimations_
      @aaanimations_ 5 місяців тому

      Autism 💯

    • @ehombane
      @ehombane 5 місяців тому +16

      @hartraven67 What do you mean?
      Do you mean that the story above is just an invention?
      Yep hard to believe, and I do not quite believe such story either, even I am a living story like these.
      Actually pretty similar to the above one.
      But a lot of differences.
      My injury happened not 6 years ago, but 41, not US, but Eastern Europe.
      Not the spine but the brain.
      But it happened while in the army.
      Also, my intellectual abilities were kind of non existent.
      Actually, I barely passed classes. All those around repeated to me that I am stupid, and I believed it, that is why I had no interest in learning. What was the point, and oriented myself to manual labor, where I was more apt.
      But the bullet in the head took away some skull and some brain too. Also took away my left hand and foot. I mean the ability to use them. The foot recovered somehow, I can limp my way around, but running is no more an possible activity for me. But the hand is mostly useless. And so, manual work was not more an option too. Even I can do with a single hand what many others cannot do with two hand, I am no more competitive, I am too slow at manual labour, amd so I was forced towards an intellectual activity. Computers were my chance. But I could not afford one, and so I did some classes in order to acces one. Than I enrolled at University for the same reason. I was 10 tears older than my class mates, and with a mangled brain. beside the reality of being retarded, or maybe just almost retarded. It was not a class of valedictorians, but a class of those who could not enter the free classes, by getting good grades. So were my kind of people, barely able to stay in school. But not as dumb as me, to not even consider a higher education. So they chose it, but was only able to attend a paid version.
      Anyway, guess what, even with my mangled brain, and a decade of pause after high school. I got on the third place in the class. I suspected that the cause was that I just paid attention. I was not a prisoner is school, I was attending on my free will, while the others were there because of the parents. But now, after seeing other examples, I admit that there could be some effects from the injury too. I did not had sudden skills that I did not previously had, except maybe confidence, or the ability to work with computers. I am not a tallented coder, but compuers are easy stuff for me, unlike everybody else around who are simple inept at using computers.

    • @SamJ_1980
      @SamJ_1980 4 місяці тому +8

      I don't like people either, most of them suck.

    • @davidh6300
      @davidh6300 4 місяці тому +2

      Stay safe my friend. All the best with your new interest.

  • @Julia68yt
    @Julia68yt 6 місяців тому +40

    10 years ago I suddenly started seeing enhanced colors everywhere , I also went slightly legasthenic (tried to read words backwards without noticing it and couldn't make sense of them). Plus, geometric things made me dizzy (tiled walls or pavements were the worst) and triggered Parkinson-like symptoms. My dreams were filled with fast moving images like in early vector computer games.
    After weeks and weeks of trying to figure out what was going on, one eye specialist finally figured out that I had a severe migraine - a "silent" one, i.e. without any pain whatsoever but with a masive neurological aura. It still took almost a year for the symptoms to disappear. The brain is a very strange thing.

    • @neilmarsh1904
      @neilmarsh1904 22 дні тому +2

      "Ocular migraines" and "scintillating scotomas?" The first time I had one the scotoma drifted across my field of vision from left to right, taking something like 45 minutes or so before my vision was clear again. I don't mind telling you it scared the bejebbers out of me. I wish I was able to draw what I saw, they're kind of cool to look at once you know what they are.

  • @TheRanaro
    @TheRanaro 6 місяців тому +22

    I have met and known a savant. Back in the day when I was in uni, I worked p/t at a group home for mentally challenged adults. One man w/retardation had autism and was deemed an "idiot savant" (real term in the USA). If one told him their birthdates, he would tell them which day of the week they were born. Even does this in years in centuries past and future. His name was Marc and we all loved him. He passed from COVID in 2020.

    • @ovdhvdh1355
      @ovdhvdh1355 6 місяців тому

      that is amazing all though knowing what day of the week it is based on a date is not that hard to learn

    • @carolanndenton5933
      @carolanndenton5933 11 днів тому

      aww

  • @Victoria-dh9vb
    @Victoria-dh9vb 7 місяців тому +981

    There was a severely autistic boy I went to school with, and my friend's mom was his EA. He was unable to complete full sentences, but loved Disney, and could riddle off the entirety of the end credits of several films from memory.
    Which is a really crappy trade off for having to live with debilitating sensory overload and difficulty with motor function. He seemed like a nice kid, and fortunately the popular "jock" type kids took a shine to him and made the lives of anyone who even thought about bullying him a hell scape for the rest of their high school careers.

    • @noweebatall5520
      @noweebatall5520 7 місяців тому +62

      Bro I was waiting for the happy end😭💀

    • @quonk2
      @quonk2 7 місяців тому +25

      @@noweebatall5520wdym so happy end 😊

    • @clairebeane3455
      @clairebeane3455 7 місяців тому +44

      @@quonk2The support this child has makes for happy moments. Perhaps not the happy ending we would like to see, but refreshing nonetheless.

    • @Drogas3653
      @Drogas3653 7 місяців тому +5

      Need proof of this. Sounds like bs.

    • @eafasfwasgwg
      @eafasfwasgwg 7 місяців тому +41

      @@Drogas3653 bruh you cant get proof from the past its not like the person who made the comment recorded it lmao

  • @SwampDonkey64
    @SwampDonkey64 7 місяців тому +71

    Before you go out for some intentional brain smashing remember this. My big brother got hit with a ball bat that left him having to learn to walk and talk, eat and even how to use the restroom. The brother I knew and loved was not in there anymore. I did get to know my new brother but he was not the same in anyway. He was tougher and faster than me before that but after that I fought all his battles because he was my brother and no one was allowed to mess with him but me. He died at 40 years old of a massive hart attack. I miss him every day and can’t wait to dine with him at our Father’s table 🙏🏽

    • @broganworthington8991
      @broganworthington8991 7 місяців тому +8

      Thank you for sharing 🥲

    • @youbigtubership
      @youbigtubership 3 місяці тому

      Man, you are a good brother.

    • @Angelina6518
      @Angelina6518 2 місяці тому

      Wow! Your brother was a martyr for his faith.

    • @SwampDonkey64
      @SwampDonkey64 2 місяці тому

      @@Angelina6518 I am not trying to boost who he was but I will say this, my brother walked the talk. Not sinless but his relationship with his Savior was strong. I say his Savior because at the time I could have given you a million reasons why the is no god. Then one day walking on the side of an old dirt road in Ohio the Lord God reviled himself to me. I really thought it was a UFO at first LOL it was a force from above that pushed me to my knees then eventually to my belly, and my head turned to the right flat on the ground. I did not hear him or see him but I felt him. When the Lord reveals himself, you have no doubts as to who it is , he make that perfectly clear in your hart. Now over the years I’ve looked to the heavens and asked some questions like every blind man does. So when the Lord enlightened me he gave me the answers I was looking for all in three small words, I didn’t hear these words they were laid on my hart and changed my life. Those words were “ ITS ALL MINE!”
      God bless you brother may glory from God bless you and yours all your days 🙏🏽

    • @carolanndenton5933
      @carolanndenton5933 11 днів тому

      who's cooking??

  • @jeffmckinnon5842
    @jeffmckinnon5842 5 місяців тому +49

    In 1999, my sister in law had surgery for an aneurism in her brain. At 52 years old, she woke up a completely different person, in every way.
    She lost all memory. Her husband, her friends and even her own children. Those memories never came back. It was quite destructive, but she could walk and talk, and learned how to drive - again...
    Her soul was something I thought about a lot over the years. Who are we, if this happens???

    • @lucky6666
      @lucky6666 2 місяці тому +3

      They took her soul.

    • @ravenfields8968
      @ravenfields8968 2 місяці тому

      Without a particle of pure thought ever found it may be the brain is a complex anttena to pre tuned to recive your personal concensice channel broadcast and somepeole pick up multichannels or change channels

    • @MoonGuy7070
      @MoonGuy7070 2 місяці тому +3

      ​@@lucky6666💀

    • @carolanndenton5933
      @carolanndenton5933 11 днів тому

      probably much like someone with alzeimers

  • @dougjones3305
    @dougjones3305 4 місяці тому +15

    I think i am someone who might actually have adult aquired savant syndrome. Im such a different person then i was 10 years ago. I used to be an extrovert, used to have obvious adhd, now i feel like a total different person and have synesthesia without a doubt and i suddenly started building models a couple of years ago without the smallest bit of a learning curve. I just started and knew what to do right away. Im now introverted and sell and paint the models i create and often will just sculpt them if i dont have the model. I guess theyre really good too because people seem to really like them in droves.

    • @dougjones3305
      @dougjones3305 2 місяці тому +1

      @@jameswierdchannel744 ok, maybe I should. I just have to get over my shyness and other issues I guess. Yea I'm going to do that, what the hell do I have to lose? I dont want to be someone who just fades away like most people do. Ok I'm convinced but I gotta actually do it. Goddamn it....

    • @jameswierdchannel744
      @jameswierdchannel744 2 місяці тому +1

      @@dougjones3305 Nike just do it. Good luck mate.

    • @dougjones3305
      @dougjones3305 2 місяці тому

      @@jameswierdchannel744 heroin.... Just do it.... Always pops into my head.

  • @dawsie
    @dawsie 7 місяців тому +1153

    My Mom was born blind in her left eye, then one day she got so sick that her brain was literally cooked when her body temp climbed over 110°f plus, they placed her into an ice bath hoping that it would help, they had to keep adding ice due to the fact her body was warming it up and melting. Finally 5 days later her body temp dropped down to normal, but the damage was done, she had to learn to walk and talk all over again, but each time she went to sleep she would wake up in a different part of her memories, we never knew when or where she was until she spoke. 80% of the time I was me her daughter, 5% of the time I was her sister, the other 15% I was her Mother.
    For all of that I had to learn to be very quick in my feet as they say, because contradicting her would cause so much trouble, funny enough Dad was always Dad no matter where she was, he was her one fixed point in her life that never changed at all.
    6 months after she was finally released from hospital Mom shocked us with a fact that she could see, for months Mom was suffering vertigo and we just could not work out why, until one night she asked me to stop twitching my foot, a foot that she should never of been able to see from her angle because she had been blind in that eye for over 60 years until now. Well poor Mom had to go back to Brisbane Hospital as they had to run a whole heap of new tests to be compared with the ones that had been done just after her brain had been well and truly cooked.
    Her brain had started to rewire itself around all of the dead spots in her brain (we called them holes, she called it Swiss cheese brain) she had trouble making new memories, but if something scary happened at the same time it got past the blockage and was fixed into her fixed memories. The tests showed that if she had lived long enough her brain would have finished re-writing around all if the holes. Unfortunately the draw back of killing the virus that attacked her brain also gave her cancer, we were told it was a 50-50 chance at the time and we had hoped that she would have been lucky but was never to be.
    The brain is such a huge mystery and I don’t think we will ever fully know how or why these things happen, but we did find the source of her vertigo and once that was solved she got new glasses so things stopped looking fuzzy and thus helping to stop the vertigo as well.
    I got to meet my Mom from a child to a teenage to a young adult and finally once in a while I got to see Mom as how I grew up with. I still miss her everyday I just don’t miss not knowing who and when she was when she woke up every time. She would get angry all the time because of the way her brain worked, in the end I explained it to her in the only way I could and that was to treat her brain as a hard drive that had crashed and during the fixing of the HD data got scrambled and data was misplaced on the HD. She actually understood this concept and was one of the very few things that actually got past the memory block in her brain and was stored for her to find when ever she got frustrated we would just say “Remember you crashed your HD of a brain and it’s busy re-writing the pathways to the data, but it sometimes re-writes it wrong” she always remembered that.

    • @DiHandley
      @DiHandley 7 місяців тому +95

      What a truly amazing story. I’m sorry that you lost her so early but I’m sure she lives on in your memory. 😢🇦🇺

    • @ImadFarhat-xx8ks
      @ImadFarhat-xx8ks 7 місяців тому +35

      stop yapping bro

    • @strellasmith777
      @strellasmith777 7 місяців тому +54

      That is an incredible story!

    • @lenniusmaximus9794
      @lenniusmaximus9794 7 місяців тому +14

      you just made me cry

    • @sonnylambert4893
      @sonnylambert4893 7 місяців тому

      @@ImadFarhat-xx8ks Take your own advice wanker

  • @thisolesignguy2733
    @thisolesignguy2733 7 місяців тому +289

    This is awesome. I had the pleasure of meeting a savant when I was younger, I used to play Steel guitar before I developed partial deafness and when I was applying for music school there was a young 16yr old kid that also played steel that was applying. He couldn't walk nor talk, but when he sat in front of the guitar and began to play it was so beautiful that everyone in the room had tears in their eyes. It was truly an amazing experience that I will cherish my entire life. I heard he passed away a few years later due to complications with his autism, but I hope he knows there are people that still revere him even 30 years later.

    • @Bc232klm
      @Bc232klm 7 місяців тому +6

      Fake

    • @Eoin999
      @Eoin999 7 місяців тому +5

      @@Bc232klmwhat proof do you have lol

    • @cajampa
      @cajampa 7 місяців тому

      This sounds weird dude. If this really happened why are you not telling us his name. If he was that skilled at music someone would have recorded him and his music would be out there.
      No, what you wrote sounds more like creative writing from an LLM than a description of reality from a real person.

    • @caracassalkatraz1284
      @caracassalkatraz1284 7 місяців тому +8

      ​@@cajampacause you heard something about those thousands savants currently living? Your argument doesn't make much sense there are hundreds of guitar players out there who could bring a room to tears but you will never hear from them cause they didn't got lucky.
      What threw me of was the part where he died cause of his autism. In our society the inability to care for yourself isn't a death sentence anymore other than that autism shouldn't be deadly?

    • @MikaelIsaksson
      @MikaelIsaksson 7 місяців тому +3

      Same here. But my friend is still alive and he is a savant with the piano. He made his first song at the age of 3. He can play any song he hears once perfectly on the piano.

  • @josevillanueva9705
    @josevillanueva9705 2 місяці тому +6

    I actually met a guy like this. When I was homeless. He was homeless too. He became a genius over night. I never met someone so intelligent in my life

  • @charlieketchem266
    @charlieketchem266 2 місяці тому +2

    When i was 2 i had a door kicked in by a large man whos wife was watching me at the time. It did massive damage, and my mother said it was so bad i didnt even look human anymore due to how far my head swelled out. Not sure if thats the way i am, but i see specific things in life now, and have used it to develop technologies. I can also see certain things before they occur. I feel when something is going to happen and try to warn others. Have saved lives. My family and friends have witnessed this on multiple occasions. I didnt like being different from the kids around me and wanted to fit in so i tried to damge my brain further to make myself dulled down mentally so i could fit in because it was like a curse. It didnt work only cleared things up more. Made me feel ostracized from society, still does. It may be beautiful to have specific gifts but what they might not tell you is its also a major curse.

  • @kookmintony
    @kookmintony 7 місяців тому +184

    Had a good friend in HS who always had migraines, valedictorian of our class and his law school. The guy can recall every conversation he's had, verbatum, all the way back to middle school. I remembered he used to complain that he felt burdened with information overload and wished he could forget but it was impossible.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 6 місяців тому +1

      yep ever conversation all the way back - also ambidextrous - unfortunetly -qunicly bislexic

    • @brainretardant
      @brainretardant 4 місяці тому +2

      Cannabis

    • @g.k.1669
      @g.k.1669 4 місяці тому

      I have synesthesia and that definitely makes an incredible difference while listening to music. For some reason it becomes overwhelming and I have to remove the headphones as the images become too intense. If I use that the images turn in to faces most of the time, every other time they are variances of structures or forests and plants. @@brainretardant

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 4 місяці тому

      @@brainretardant i have smoked loads of pot but im still quonicaly bislexic should i try eating it ???

    • @Rhyane490
      @Rhyane490 4 місяці тому +1

      The 🧠 cannot be overloaded with information

  • @TheElbowMerchant
    @TheElbowMerchant 7 місяців тому +201

    Man, all I got from head trauma is migraines, insomnia, unsteady fine motor movement, and short-term memory deficits. Where do I sign up for the good head trauma? I definitely didn't get that one!

    • @marshalepage5330
      @marshalepage5330 7 місяців тому +18

      The people with the good head trauma also have the bad. It makes it difficult to let anyone know you are talented because you know they will overstimulate you or work you to migraine death.

    • @leftright5
      @leftright5 7 місяців тому +1

      Check out jre #1056.

    • @ephraimakoto3657
      @ephraimakoto3657 6 місяців тому +2

      I got a good one 😂😂😂. Sorry bro.

    • @nodnard009
      @nodnard009 5 місяців тому +2

      Lemme knock some sense into you again 😂

    • @AZVIDS
      @AZVIDS 5 місяців тому +1

      A night at the Roxbury🎶🎶

  • @YZ450f24
    @YZ450f24 3 місяці тому +7

    Some people on here have some cool stories of who they met but I think I met the person with the most incredible brain in human recorded history who happened to also be talked about in this video. Kim peek and his father lived here in Utah before he died and I met and talked to him. If you told him your address he would tell you the name of the homeowners because in less than one day he memorized the phone book. He knew the winner of every world series he could tell you the score and in what inning and even what the weather was like on that day. He would spend a lot of his time reading multiple books a day. Sad he is no longer alive.

  • @Riker626
    @Riker626 6 місяців тому +61

    OK, I'm taking up skate boarding ... without a helmet ...

  • @michaelhicks3273
    @michaelhicks3273 7 місяців тому +43

    I was diagnosed with high functioning autism, and my observation is that indeed, instinct can make virtually anything possible. The trick is to know how instinct relates to whatever skill you're speaking of. All it takes is for you to want to pay enough attention to something to figure out how it works.
    Survival is the most effective way to do that. If you think you are going to die, you will be pressured to learn whatever it is you want. It sounds cruel that I say the best way to see amazing things from people is to threaten their life, but note that I said you at least have to "think" you are going to die. That is exactly what happens whenever you are sad or angry.
    I think that is well known. Face your fears and you will become amazing.

    • @tanistyerman190
      @tanistyerman190 7 місяців тому +5

      Knew a boy who said his parents put him in a Christian school in grade two. He had never been raised religious and when he saw the crucifix he became studious and well behaved. He thought they would hang him up their too if he didn't behave.

    • @Ace-ns9co
      @Ace-ns9co 6 місяців тому +5

      You know, now that I think about it, I can recall with extreme clarity every single time in my life I have been either sad, or angry. What you say is true. Thankyou for that insight.

    • @boingyboop4960
      @boingyboop4960 5 місяців тому +7

      I have noticed that when I am in fight or flight mode, I can suddenly do things I’ve never been able to do before. Like once, as a kid, a friend and I were riding bikes in a park, and we were trying to ride up this steep, grassy hill, and no matter how hard I pedalled or how much of a run up I got, I could never get up that hill. Until a dog started chasing me (and I had a HUUUUUGE fear of dogs back then) and I was absolutely terrified for my life. In my attempt to escape, I rode up that very hill that I’d been trying to get up all day, and I barely had to give it a second thought. My friend was so impressed that I was able to do it but when I tried to do it again without the threat I couldn’t anymore. The human body is so mysterious.

    • @pafu015
      @pafu015 4 місяці тому +2

      @Ger954That’s called using your brain 💀

    • @nicholash8021
      @nicholash8021 4 місяці тому +2

      Michael, very interesting. I once was free diving in Croatia, not a thing in sight, and dove at least 15 meters deep and was down for probably near 2 minutes and running out of breath. As I came up for air, I heard a boat motor and had to spin around to see where it was coming from. I was still about 10 feet from the surface when I saw a large hull coming straight at me. It was too close for me to try and swim downward or outward. I instantly knew I had to remain calm and think smart. I instantly turned my body up-side down, then with careful timing and with both legs, I pushed off the hull as hard as I could to quickly gain momentum to get down and away so I didn't get chewed up by the large propellor or my have had smashed against the bottom or sides. I just cleared it and came to the surface along its side where I could see it was a large fishing boat on its way out to sea. The fisherman must have felt they had hit something because they leaned over the side only to yell at me for not using a diving buoy--and they were correct. I learned my lesson. I had 3 small boys waiting for me at the shore with my cousin, and thank God I didn't leave them that day.

  • @WWTormentor
    @WWTormentor 7 місяців тому +514

    After completing my first year of gross anatomy in medical school, I realized that we know almost everything that there is to know about every organ and structure in our body except the brain. We know so little about it. We will most likely reach the point where we have perfected gene therapy and gene splicing long before we ever truly understand the brain.

    • @cinemartin3530
      @cinemartin3530 7 місяців тому +49

      In my opinion, the human brain is the most amazing thing that nature has ever created. When we study it well, it will be one of the biggest breakthroughs for people.

    • @kozlorog
      @kozlorog 7 місяців тому +3

      I know everything about the brain. Ask me anything.

    • @19Ronny
      @19Ronny 7 місяців тому +34

      @@cinemartin3530just think the human brain is saying that about itself ;-;

    • @erickellar5867
      @erickellar5867 7 місяців тому +18

      @@19Ronny funny if the human brain would just be putting itself on a pedestal and making it seem greater than it really is out of arrogance or something

    • @DeliveryGuyMan
      @DeliveryGuyMan 7 місяців тому +43

      @cinemartin3530
      "The human brain is the most amazing thing that nature has ever created" - The Human Brain

  • @IT2012
    @IT2012 6 місяців тому +10

    Dude i just love the supersmart yet gentle and human-firendly-paced style of your videos, you do indeed inspire me to try better to be a better human myself too!
    Even the topics I feel well educated on you put into context in such a delicate way for the people, bravo!

  • @andreasofficiall
    @andreasofficiall 6 місяців тому +10

    9:00 RESPECT YOU 100% :)

  • @lennypen1978
    @lennypen1978 7 місяців тому +12

    One of my nephew's has autism, he banged his head when upset, hes 7 now and is a mathematical genius, although he is developing a bit slower in other areas i think he will speed up in most if not all these areas as he becomes older, but at the moment his mathematics is unbelievable, crazy working out at ridiculously high numbers

  • @brohen
    @brohen 7 місяців тому +160

    Had a kid in high-school like the Peake (sp?) guy. He pretty much had any and every football stat, player names and numbers, teams, scores, could recall every game he's watched play by play, and could also give you step by step instructions to and from any place he's been, even out of state. It was incredible listening to him talk. Pretty much total recall

    • @GiornoLovesDeathGrips
      @GiornoLovesDeathGrips 7 місяців тому

      Could've been autistic

    • @kjnoah
      @kjnoah 7 місяців тому +5

      Awesome, also frightening if you ever did something you later regret.

    • @kjnoah
      @kjnoah 7 місяців тому +3

      Or were traumatized by something done to you.

    • @brohen
      @brohen 7 місяців тому +9

      @kjnoah he was an autistic guy in a wealthy family, so I think they did him well. I went to school with him for 4 years, and it was also crazy seeing him go from SP.ED. only classes, to being escorted by a Para/counselor to in later high-school being completely unattended. Still noticeably autistic but in school by then he was 90% independent. I hope the best for that dude

    • @paktru
      @paktru 7 місяців тому +3

      I Have a customer that comes to my job every morning thats the same way. He would write down his predictions for football games for the week. This guy will be at least 85% if not 100% correct on his predictions. He is a 💎.

  • @vivienhodgson3299
    @vivienhodgson3299 5 місяців тому +3

    Your use of the song of the zebra finch as an illustration put me in mind of a young man I once knew, who had retained a very young child's ability to learn language. He was only 21 years old when I knew him, and already spoke almost fluent French and German, as well as his native English, and had a working knowledge of Dutch and Japanese, yet he had hardly left England as a child, apart from the odd camping trip to France, and had had little contact with foreign speakers. He had 'picked up' his knowledge of Dutch and Japanese from working abroad since he left school, and had learned French and German at school, but as we all know to our cost, school education never gives you the ability to SPEAK a foreign language, only to pass exams!!!! To put it in perspective, I have a French diploma, and have lived in France for 27 years, but I will never have the complete fluency this young man had at 21 years old. He was not a 'savant' in the usual sense of the word, but highly intelligent, with extra brain cells for language ability!

  • @BanaMan-mv2wr
    @BanaMan-mv2wr 4 місяці тому +8

    I love how he just roasted Taylor Swift🤣🤣 time- 8:55 Edit: I personally agree with him

  • @CluntEstwode
    @CluntEstwode 7 місяців тому +31

    I have Synesthesia, but its not like I actually see sounds as colours or shapes, but its more that I percieve things in my "mind's eye" like its processed with parts of the brain associated with other senses. So when listening to music certain sounds will show up in my head as colours or even flavours. For example the tonal qualities of someone's singing voice may be percieved as the colour and taste of white wine. I'm also a musician and songwriter, and sometimes when writing music the sounds of certain instruments will take on a colour, or a particular passage of music will manifest as colours as I'm writing it and flesh itself out in that perception.
    Synesthesia can manifest in different ways for different people, but that's my experience of it

    • @laurabarber6697
      @laurabarber6697 3 місяці тому

      I believe that this is the way our brains work in heaven. 💝

    • @JF59122
      @JF59122 3 місяці тому

      Jee I'm just dumb 😂

    • @jimh4072
      @jimh4072 2 місяці тому +1

      I do that too, when I was a kid if someone asked me what a certain food tasted like I might say a colour, I always described liquorice as tasting purple.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 2 місяці тому

      My sone is bad math (while his brother is a PhD in it), anyway, I asked him what is 9 + 3? He got it wrong, so I said it’s 12…how can you not figure that out? He starts with, but 12 is green, and 9 is red…….

  • @lazytommy0
    @lazytommy0 7 місяців тому +190

    My grandfather obtained this from a head injury shortly after Vietnam in the marine corps. They still use part of his electrical instruction manual in some of their training courses. He gained a massive boost to IQ after the head injury along with a skull fracture.

    • @clairebeane3455
      @clairebeane3455 7 місяців тому +6

      This is so fascinating to me. ❤❤❤

    • @MK-qf3ve
      @MK-qf3ve 6 місяців тому +1

      can i ask if he took an iq test before

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax 5 місяців тому +7

      A cognitive boost happens with learning many languages. When I was attending DLI in Monterey, CA taking Turkish in 1976,:a language auditor was ripping through the 37 week Finnish language course in twelve weeks. This was his fifth or sixth new language -and he noticed that each new language was easier to learn than the last one

  • @eetukuusisto9133
    @eetukuusisto9133 6 місяців тому +2

    Thanks! I'm already waiting for the next one.

  • @rymkervic123456
    @rymkervic123456 6 місяців тому +3

    Haven't seen you for ages, you are looking good. Thanks for still doing this.

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 7 місяців тому +114

    My mom was a Special Education teacher, and she had a student who was a congenital savant. He had autism, and could tell you on what day of the week you were born when you gave him your birthdate. He could also remember exact routes he was driven, no matter how complex, after just one trip. He wasn’t able to drive, but had all the streets of Indianapolis memorized, and it’s a really big city. He also loved to draw maps. Mom said he was an absolute joy to have in class.

    • @1RandomMiss
      @1RandomMiss 7 місяців тому +9

      I also had a client who had the exact abilities. He was also a joy to be around.

    • @juliawilliams1355
      @juliawilliams1355 6 місяців тому +2

      Indy isn't that big but yeah that's wild. I always used to think the term differently able was condescending but it is extremely accurate in cases like these. Also just a small reminder about how little we know about the nature of human consciousness

    • @Musicman3832
      @Musicman3832 6 місяців тому +1

      @@juliawilliams1355yeah Indianapolis isn’t that big. I would say Chicago is waaay bigger. Also New York.

    • @1RandomMiss
      @1RandomMiss 6 місяців тому

      @@juliawilliams1355 To me the term differently abled seems empowering and perhaps more accurate. Disable means not able at all and in many peoples cases that’s just false and non inclusive. Differently abled has a can do attitude about it. That’s just my perspective anyway.

    • @yippee8570
      @yippee8570 6 місяців тому

      @@1RandomMiss Disabled people generally prefer to be called disabled, as 'differently abled' just sounds patronising

  • @glennjpanting2081
    @glennjpanting2081 7 місяців тому +462

    I'm not a savant (unless there's a savant for dad jokes), but calendar calculations are not that hard to do. Some years ago, I saw a video of a guy who was not a savant doing it for a crowd, and I figured that it wasn't magic .... there had to be a way to do it. I looked it up, learned how to do it, and now I can impress people by doing something that nobody gives a shit about! 😎

    • @Dave_of_Mordor
      @Dave_of_Mordor 7 місяців тому +109

      nah bro you're a savant and you're in denial. accept your power and go on a hero journey

    • @glennjpanting2081
      @glennjpanting2081 7 місяців тому +81

      @@Dave_of_Mordor No, I'm not in denial. I know exactly how fucking awesome I am .... it's just that no one else can truly comprehend the immeasurable scope of my awesomeness. It's like staring into the sun. That much raw power is blinding.

    • @syntaxusdogmata3333
      @syntaxusdogmata3333 7 місяців тому +63

      > _now I can impress people by doing something that nobody gives a shit about!_
      Story of my life, bro. 🤜🤛

    • @victor9
      @victor9 7 місяців тому +29

      @@glennjpanting2081 Yes you are! that's exactly what a savant in denial would say. Your fate is sealed go on be free my precious savant, the world needs you!

    • @Willy_Tepes
      @Willy_Tepes 7 місяців тому +19

      I am pretty good at interpreting satellite images and a lot of other stuff related to pattern recognition, but that is simply because other people are so shit at it. Somehow their programming does not allow them to see what is right before their eyes. It is immensely frustrating to hear "but the experts say" when I am literally showing them proof of the opposite.

  • @savannahshepherd2283
    @savannahshepherd2283 3 місяці тому +4

    The fact organ receivers get donors traits makes me find this...highly compelling. Scientist say yes. 😂

  • @Vortex-Dee2
    @Vortex-Dee2 5 місяців тому +3

    Channel always getting better and better..... Great work man!

  • @JaneNewAuthor
    @JaneNewAuthor 7 місяців тому +108

    I'm Asperger's. Numbers have colours, some flavours have textures. When I was younger my memory was close to photographic. Exams never worried me, I'd read the notes the night before.
    I'm writing this because you've explained a lot about why my brain is different. I'm not a savant, but I make connections other people don't. My brain is wired differently.

    • @brianadams3189
      @brianadams3189 7 місяців тому +14

      If you experience that sort of synesthesia (numbers have colors) and you don't play music, you might want to consider getting yourself a keyboard. I wonder if you have perfect pitch as well.

    • @JaneNewAuthor
      @JaneNewAuthor 7 місяців тому +8

      @@brianadams3189 interesting idea, thank you. My son and my brother are both very musical, can get a tune out of any instrument.

    • @chobswey
      @chobswey 7 місяців тому +6

      I don’t have autism nor I am a savant, but I’ve had the same experiences.

    • @Starscreamious
      @Starscreamious 7 місяців тому +20

      Hi Asperger's, I'm Dad.

    • @salsichalivre5401
      @salsichalivre5401 7 місяців тому +1

      but what else? Are you rich? How u have fun with that memory? because must be fun@@JaneNewAuthor

  • @lunatik9696
    @lunatik9696 7 місяців тому +45

    I had the opposite happen. I was always really good at math,
    and by college performed most math, engineering and science calculations/ approximations (easily) in my head.
    I spent months researching the best calculator for my money. They were still pretty expensive back then.
    I chose a RPN, National Semiconductor 4640.
    An automobile wreck and head trauma diminished my mental calculating abilities significantly.
    I could no longer hold all the variables for my approximations.
    I confused simple math laws and developed a dyslexia between 3 and 5 as well as o and a.
    Once I realized these "modifications" I was able to pre-compensate to some degree.
    Occasionally, I can still produce some impressive feats, but no where close to b4 the wreck.

    • @tubax926
      @tubax926 7 місяців тому +7

      Reading this hurt me. I hope you're ok. The world is truly rough, I would flat out unalive myself if I found out I couldn't do what I staked my entire pride and joy on, unless I had some loved ones.

    • @paulgoogol2652
      @paulgoogol2652 7 місяців тому +1

      Should of not done the trauma thing there mate.

    • @polyrhythmia
      @polyrhythmia 7 місяців тому +2

      I used to have an HP11C calculator with RPN logic. RPN is Reverse Polish Notation by the way.

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 7 місяців тому +2

      I used my TI86 to play games first handheld console for me wonderful time to be alive

    • @magsmcginty3929
      @magsmcginty3929 7 місяців тому

      brain can still heal. eat omega 3 fatty fish.

  • @theverseshed
    @theverseshed 3 місяці тому +2

    A truly fascinating video - classic Thoughty2.
    One of my colleagues experiences synesthesia when she sees colours for words and numbers. This has been with her all her life and she always thought there was something wrong with her. She mentioned it to me when we were discussing children's behaviours and special abilities. She was astonished that I knew what she was talking about. Why per parents or other friends hadn't made the connection, I don't know. I mentioned the word 'synesthesia' and suggested that she check it out to see how others have the same experience.

  • @brylevelarde8226
    @brylevelarde8226 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you so much for keep on sharing some important ideas to us!

  • @oakstrong1
    @oakstrong1 7 місяців тому +27

    I watched a video of a young, ordinary girl who went to bed with a headache and woke up the next day being able to paint like a trained artist. She was only 14 or something like that. Her parents let her homeschool so she could have more time to paint... I wonder if she had some undetected problem in her brain, an internal "blow"? Like aneurysm, for example. There would be no reason why anyone would have done a brain scan of otherwise healthy child. She isn't the only child like that, I remember the video mentioning a couple of other young people suddenly gaining an incredible talent without any apparent trauma or diminished brain function. Maybe their brains just rewired themselves spontaneously.
    Makes me wonder if some of the famous inventors and artists in history were savants and people just thought them eccentric.

  • @MsHap57
    @MsHap57 7 місяців тому +30

    My nephew fell off of a car while "car surfing" as a teenager. When he woke up after a weeks'-long coma, he could suddenly play any instrument after hearing it played just once. He also excelled at math, whereas before the accident, he barely scraped by his classes. It struck all of us as amazing - although, understandably, my sister was just glad he came back to us at all!

  • @kingdomsbricks4762
    @kingdomsbricks4762 6 місяців тому +8

    The thumbnail making me wonder if I’ve got a brain.

  • @robpolaris5002
    @robpolaris5002 2 місяці тому +1

    I met Kim Peek and his father Fran in 1997 in Salt Lake City. Kim really was incredible. RIP

  • @haidner
    @haidner 7 місяців тому +138

    I had a friend who was a musical Savant in high school. Because of family circumstances he never discovered it until he was 16. He was literally shown how to use a guitar for the first time, and within 10 minutes was playing pieces that took me months to learn. Same with piano; got his RC grade 10 piano before he turned 18. Picked up a trumpet and could play it inside of 30 minutes as well as the kid who showed him how. I've always wondered what happened to him.

    • @GeoffryGifari
      @GeoffryGifari 7 місяців тому +11

      Also interesting is the *scope* of savantsim. Do musical savants lean more towards freakishly mastering a single instrument? How good at drumming can a piano savant be? What about composition? Or performance adjacent to the music itself (like body language/dance)?

    • @haidner
      @haidner 7 місяців тому +13

      @@GeoffryGifari
      Good question. All I know is my friend. He could do anything musical, including singing, eventually. He didn't try singing until he was about halfway through learning piano, and that was only at extreme urging (he was quite shy). Sadly, I lost track of him in university, when he got involved with some unsavory people. I'm afraid he ended up going down a bad road that includes addiction.

    • @frankclough380
      @frankclough380 7 місяців тому +10

      I've been learning to play the guitar for 50 years and I'm completely useless, after all these decades I still sound like a clumsy beginner. I have a friend who is a brilliant player, back in the day we used to buy the latest Paul Simon or James Taylor records and after one listening he could play all the songs on the record as well as the original. He said playing the guitar is easy, anybody can do it, there's no skill involved. He showed me how to do stuff, but even though I knew what to do I could never master any of it, my hands just felt like lumps of lead with fat pork sausage fingers attached. Some things for some people are easy, like my effortless guitar playing friend, he never had to exert himself to learn the guitar, I don't even think you can say he learned to play, he didn't learn, he just picked one up and played it from the beginning without ever really trying. For others the same thing is an insurmountable task they will never master however much time and effort they put into it.

    • @GeoffryGifari
      @GeoffryGifari 7 місяців тому +6

      @@haidner Wow... In life not all extreme talents go on to be immortalized. Hopefully your friend is in a better path

    • @michaelbrinks8089
      @michaelbrinks8089 7 місяців тому +4

      Ya, it's crazy how you can practice drawing or playing an instrument for years. Then someone else can come along & blow you away after 1 day of practice.

  • @JackalX111
    @JackalX111 7 місяців тому +70

    I am no savant (as far as I know); but when I was 10 I suffered a TBI in a go-cart accident. Shortly afterwards, I developed a bizarre understanding of analog machines & their internal workings (also my memory "unlocked" & I can remember things going all the way back to my first word & cognitive thought at 8 months old). Exempli gratia: I have yet to encounter an analog (non-computerized) machine that I cannot fix. Though this goes far deeper and I believe this is merely just the manifestation of my greater ability to "understand" the world around me in extreme detail.
    Though, as all coins have two sides, I also received a few curses. I developed exploding head syndrome, tourettes, and an almost complete lose of self (my I'd in Freudian terms) as well as significant damage to my super ego.
    I've never been properly tested other than a basic IQ test performed by vocational rehab back in November 2021. The psychoanalyst stated I scored in the "High Superior" range.
    Enough about me (if anyone actually read this), Merry Christmas to everyone out there & I wish you all a blessed new year! :)

    • @mariavictor4324
      @mariavictor4324 7 місяців тому +4

      To you as well. Have a lovely day. So very interesting to know your life experience and I hope the negatives will balance out with the good. 👍

    • @kitefan1
      @kitefan1 7 місяців тому +4

      Merry Christmas and a Joyous and prosperous 2024!

    • @AlecKristi
      @AlecKristi 7 місяців тому +4

      Seems that understanding of machinery (or physics) is a much more common symptom than I thought... At least based on this comment section.

    • @kevinmurphy5878
      @kevinmurphy5878 7 місяців тому +3

      That's fucking wild (in a good way)

    • @AnyWayICan
      @AnyWayICan 7 місяців тому +4

      Your English composition skills don’t seem to have suffered.

  • @Mysterium-zy6ri
    @Mysterium-zy6ri 6 місяців тому +4

    When I played piano, my music teacher found that I would memorize most of the music very quickly. The problem was that I was not confident in my memorization for some parts so when I looked at the sheet music I got lost and messed up. So, I would learn the piece as best as I could then not use the sheet music and if there was a part I didn't know, I would find it and practice it. I also learned pieces quite fast and taught myself how to play some songs. Not a Savant just sharing an interesting part of my childhood.

  • @PhailingMath
    @PhailingMath 3 місяці тому +1

    Great video, thanks Thoughty2!

  • @Animanarchy
    @Animanarchy 7 місяців тому +195

    The seating plan in high school chemistry put me next to the smartest guy in the school. He was a genius of some sort. He had near perfect marks (99% I think because apparently they can't give you perfect marks in English classes). It was great because he insisted on doing the write ups for all the labs we did together so I wouldn't bring down his marks (he never said so but it was obvious) so that arrangement brought my marks up without having to do as much homework.

    • @ChappyQuiddick-wz6ci
      @ChappyQuiddick-wz6ci 7 місяців тому +9

      He wasn't as much of a Genuis as you "Supposed" him to be.

    • @wolfthorn1
      @wolfthorn1 7 місяців тому +24

      Sounds like that nerd stole your education.

    • @Oklahoma-Dreaming
      @Oklahoma-Dreaming 7 місяців тому +23

      Funny. When I was taking a college Calculus class we had to create groups of five and solve quite a few tricky problems. I always hated group projects but I tolerated them. Anyways one other guy in my group - he was a bit lazy but he was really smart - and I did most of the problems independently then compared, as a sanity check. We both had the exact same answers surprisingly. There was a girl in the group who thought we were on the wrong track so she broke off from our group telling the professor she wouldn’t work with us. The professor allowed it for some reason. Short story long we got 100 percent, maybe the only group who did, which is unusual for a difficult math class. She got around 50 percent. I thought she had it coming.

    • @KasparrTV
      @KasparrTV 7 місяців тому +4

      Funny that the biggest difference between a genius and a dumb person is just fucking applying yourself in school lmao.

    • @Animanarchy
      @Animanarchy 7 місяців тому +12

      @KasparrTV Weird how some kids are just naturally smarter than others even before any schooling, isn't it? And some just do naturally better in school without having to try much? People are not all born with equal intellectual capabilities.

  • @tonytor5346
    @tonytor5346 7 місяців тому +11

    The mapping of the brain was done about 150 years ago by sticking needle electrodes in different areas of the brain and looking for what happened,
    . One most documented case is the one from Brocat , a French physician that discovered the language center in the brain. This is known as brain area 32 or Brocat area 52 . Stimulating this area would make the “volunteer” say did
    Ffernt words. Thi was done in French prisons where detainees who volunteered to take part of the experiment would have part or all of their sentence commuted. This was under the Napoleon empire. His notes are incredibly detailed and I encourage you to do a talk on this particular individual. We now know what most of the brain areas do. Many have multiple functions. Other we have no idea! Of course nowadays using the unethical methods used during the Napoleônic era are unthinkable nowadays. Now we rely on accidents, muggings, people who show up with knives and other objects penetrating the brain. Please keep up the good work Dr. T M.D, MS.

  • @sixsensebyahands5278
    @sixsensebyahands5278 4 місяці тому +2

    I’m a Savant in unconditional ‘Love’ ambience as no one else, I was told. So creating emotions as well as arts & music are also brain gifts.

  • @thederpydude2088
    @thederpydude2088 6 місяців тому +3

    I feel like a simpler possible solution (and with fewer potential negative side effects than more direct alterations and modifications to the brain) is to better understand the psychological and/or neurological processes that are involved in learning so that we can more quickly and efficiently make these neural connections and such that allow a person to have certain abilities, skills, and talents. We know we can learn things under a certain period of time, but maybe we'll find ways to learn things faster so that we can more quickly achieve our potentials.

  • @OfficialFleaFactory
    @OfficialFleaFactory 7 місяців тому +244

    I’m definitely an idiot savant…just without the savant part.

    • @icanhasfreecat
      @icanhasfreecat 7 місяців тому

      Lol! Same! I'm so good at being retarded.

    • @denisesiddon317
      @denisesiddon317 7 місяців тому +18

      Ditto 😂

    • @milo-qh7cv
      @milo-qh7cv 7 місяців тому +9

      yes you are and so is a big part of the pop lol

    • @tinkerstrade3553
      @tinkerstrade3553 7 місяців тому +11

      No, we've got it all, it's just in bitcoin and we forgot the password. 😂

    • @LuisCipher
      @LuisCipher 7 місяців тому

      Everyone is an idiot at certain points in their life. Anyone who doesn't accept or denies this simple truth is a fool. 🫠

  • @toadgamesNL
    @toadgamesNL 7 місяців тому +32

    A friend of mine from high school never learnt to play the piano but his father used to play the piano, from the moment his father died he could out of nowhere play the piano very well without even being able to read musical notes, this video really reminded me of that

    • @rafaelgonzalez4175
      @rafaelgonzalez4175 4 місяці тому +2

      I was sitting at my kitchen table at home during the time I was in the 6th grade. I was writing a book report on Paul Revere. I had most of my report done and while I was covering the report with a book cover that was just brown paper, Kind of like the old grocery carryout bags. My mom walked up behind me and asked me had I finished my book report. I reply yes, and she gets hold of it and proceeds to read it. Very good she said. She put the report down and grabbed one of my pencils. She opened my history book looked down at the illustration of Paul Revere on his Horse holding the lantern and she drew that very illustration on the face on my book report cover. It was right there and then that I knew I could draw. And yes, I can draft mechanical drawings. I can sketch a portrait. I can draw caricatures and cartoons. I can paint a mural. On top of learning two other languages. and three musical instruments. All before the 9th Grade. I graduated HS a year and 3 months early. All because I saw my mom draw a picture from a picture as quickly as she did.

  • @Karanaarta
    @Karanaarta 3 місяці тому

    It's always great to hear and watch Thoughty2!

  • @tesaculbertson5305
    @tesaculbertson5305 3 місяці тому +3

    I've always been a big fan of your channel brother and always seeing exactly how smart you were and how interesting it were content and that proved to be loved to work keep it up and cheers on the success that your channel has brought you have a good day God bless.😮

  • @samward9889
    @samward9889 7 місяців тому +70

    This is why I love this channel above all else.
    "Who drew this hand?" "First, we need to go back to a karaoke bar in 2002" 😂🙌

    • @humboldthammer
      @humboldthammer 7 місяців тому

      I was nowhere near Tacoma in 2002.

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee 7 місяців тому

      You can't go back to 2002, and you shouldn't go back to a karaoke bar, and Tacoma doesn't exist... I mean, have you ever met anyone from Tacoma?

    • @humboldthammer
      @humboldthammer 7 місяців тому

      @@GizzyDillespee I've met people from Walla Walla and Yakima. So, Tacoma doesn't seem like much of a stretch.

    • @shannonmacdonald8235
      @shannonmacdonald8235 7 місяців тому

      I’m from Tacoma and I’m not surprised this dude was beaten up and mugged outside of a bar.

    • @AlfredoNelito
      @AlfredoNelito 7 місяців тому

      yeh you re right bout this chnnel sorry if you cn rid wht i wrote my computer does not hve 'n "a"

  • @Martin1519
    @Martin1519 7 місяців тому +69

    I actually became a bit obsessed with these abilities, and tried figuring out how I could make myself learn quicker. Needless to say I was unsuccessful. I always considered myself average, but people have always told me I was a very smart person. I always got very good grades in school, and in college. However I was actually a slightly slower learner than my peers. but as a result, I was extremely persistent. Far more persistent than most people. I was always the last to finish a math test, but also one of the highest ranking. But nowhere near the abilities of a savant. Quite the opposite actually since savants typically need very little to no training, and I needed tons of it. I think the moral here is that there are 1000 ways to get to the same destination. Savants just take a shortcut, and everyone els takes the typical path.

    • @adronius147
      @adronius147 7 місяців тому +9

      Persistence is better than being smart in my opinion.

    • @omgdodogamer4759
      @omgdodogamer4759 7 місяців тому +7

      @@adronius147 objectively youd probably rather want to be able to quickly learn, and remember stuff rather than trying over and over again

    • @axiological5468
      @axiological5468 7 місяців тому +5

      ​@omgdodogamer4759 Desire is subjective. One might prefer to be persistent rather than intelligent because it's common for intelligent (and talented people in general) to give up when they aren't immediately good at something.

    • @omgdodogamer4759
      @omgdodogamer4759 7 місяців тому

      @@axiological5468 i dont literally mean that you want it, i mean that it would probably be in your best favor to be able to learn quickly

    • @craigmak
      @craigmak 6 місяців тому +2

      @@adronius147a high IQ is definitely better than persistence.

  • @6900xx
    @6900xx Місяць тому

    Thank you thoughty2. Keep up the good work

  • @elizabethnash7491
    @elizabethnash7491 6 місяців тому

    Always so interesting and amusing! Thanks for all your hard work. From the West of Ireland ☘️

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 7 місяців тому +9

    The human brain is amazing. I had a stoke when I was younger due to a genetic condition. I woke up one morning and my left leg wouldn’t work. It was the most bizarre feeling. I knew immediately I’d had some kind of brain injury. I thought I would have to walk with a cane for the rest of my life, but after only a few months I didn’t need one anymore. Now you could never tell. It’s still a bit weak and I’m prone to falls, but otherwise I’m fine.

    • @magsmcginty3929
      @magsmcginty3929 7 місяців тому

      well done. eat fish, omega 3 fatty fish, my friend. you are one of the chosen.

  • @kraftykara8009
    @kraftykara8009 7 місяців тому +5

    I've actually met/know 2 sovants, both congenital. One is a 40 yo man that was a camper at a camp for mentally challenged adults that I was a counselor at years ago. He could tell you every option available like exterior/interior colors available, all of the motor, style, tire options, EVERYTHING for EVERY car going back to the first car. He is amazing. The last time I see him, he had moved on from cars (after knowing everything about them) to boats. The other sovant is a child. He has amazed me since he started reading on his own before he was 2. He has several special interest and knows so much about each and can write in the tiniest print but looks just like a tiny typewriter typed it. He is amazingly awesome too!
    I never met him, but my dad told me about a guy in his hometown that would walk up to you, introduce himself, and when you told him your name, he would tell you your address and phone number from the phone book. He memorized the local phone book. The brain is so interesting!!

    • @DontBeAWollyy
      @DontBeAWollyy 7 місяців тому +2

      The phone book guy must have been beat up a few times to start with before he became known

  • @ashaleewai8735
    @ashaleewai8735 6 місяців тому

    You have the most interesting topics for us, delivered factually, succinctly and with humour. Just love this channel, thank you so much.

  • @samanthagowen7299
    @samanthagowen7299 4 місяці тому +1

    When I was younger I attended Cherokee camp (free summer camp in my area) and they explained this theory to us of growing brain connections and how it’s easier to shape you’re brain before adolescence or in early adolescence and showed us certain thought exercises and it’s been such a tool. You likely won’t become a savant, but any singular thing you want to master literally just practice, but beyond that when it comes to the arts, just observe over and over and you will grow those brain connection but it has to be engaged thought and processing not just say, listening to music or looking at a painting. Similar concept to the one is this vid

  • @incredibleflameboy
    @incredibleflameboy 7 місяців тому +93

    Everyone is amazed by the abilities that Padgett unlocked but nobody mentions how impressive it is that tank put all of maths on a floppy disk.

    • @chunkyMunky329
      @chunkyMunky329 7 місяців тому +6

      I've been re-visiting maths as an adult, and am surprised at how little of it there actually is. It just seemed like a lot when we were in school because the teaching methods rely heavily on repetition and on spending a tonne of time bringing our attention to the minute details. But it you wanted to compress it down to the essentials, without repetition or excessive detail, you could definitely fit most or all of it within 1.44 mb. Remember, thats almost 1.5 million letters/numbers/etc. which is close to the length of a typical novel.

    • @BrownDaddy007
      @BrownDaddy007 7 місяців тому

      Maybe it was a double density disk.

    • @wutang80oc39
      @wutang80oc39 7 місяців тому +7

      Yup, all that repetetion is the reason why public education is not to help you become a thinker, or even give you knoweledge of the world around you. It exists to train you, to follow instructions, to not question authority, to be ok with wasting hours of your time for seemingly no purpose, while discouraging teach work and being docile.

    • @BrownDaddy007
      @BrownDaddy007 7 місяців тому +4

      @@wutang80oc39 It's good for training people to stand up and sit down at the sound of a bell, en masse.

    • @brianadams3189
      @brianadams3189 7 місяців тому +4

      ​@@BrownDaddy007Henry Ford approves of this comment. It's not called a child garden(kindergarten) because we teach them to grow vegetables, after all.

  • @BionicRusty
    @BionicRusty 7 місяців тому +14

    If only. 💭
    I was born with a musculoskeletal disorder which, even though having tests since the mid ‘60’s, and most recently, more in-depth genetics testing, not a single other case has been found.
    It has no name and as the major symptoms are my limbs being very different to yours with progressively worse pain, my medication, including copious amounts of morphine, is purely for the pain.
    Even so, I worked in the able world from 12 years of age, then joined a company where I progressed to an accounts manager.
    I had to retire recently.
    My greatest fear as a child was to have mental capacity but be trapped in my body.
    My greatest fear is rapidly becoming reality.

    • @bigture
      @bigture 7 місяців тому +3

      try to look at alternative medicine. researh grounding, stay away from fluoride, eat organic, get enough sun try to get in some physical activities and meditations. if what you had tried before is not giving you answers, it can only mean that you need to look elsewhere.

    • @BionicRusty
      @BionicRusty 7 місяців тому +6

      @@bigture Thank you 🙏
      I appreciate the advice.
      I spent many years (~30) weightlifting 3-4 times a week and through my own trial and error found a routine that kept muscle strong but did not hurt my joints.
      However, it eventually became too painful so I had to all but give up.
      Swimming was then my main exercise and in water, the downward stress is lifted and it is bliss.
      Grounding has also been something that I’ve already done for many years. On my land I spend as much time as I can doing this.
      Meditation is something that I have tried but found it difficult, but I will certainly give it another good go.
      Alternative medicine is my wife’s area.
      We have spent the past two decades trying different things and will continue to do so.
      I’ve long since stopped thinking that there’s a magical remedy and now, anything that helps I gladly embrace.
      I certainly don’t like taking drugs but sadly, without them I’d be chair/bed bound.
      Thank you, again. It’s lifting to know that there are good people out there willing to offer advice 🙏

  • @AnnabelleBeaudoin
    @AnnabelleBeaudoin 6 місяців тому +4

    I love your videos ❤ they are always so well researched and narrated.

  • @Handlelife247
    @Handlelife247 4 місяці тому +3

    I love ur videos man u every video is a smile and death vibe I know im to be gone one day but I rack up the nostalgia of future memories and past memories and I keep track of many lessons in ur videos and ur genius detail working thru words ands angles to presentation

  • @4RILDIGITAL
    @4RILDIGITAL 7 місяців тому +66

    The concepts presented here about savants, and how the brain can potentially adapt and unlock unique capabilities is fascinating. It truly begs the question if we all have hidden talents coded within our DNA waiting to be discovered. Looking forward to more thought-provoking content like this.

    • @NemesisFromResidentEvil
      @NemesisFromResidentEvil 7 місяців тому +1

      Comment bot

    • @powershare2566
      @powershare2566 6 місяців тому +1

      @@NemesisFromResidentEvilwhy?

    • @craigmak
      @craigmak 6 місяців тому +1

      I think most of these incredible talents come at the expense of other normal abilities. It’s like the brain rewires itself to be extremely good at one thing by sacrificing ability in others. I think I would rather be well rounded.

  • @doubledeeeeeeez
    @doubledeeeeeeez 7 місяців тому +5

    Absolutely believe in the passed down ability theory and head trauma bit. My grandfater on my dad's side repaired tv's in a shop and also worked in a bakery for most of his life. My dad grew up working in the same family bakery. But Electrical repair eludes him. I was asvab'd to show high mechanical but even higher electrical when joining the AF at 17. Was trained by the AF to repair ECM on B-1Bombers also comm nav. Did 7 years of that and I got hired doing Avionics repair on Helicopters in 2000. Been doing that ever since. Also, I was a C-, D average student in High School. Got in a wreck shortly after Graduation, head almost went thru the windscreen. Was in Basic training the very next week. I excelled among my peers in all my AF studies. The world of electronics came natural to me with the training the AF provided. Got my Associates and got out of the AF. Before getting my brain banged up in that wreck I had zero intention of ever going for more education. School was a bore. Post wreck, I was a different person.

  • @DubultaisT
    @DubultaisT Місяць тому

    I am so glad I found this channel. I can feel neuron pathways building with every video. Thanks. ❤❤

  • @heleng2274
    @heleng2274 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for these videos I love them! This one is great, my mum was a savant with music, so this is interesting to see.

  • @cryptocrush-823
    @cryptocrush-823 7 місяців тому +30

    A friend of mine, Frank Healy is extremely rare; he’s the only person in the world with a mind like his. He can recall almost every day of his life including all the details, Weather, meals, and which baseball team played on any given day including the scores and who made them. It’s funny, when we see each other he reminds me of our last conversation, even if it was 2 -3 years ago.

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc 7 місяців тому +9

      Reminds you of every conversation you two had?
      So... like EVERY. SINGLE. WOMAN. on the planet.

    • @CiBi1968
      @CiBi1968 7 місяців тому +4

      Marilu Henner ( Taxi 1970's TV series) has a highly superior autobiographical memory, it's basically what you describe .

    • @augustuslunasol10thapostle
      @augustuslunasol10thapostle 7 місяців тому +3

      @@davidanderson_surrey_bc hurr durr wamen my dude just because you know alot of women that will bring up conservations doesn’t mean they all do it literally know more guys who do it than women

    • @pafu015
      @pafu015 4 місяці тому

      It just doesn’t stop with these comments huh? Funny that photographic memory has never been proven to exist and yet everyone thinks it’s a thing.

    • @cryptocrush-823
      @cryptocrush-823 4 місяці тому

      @@pafu015 If you met him in person you’d understand. Frank is an extremely humble guy with a very exceptional gift.

  • @SmilingIbis
    @SmilingIbis 7 місяців тому +91

    Most innate talent is usually drummed out of people by the time they finish third grade. We intentionally and systematically destroy creativity in children and call it "education". Imagine Mozart placed in Kindergarten instead of encouraged to learn music. He would be adept at social conformity and pleasing his teachers.

    • @o0Donuts0o
      @o0Donuts0o 7 місяців тому +6

      I suppose learning to write, do basic math, learn logic, speak and be social are things not needed. We can all just be encouraged to do that one special thing, no matter how useless. Utopia.
      That was all sarcasm. Which in itself was sarcasm. I like to be sarcastic across dimensions.

    • @antoonhermans8953
      @antoonhermans8953 7 місяців тому

      @@o0Donuts0o so you like to be an brainwashed nitwitt ready to perform in society ? no sarcasm here : )

    • @frankclough380
      @frankclough380 7 місяців тому +3

      I'm useless at everything, if I have a skill it is screwing things up, I'm very good at that. I like the guitar and I've been learning to play it on and off for over 50 years and I still can't play anything. I can't draw or paint and my math is useless, I need a calculator for everything and now that I'm old I'm starting to forget things. It would be nice to be good at doing stuff, but that is something I will never know about.

    • @bradleyboyer9979
      @bradleyboyer9979 7 місяців тому +5

      Yup. Basically correct. And if school doesn't do it, we put them on medication to make them "normal." As though our world needs more people who think the same...

    • @o0Donuts0o
      @o0Donuts0o 7 місяців тому +5

      @@frankclough380 Not entirely. You wrote complete sentences with the correct punctuation and not a single “lol” in sight. That’s already better than 99% the English I have to read on the internet.

  • @charlesmitchell5841
    @charlesmitchell5841 6 місяців тому

    This was very interesting. Thanks for the video!

  • @or.k4255
    @or.k4255 Місяць тому +2

    that one scene where patrick star hits his head, gets his brained plugged in, and becomes a genius

  • @jhriss
    @jhriss 7 місяців тому +11

    As usual, Great content, well thought out, planned, executed, and edited. Thank You !

  • @theeveningswan6469
    @theeveningswan6469 7 місяців тому +5

    Thank you for these incredible deep dives! I love channels like this that can make me interested in topics I've never heard of

  • @scarlettg6136
    @scarlettg6136 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for the great video. I truly enjoy your artwork and content ❤

  • @mrharry8466
    @mrharry8466 4 місяці тому

    He has got some really interesting, entertaining and educational uploads.
    Brilliant channel.
    All the best to you all.

  • @AliciaGuitar
    @AliciaGuitar 7 місяців тому +12

    DNA memories are something I thought was real for a long time. I noticed several examples in real life. The biggest one is birds... not zebra finches, but all birds. I like to photograph birds, and they can be fine with me looking at them, fine with the camera or phone, but as soon as i point the lens at them they seem to think "DANGER!" as if it is a gun and hide or fly away. How would all these wild birds, even birds from captivity their whole lives, all know about guns?
    Another: I had a severe trauma in my life, but for a long time I did not know what time of year it was when it occurred. Many years after the trauma I noticed I was always sick and hospitalized at the same time down to the day every year. I discovered it was the same day as my trauma. It is like my DNA remembers it even if I don't.
    I used to believe in past lives because I mysteriously knew how to speak and understand Spanish as a small child with no other exposure. I am autistic and intellectually gifted, and have moments of savant-like abilities, but they never last. I think if I had a way to keep it turned on, I would die of exhaustion. It is so hard to focus on anything else during times of savant abilities. I lose sleep and don't eat. I was once misdiagnosed with mania because of it.

  • @plusrunning
    @plusrunning 7 місяців тому +11

    I myself find my mood is affected by scents, like the ones you haven't smelled since you were a kid or ones that happen during certain times of year like the burning of fire wood. Its so weird to me how something like that can control such a major part of how I feel and my current outlook on the world, there are times when I feel more productive or creative just by what I smell other times I feel lethargic and lazy too.

    • @VikingTeddy
      @VikingTeddy 7 місяців тому +3

      Scents are extremely important. Especially if you live in a city where the odors are either nonexistent or monotonous.
      Whether the scents are pleasant isn't that important. What is important is variety. Some types of depression are caused by lack of enough sensory input.
      It's been years since I read research about this stuff. But the things I remember are that you should daily; smell at minimum 7 different scents, walk barefoot on uneven ground when possible, and spend at least half an hour having the horizon visible.
      There were more recommendations, for most senses (even the less talked about ones like proprioception and the like), but I only remember those three. The gist is that you should work your senses if you wish to avoid getting dulled and depressed.

    • @Old299dfk
      @Old299dfk 7 місяців тому +1

      That's because smell is very deeply tied into the mind. Especially memory, and that obviously brings back emotions etc.
      It's just synesthesia, it's the same with everybody. I used to think it was special but it's actually just normal.

  • @energybrown
    @energybrown 6 місяців тому

    Another great video! Nice work 🙂

  • @MyTestAccount-md6tb
    @MyTestAccount-md6tb 3 місяці тому

    You're an Intelligent person! THAT keeps me coming back for more! Love your channel!

  • @fadishaker
    @fadishaker 7 місяців тому +19

    I love your videos, you’re not centered around one subject, you talk about various things, and you add animations and pictures to make it fun, you way of presenting is great, and like generally anyone who like the stuff you talk about MUST like your videos, I hope you keep it up ❤

  • @christinewatson1989
    @christinewatson1989 7 місяців тому +10

    I have SEVERE dyscalculia and I usually tell people I sustained head trauma and that's how I got it because people find that totally believable while believing that someone can be born with the inability to do math is impossible for most people. 🙄

    • @stottme1
      @stottme1 7 місяців тому +6

      I have had dyscalulia all my life. Bottom of the maths class and told ‘there was nowhere lower’. My father was a research scientist who could do calculus in his head. I also have no spatial awareness either and have never been able to draw a cube or perceive depth dimensions. Also I can never remember the last three numbers of any phone number.
      I agree with you - most people believe that it is impossible for a person not to do maths like not everyone can draw a stick figure.

    • @christinewatson1989
      @christinewatson1989 7 місяців тому +2

      @@stottme1 It's weird how lack of spatial awareness is seldom listed as a core symptom of dyscalculia but I have that too. Also ZERO sense of direction.

    • @stottme1
      @stottme1 7 місяців тому +1

      @@christinewatson1989 Absolutely no sense of direction whatsoever. Also measuring for curtains.

    • @stottme1
      @stottme1 7 місяців тому +1

      @KMVS8686It’s difficult but not impossible and usually takes a lot longer than most.

    • @stottme1
      @stottme1 7 місяців тому +1

      @KMVS8686 Odd you say that. I can’t do the 24 hour time. I usually air draw from 1600 onwards. I get 1300, 1400, 1500 and 1600 but after that it’s impossible.

  • @jacobfrey9961
    @jacobfrey9961 6 місяців тому

    thank you for being one of my favorite youtubers since 2014 :)

  • @Chocochey
    @Chocochey 3 місяці тому +3

    So you’re telling me that MAYBE that fall I had when I was 2 is responsible for my Bipolar disorder AND my cyclical interests? 😂

  • @wendypetersen7529
    @wendypetersen7529 7 місяців тому +17

    They may be incredibly "gifted" in some area, but with that gift is the curse that many of the people who are born savants are totally unable to live unassisted as they don't have the ability to take care of themselves. I wonder if any of these would help in the "cure" or prevention of dementia.

  • @patbaron8197
    @patbaron8197 7 місяців тому +6

    I really enjoyed this video. It’s absolutely fascinating to think how our brains are capable of these unimaginable tasks. I used to work with autistic children. Some were severely disadvantaged but occasionally we would find that one would have a certain ability to do amazing things. One boy could remember every shift, date and time of any staff member instantly. He could also remember the weather on that day he could remember what was for tea, breakfast and dinner. Another boy used to rip up paper into tiny pieces all of which were the very same shape and size, an L shape. Some types of paper were a bit awkward to shape so he would get really angry. We would often find books, toilet paper and the rota torn into thousands of these tiny L shapes.

  • @sillyhairsam217
    @sillyhairsam217 2 місяці тому +1

    8:52 "its like you waking up one day and being able to perfectly execute a cheroegraph damce to Taylor Swift's shake it off, without ever once having listened to terrible pop music in your life"
    I like this man

  • @Milton2k
    @Milton2k 6 місяців тому

    Great video as always.

  • @scottguitar8168
    @scottguitar8168 7 місяців тому +10

    Some amazing traits run in our family that made me question reincarnation because it seemed like we came with the knowledge already, like we learned it in a past life. I never thought about it being hard wired into our genetics.

  • @howardpalmer7744
    @howardpalmer7744 7 місяців тому +17

    You are truly one of my favorite channels. I enjoy all the different topics you put forth as well as the way you provide them to us. Thanks for all you do.

  • @AdnanTraveller
    @AdnanTraveller 6 місяців тому

    Enjoyed this video, thank you.

  • @merlin8514
    @merlin8514 6 місяців тому

    Outstanding content as always 👌

  • @dennistrepanier3836
    @dennistrepanier3836 7 місяців тому +267

    Synesthesia is the most incredible thing that can happen to the human brain.

    • @mybigsteaminjohn4027
      @mybigsteaminjohn4027 7 місяців тому +58

      That’s why I LOVE acid

    • @0MNIDaSher00
      @0MNIDaSher00 7 місяців тому +3

      Indeed, arguably so-🌹👁️‍🗨️

    • @0MNIDaSher00
      @0MNIDaSher00 7 місяців тому +6

      ​@@mybigsteaminjohn4027I second that..👁️‍🗨️

    • @suzandouglass5241
      @suzandouglass5241 7 місяців тому +10

      One of my kids has it. Got into Mensa at 15. It's a wild ride for sure.

    • @jismeraiverhoeven
      @jismeraiverhoeven 7 місяців тому +7

      I heard it does have disadvantages tough kinda like perfect pitch

  • @HenryofEngland
    @HenryofEngland 7 місяців тому +8

    Literally one of the best channels on here .never disappoints

  • @davidt783
    @davidt783 18 днів тому

    Thank you. I enjoy your videos. They are like the Why File but uniquely different.

  • @JuliaKirsty
    @JuliaKirsty Місяць тому

    I actually don't know if this is in any way related to the video, but it just came to my mind while watching it. Ever since I was a kid and able to hold a pen, I was drawing. I made my first short story comic when I was 3 years old and I still have the book I drew it in. It was about a nightmare I had in which I switched into another dimension through a door in a warehouse and lost all my family. I vividly remember that dream until today, probably because I drew that comic and revisited it so many times. But I had many dreams and created many stories like that when I was a kid and remember all of them.
    Just a tiny bit later I started to obsess about colors. This obsession never went away. Music has colors, scents have colors, the taste of meals has colors and moods have colors too. It happens that I wanna change outfits up to 5 times a day, because I wanna wear different colors than 10 minutes ago. It's not a case of being indecisive, really. I know what I want, it just changes sometimes, when my mood switches and I need to be surrounded by other colors. And because music has colors too, I listen to music in a very specific way. I don't really have a favorite song either, because it depends on what I "need" in that moment.
    I once asked a very talented musician and producer to make a music collage for a video I had to edit and I wrote him a very detailed script, which we talked about in detail before he started producting. He had to laugh out loud when he started reading the script because he had never seen someone ask for "color-switching" music with a very detailed description of which part of the collage should have which color and how it was supposed to switch to or transition into the next one. He did a perfect job though and was able to create exactly what I had imagined. The rest of the team were absolutely unable to understand the entire process or get what was happening, but it felt so good to be understood in that way. I can also paint music because of this. But I do this quite rarely because it brings me to a state of mind in which I am absolutely not able to do anything else. I will lose any sense of time, space and forget about life. And whatever knocks me out of this state of mind will probably be confronted with a burst of rage. And because I don't wanna end up calling my boss saying something like "Sorry, I didn't come to work yesterday, I was lost in colors", I only do such things when I don't have to go anywhere and nobody's home.
    Before anyone asks: It's not like I physically see the colors, I feel them, sense them and only "see" them in my mind. What I think happens is, that this might be about energy (frequencies) more than anything else. Because colors have energy in the sense of being of a certain frequency and that can be connected to any other type of energy, if the mind allows us to.