http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x5033452Oh my.
And the primitives are only now finding this out, that for a primitive, the memory is a short-term, self-interested phenomenon?
Robert Murphy (303 posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:41 PM
Original message
Any Other 40+ Experience This?
Dear fellow old ****s,
Does this happen to you?:
FYI I am 41.
You have the perfect rejoinder, but a critical word doesn't come to you! You are writing, you know th perfect word but... but...
WHAT WAS IT?!??!
You're writing or worse (speaking): you have to consult your own personal thesaraus; and it comes to you!!! Great if you're writing, bugger if you're speaking.
Question: is this early. on-stage Althezheimers(sp)?
It's a very big bonfire, the primitives boasting of their absent memory-cells.
Atman (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:44 PM
Response to Original message
3. I wouldn't worry about it, Robert. I'm about to turn 50 and...
...there is no doubt that...uh...I'm 49, so it means that, uh...anyway, what was the post about? Rejoinders or something, right? I don't know why I replied 'cuz I don't know shit about carpentry.
Or just about anything else.
eleny (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:45 PM
Response to Original message
4. Wait till you find your car keys in the fridge
And sure, what you experience happens. Between aging and meds, it gets interesting. Sometimes I have to visualize an object and then I can remember the word for it. Oy.
Blue_In_AK (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:45 PM
Response to Original message
5. Nothing wrong with that.
Sometimes if you just stop trying to grasp the word and think about something else, the word will come to you. It happens to me, more with names than with particular words. The way I think about it, by the time you get to a certain age, you've accumulated so much knowledge that it's harder to find exactly what you're looking for -- kind of like an overstuffed file cabinet. It's all still there, just a little harder to find.
DesertFlower (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:49 PM
Response to Original message
14. i'm 67. i came down with chronic fatigue syndrome when i was 48 and started having problems with my short term memory. now i don't know if it's age or the illness. both my parents had dementia. i worry.
Winterblues (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:50 PM
Response to Original message
16. There is a scientific term for that ...CRS
Can't Remember Shit..
Stellabella (608 posts) Wed Feb-11-09 07:52 PM
Response to Original message
20. No, it's just a full brain.
I like the definition of simply growing older vs. Alzheimer's put this way:
If you lose your car keys, you're just getting older. If you find your car keys but don't know what to do with them, that may be Alzheimer's.
LiberalHeart (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 11:56 PM
Response to Reply #24
89. chemo knocked me for a loop...
Used to have a photographic memory; it's gone.
Used to read a book a week; now I struggle to get through one a year.
Short term memory: doesn't exist most days.
The change was sudden and awful and hasn't improved all these years later (18 years).
The primitive woman bothered by cold weather:
troubleinwinter (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 09:09 PM
Response to Original message
66. I am not an "old ****".
I am 58 and am not any less mentally capable than I was at 25 (though I know one hell of a lot more).
This entire thread is an unfortunate stereotype of elder people... that they are forgetful, ditsy, less sharp, less mentally capable, losing their faculties, in other words: easily marginalized.
The thread appears 'humorous' and self-deprecating, but perpetuates and makes acceptable an ugly and unfair stereotype of elders.
Man, what an old grouch, but then here's Lisa, to lighten things:
liberalhistorian (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 09:10 PM
Response to Original message
67. Yup, it happens to me and I'm 44.
First started noticing it a couple of years ago. It's called "hard drive clutter." IOW, by this age, our brains, our "hard drive" are starting to get a bit fuller and more cluttered and, therefore, it takes longer for our "search engines" to get through to the info it needs.
That's all it really is; doesn't mean beginnings of, of, of..........hmmmm, what's that word I want again....uh...hold on, it'll come to me........ah yes, dementia!
The sparkling husband primitive:
Stinky The Clown (1000+ posts) Wed Feb-11-09 10:20 PM
Response to Original message
81. as common as common can be
I'm twenny years older than you. It just gets worse.