>>14128214Dunno if you've ever tried learning a language, but learning about mnemonics really helps with memory. And confidence too. It appears that if you know how your memory works, you can make it work a little better, if not more than that.
Head works in weird ways. Information regarded as important stays there. And as you build information, it builds up as blocks, an then groups of blocks with which you can operate, and then instead of blocks you use groups of them, and you can see the same small amount of things, but those things get bigger.
First you talk about wheels, sits, steering-wheels, later on about cars, vehicles, about traffic, about laws.
There isn't much that isn't learnable if you stick to it enough as it needs for you yourself to learn it. The ability to find recognizable patterns is limited by memory, but the blocks of information that you need to analise become less than (whatever the current limit in your working memory could be) in complex tasks if you know what they consist in, and have that part of the argument interiorized.
I thought I had become dumb for years. But it happened, thanks to God, that I just was in the right environment learning while enjoying it, and without even realizing it.
I'd like to hear how much a preocupation this is for you, and as far as you are willing to share, I'd like to know the reason too.
May God bless, anon.