When I first learned about aphantasia, I thought It described me—I don’t naturally visualize when I read. But after closer inspection, I found out that I can visualize if I put some effort into it. Images might not be terribly vivid, but recognizable enough. So technically I don’t have aphantasia, but my experience is pretty close, and it’s all kinda confusing . For the most part of my life, I did not even realize that was not normal.
I was always fast reader because of that, you can save time and mental resources by not visualizing, so that’s an upside. As for downsides, I can’t imagine them, haha.
When I first saw this test, I choose #6 directly without really imagining a red square. And I realized it and tried again. For first some moments I saw #1-3! And could not move to #6 really when I concentrated on. Although at this time, closing my eyes, I tried to “see” the image crystal clear, and it will be a hallucination if it happens.
I am a bit confused now how to balance between aphantasia and hallucination. I know I am not aphantasia based on several moments that mental images striked my memory. I am also not seeing hallucination, it normally does not happen and I haven’t experienced it yet. But I can’t really see the exact and obvious red square except the feeling I am imagining it.
I have not tried the square test before, and it’s weird. At my first attempt I just completely failed. I’ve certainly seen enough squares in my life to imagine them, but it just did not happen. Then I imagined drawing that square—not the tactile sensition of it, but just the process of going from A to B to C to A, but that only gets me the 3rd type of square. I can push it to the 4 with additional effort, but I can’t seem to get past that just yet. So it’s far from red. The shape is certainly easier for me to imagine than color, colors tend to be really bleak. It reminds me of another classic example, where they ask you to imagine an apple. At my very first attempt I found that difficult for some reason, but after a while I have no trouble imagining any apples I want—green, red, yellow, mixed color, stem with leaf or without leaf, no stem, partially eaten, cut in half, partially rotten, with a worm inside it, etc etc. But then again I have a lot more experience paying attention to apples then to abstract red squares, even if I do see squares way more often. Maybe it adds to effect. Or maybe all the possible transformations of shape distract me enough from color so that I fail to notice how poor my imagination of it really is.
When I first learned about aphantasia, I thought It described me—I don’t naturally visualize when I read. But after closer inspection, I found out that I can visualize if I put some effort into it. Images might not be terribly vivid, but recognizable enough.
So technically I don’t have aphantasia, but my experience is pretty close, and it’s all kinda confusing . For the most part of my life, I did not even realize that was not normal.
I was always fast reader because of that, you can save time and mental resources by not visualizing, so that’s an upside. As for downsides, I can’t imagine them, haha.
When I first saw this test, I choose #6 directly without really imagining a red square. And I realized it and tried again. For first some moments I saw #1-3! And could not move to #6 really when I concentrated on. Although at this time, closing my eyes, I tried to “see” the image crystal clear, and it will be a hallucination if it happens.
I am a bit confused now how to balance between aphantasia and hallucination. I know I am not aphantasia based on several moments that mental images striked my memory. I am also not seeing hallucination, it normally does not happen and I haven’t experienced it yet. But I can’t really see the exact and obvious red square except the feeling I am imagining it.
Which one do you think is your case?
I have not tried the square test before, and it’s weird. At my first attempt I just completely failed. I’ve certainly seen enough squares in my life to imagine them, but it just did not happen. Then I imagined drawing that square—not the tactile sensition of it, but just the process of going from A to B to C to A, but that only gets me the 3rd type of square. I can push it to the 4 with additional effort, but I can’t seem to get past that just yet. So it’s far from red.
The shape is certainly easier for me to imagine than color, colors tend to be really bleak.
It reminds me of another classic example, where they ask you to imagine an apple.
At my very first attempt I found that difficult for some reason, but after a while I have no trouble imagining any apples I want—green, red, yellow, mixed color, stem with leaf or without leaf, no stem, partially eaten, cut in half, partially rotten, with a worm inside it, etc etc.
But then again I have a lot more experience paying attention to apples then to abstract red squares, even if I do see squares way more often. Maybe it adds to effect. Or maybe all the possible transformations of shape distract me enough from color so that I fail to notice how poor my imagination of it really is.