Age and memory

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Yaworski

Buckeye
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May 22, 2016
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I don't know how many thousands of novels I've read over the years. Sci Fi, crime, fantasies, even romance novels. So it has never surprised me when I start reading a book, only to realize that I read it before, maybe twenty or thirty years earlier.

What's getting me now is that I don't remember movies I've seen recently. I had never seen the Mission Impossible movies so I started from #1. Last night I started watching "Fallout" and partway in, things looked familiar. Maybe I saw this scene on a talk show? Nope, more and more I realize that I've watched this movie but I couldn't tell you what is coming up. For the life of me, I don't have a clue when I would have watched it. So it turns out that I had seen one of the MI movies, I just don't remember it.
 
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This has been MY experience not recently but for most of my life. Since my son was little (27+ years ago) when asked about some detail in the recent past I said "I don't know, I've been asleep since then" :)
 
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The beauty of it is that I can now watch hundreds of movies that I KNOW I've seen before and everyone seems new to me. Hence, I don't have to subscribe to any special cable stuff and certainly no streaming rip-offs. If I wasn't married, I'd still have my house antenna... Really...!

J.
 
Plus add to it there are so many movies out there. And many of them have similar plot lines. So they kind of blend together.

I do Wordle everyday, in the morning. But if you ask me what the word for the day was at lunch time, I couldn't tell you. It's just not important.

Which is also one reason you might not remember a mission impossible movie. They really aren't important.
 
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In 2010 the house was sold, and we moved. Moved again, and then yet again to our forever place in 2016. During those three rapid-fire relocations, about 1000 books, (all of which I had read) were either sold or donated. The book inventory is probably down to less than 500 now. I've read all of these as well.

In my younger days, I would not, except on very rare occasions, re-read a book, or re-watch a movie. It was easy for me to provide a detailed blow-by-blow re-telling of just about any book I had read - even decades in the past.

Looking over the shelves of books today, there are very few of which I could provide a decent synopsis!
This is a good thing. I will never - ever - run out of things to read, and won't spend another cent doing so . . . :)
 
I don't know how many thousands of novels I've read over the years. Sci Fi, crime, fantasies, even romance novels. So it has never surprised me when I start reading a book, only to realize that I read it before, maybe twenty or thirty years earlier.

What's getting me now is that I don't remember movies I've seen recently. I had never seen the Mission Impossible movies so I started from #1. Last night I started watching "Fallout" and partway in, things looked familiar. Maybe I saw this scene on a talk show? Nope, more and more I realize that I've watched this movie but I couldn't tell you what is coming up. For the life of me, I don't have a clue when I would have watched it. So it turns out that I had seen one of the MI movies, I just don't remember it.
First stage of Alsheimer's...
we all have it that are over 60 years of age.
 
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Movies have always been "in the moment" for me. Until I have seen it a few times I don't remember much about it. Not so much with other things, but for whatever reason movies don't stick.
Thank you for pointing this out! It reads like everyone else here wants the OP to check into the Alzheimer's ward ASAP.

My wife and I like to watch movies, and I see actors I recognize from other movies. Actually I recognize their voices, since they might look different from one movie to the next.

But heck if I can remember which movie they were in. 😀 So we end up hitting pause and checking our phones to see who they are and what they've played in before.

Some things just aren't worth remembering.
 
I feel that way about movies I know I seen it before but when I watch it again I don't remember anything about it my problem is I am guilty of playing on my phone and didn't pay attention . So when I really want to see this movie I put my phone down
 
Many novels are so similar these days, I love reading the classics more than once. I have read Moby Dick probably 5 or 6 times and pick up something new each time. Great quotes and I love great quotes. I have one great Civil War Book of history that is 6-700 pages that I have read 4 times. Just watched the new version just released and still not as good as the original book.
 
Usually it is short term memory that starts to go as an early sign of dementia, of which Alzheimer's Disease is the most common form. Going on an errand and suddenly not sure of how to find your way home. Being asked what you ate for dinner last night and having no memory of it. For some, long term memory starts to fade first. As the disease becomes more pronounced the effects become clearer. My Mom had Alzheimer's, for fortunately for her it did not start to become noticeable until she was already in her late 90's. After her short term memory disappeared, her long term memory started slipping away. At first she clearly knew who I was when I visited. Then it became where she remembered she had a son, but said I was not her son. Later she expressed surprise when I told her I was her son, responding "I have children?". By 101 she lost the ability to speak, but it wasn't until just short of 104 that she "forgot" how to swallow and stopped eating and shortly afterwards passed away.

Working with the elderly for many years as a Nursing Home Administrator, I noticed that being unable to recall a past memory, at least temporarily, was a common aspect of aging. But with Alzheimer's or other dementia disorders, the memory is truly lost. If you can't remember the name of a childhood friend, or the name of a movie that you almost remember, but an hour or day or week later it pops into your head, that is NOT dementia. If the lost memory is really lost, then it might be from dementia. There are tools to test individuals to determine if they are showing early signs of Alzheimer's that your health care provider can use, so seeking such help for yourself or a loved one is a better plan than just worrying about it.
 
Not only if you can't remember the name of a childhood frame but after being told you don't recognize it. That is a true sign …
 
Usually it is short term memory that starts to go as an early sign of dementia,

When I was in my 30s I asked a clinical psychologist about forgetting things like why I was headed to the basement. She told me that's pretty normal and nothing to worry about because short term is ephemeral and things get bumped out of it easily.
 
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