enigma rule
enigma rule
enigma rule
I understand this until the overlapping part in step 4, then it just gets more derranged
Sometimes it helps just to sing the number. Just like this emergency one
0118 999 881 999 119 725...3
I genuinely have no idea what this person is talking about. They wrote down the number and then transformed to remember the number that they already wrote down?
It never even occurred to me that people might have an advanced mnemonic toolbox for things like this. I know the basics, but this is just a new level.
The only oddball thing I've used, involuntarily and entirely by accident, is "the method of loci". It's fantastic... when it works.
"the method of loci". It's fantastic... when it works.
cries in aphantasia
This reminds me of synaesthesia, where two concepts are involuntarily linked within someone's brain. Typically it's something like numbers and colours, or letters and colours, but could also be something like words and taste. It's rare, but people who have it would probably remember a phone number based on its "colour" and think that's how everyone does it.
I have synesthesia and I use colour and "feel" to remember things. I'm good with phone numbers and dates. I also use mapping a lot, where I see a picture in my head with things placed along in. For example, the year is on a ribbon of varying thickness and colours.
I did think this was how everyone did it. I was 20 before I realised synesthesia was even a thing because it seems so natural to me.
To me it looks like they know their verbal and mechanical memory is stronger than their numerical memory. (not sure that's how they are called in english)
So they basically transcribed the number into a form their mind assimilates more easily: Words and simple strokes they can maybe rattle off with the tip of their finger, or mentally. + maybe numerical sequence they know well already for a reason or another ( the 789 with an arrow to say "this needs to be read backwards")
When I have to remember a phone number, I don't remember the numbers themselves, but I remember the "sound" that this phone number makes when it's said out loud, idk if it makes sense 😭
Luckily due to having to do so mutch math for what i study my brain managed to learn to remembet numbers. Even annoyingly long ones (~30 symbols) if i group them in triplets. How? I have no clue.
Combine that with the more graphical way i think. And you get how i manage to remember the 32 symbols passwords my password manager spits out after i have to put them two times by hand.
Would be a cool little trick if that works. It does sound easier.
If anyone wants a real answer why this looks like this: it's likely undiagnosed schizophrenia.
No
This doesn’t seem that bad, just some mnemonics.
The rest is just describing extra steps of encoding and decoding the number in their mind.
I’ll admit I’m a bit lost on the color-coded step. And the way they changed the strokes in 2-4-9 on different steps. But mnemonics are often “it works for me even if it doesn’t make full logical sense” so not gonna criticize.
I'm almost certain the "she" part is referring to "elle" which means "she" in french
Maybe, but step 4 seems to tie the two together somehow.
If you recite this three times you'll summon a demon.
I think The Laundry was called as soon as it was written down.
math flying around their head set to classical music
I'm pretty sure this one was playing heavy metal.
I’m pretty sure it was the chase song from Benny Hill.
August Rush ass scene
I just ask for them to repeat it
I just start adding a new contact and hand them the phone
I do the same :D
I find it a lot easier to just be profoundly autistic. I see the number once and then I remember it for the rest of my life whether I want to or not