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-   -   Can't remember street names or directions (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/175194-cant-remember-street-names-directions.html)

sospan 08-22-2012 03:14 AM

Can't remember street names or directions
 
I used to have to have an unreal ability to navigate without a map and remember directions. It was not unusual for me to watch a TV program with someone traveling down a road in the UK - not only could I identify the road but also what would be coming up on either side of the road.

Yesterday, my elderly neighbour showed me some pictures of a house his son was considering buying. I could remember the name but couldn't locate it within the neighbourhood where I grew up and still live. It was the same with some of the other properties he showed me. Later on I went to some web sites of the local estate agents (Realtors) and it was the same. Recognised the names of the streets but could I place them in the town :confused:

Same thing happened going to my accountant near the University / College I went to for 6 years - could I remember the best route there - :Scratch-Head:

This is the strangest thing - I seem to have "lost" my ability to remember the street names and directions in my locality.

peacheysncream 08-22-2012 07:53 AM

It's horrible isnt it, change. I'm sorry you are having this difficulty. It must be frightening for you especially when you have always been good at something.

I suppose the difference with a TBI is no matter how much you practice something it doesn't seem to get better or come back.

Maybe the best course of action for you is what I am trying to do and that is acceptance.

What do you think?

sospan 08-22-2012 12:59 PM

Emotionally I can accept it, logically I am having difficulty.

My son was going to visit Dover castle with the army cadets and was moaning about seeing yet another ruined castle. I explained the history of the castle over the last 200 years, the secret tunnels, role in operation dynamo (Dunkirk evacuation) etc. This was not a problem.

Trying to remember where a stet was that I played in up to my teenage years or the route to my University 10 miles away is bizarre.

Mark in Idaho 08-22-2012 10:09 PM

Welcome to Post Concussion Syndrome. You guys are complaining about things that are very common to PCS. I used to have a photographic memory. Now, I struggle to remember streets and directions.

Many of us learn new ways to remember things, note pads, etc.

sospan 08-23-2012 03:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho (Post 908110)
Welcome to Post Concussion Syndrome. You guys are complaining about things that are very common to PCS. I used to have a photographic memory. Now, I struggle to remember streets and directions.

Many of us learn new ways to remember things, note pads, etc.

I know the human brain is very complex and many things are yet to be discovered on how it functions - but the mystery for me is why I can still remember a whole host of things on many subjects but like you why are steet names specifically a problem?

peacheysncream 08-23-2012 05:19 AM

I don't know for sure but I do know that we have differing strengths in the ways our memories work.
ie If I want to get somewhere, you can explain it to me verbally (this only applies b4 my accident) and I will mb every detail because I can mentally visualise what you are saying.
Someone else on the other hand, may need you to draw the directions out on paper or still, write them down.

What I am saying is that the memory part of our brain must be split up into sections for mental visualisation/images and mb names or roads in the form of worded facts.

andromeda 08-24-2012 07:22 PM

This happened to me just today! Somebody stopped me to ask for directions to a church. I could see it in my mind's eye but I could not direct her, despite the fact that, on reflection, I had just walked past it on my way home and I've walked past it a thousand times before.

I find myself frequently getting lost in the city that's been my home for seven years. I always recognise where I am... I just don't know where I am in relation to anywhere else. I forget how to get to my local shop that I've been going to for years, making wrong turns and confusing myself.

rochbo 08-24-2012 07:44 PM

My symptoms in this area are so much better now (7 months later) but most of the time I could not have survived without my GPS. It was a life saver.

SpaceCadet 08-24-2012 11:15 PM

I have the same problem from time to time.

I have a hard time remembering what happened yesterday. I'll have to look at my calendar or, check my text messages or my Facebook just to remind me lol.

sospan 08-25-2012 03:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by andromeda (Post 908673)
I always recognise where I am... I just don't know where I am in relation to anywhere else. I forget how to get to my local shop that I've been going to for years, making wrong turns and confusing myself.

My wife and I have constant arguments in the car because I keep on suggesting convoluted routes to get to places or the worse thing is that if I we approach a point from an unusual direction (because of diversion) my senses get completely overloaded


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