[Editor's note: Synesthesia is "a neurological phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway."]
Nothing could be more intensely subjective or taken-for-granted than the ineffable way that each of us perceives the world. This is why many synaesthetes go through a lifetime without realising that their everyday sense experience is exceptional or strange. Those who do, report a moment of startled self-awareness when friends respond with an uncomprehending: ‘What do you mean, my name tastes of split-pea soup?’ Such eureka moments have grown increasingly common since the 1980s, when cognitive tests were first developed to judge the authenticity of the reports through to the mid-1990s, when brain scans and brain-wave measurements began tracking the physiology of synaesthesia’s various forms.
Writing in The Oxford Handbook of Synesthesia in 2013, Richard Cytowic, a neurologist and synaesthesia researcher at George Washington University, describes the ‘astonishment and enthusiasm’ reported by synaesthetes after tests validated that they weren’t ‘making it all up’.
http://aeon.co/magazine/psychology/are-we-all-born-with-synaesthesia/
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 22 2015, @08:46AM
(same poster)
also after hitting my head I had to use a GPS to get to places I've been to many times. It was so bad I forgot my way home from one place I worked at at the time, a place I've been driving to and from every weekend for a year. For a good six to eight months after I hit my head I would regularly forget where I parked my car no matter how hard I tried to remember, though I'm way better now (not 100% though). From what I've been reading online all the studies show that the best thing to do is to not overdo it, you can't just 'tough' something like this 'out', you have to just relax, which took me a long time to finally accept and so that's what I've been trying to do more for a while and it's helped a lot.