Cool Brain "Moments"
So I'm using this page to document some times my brain has not
worked the way that I had expected. These moments are more unexpected
behavior than mental failure. Most of these deal with the autonomous
brain functions -- the ability of the brain to schedule some activity
and have it not be managed by our conscious brains.
Newer entries are earlier in the list.
- [20080320] Similar to the next entry, I just went to do a query
on google for 'cvs dental tape' to lookup some dental floss that I
like from CVS, a pharmacy I visit. Instead of typing cvs I type in
[sadly] svn showing how cross wired svn/cvs. Sigh.
- [20060721] So the thing that happened this morning which generated this
document was my typing of the command 'cvs'. At work we use 'svn' to
store our source code while at home I use 'cvs'. They do similar
functions and have similar arguments. When I started using svn at
work I had to continually correct 'cvs diff' to 'svn diff'. This
morning I was working at home and three times told my fingers to type
'cvs' and it came out 'svn'. I finally had to look down at the
keyboard and force my fingers to spell out C V S. This shows the
power of our autonomous mental functions.
- There have been many times when I told my mouth to say something
that it then did not say. Either I said a different word that was
semi-appropriate or not appropriate in the context at all. Why wife
would then say "you just said X" and I would argue that I didn't.
There was one time that I remember scheduling my mouth to say
something and then I heard it say something else. Doh! Nothing bad
of course but just strange.
- My favorite brain moment happened 5 years ago or so. I was
writing into my Palm Pilot PDA using their graffiti script. One of
the problemswith graffiti was that I could think at lot faster than I
could write. One time I was writing the phrase "then he went over" or
something and as I watched my hands with my conscious brain, I noticed
that I was crossing the T in the words 'then' and 'went'. In
graffiti, all letters are a single stroke so the crossing of the T was
wrong and I stopped writing. But when I then did it more slowly I
figured out that I was not crossing the T but putting in a space. My
autonomous brain was driving my hands correctly but my conscious brain
didn't know it. How cool is that.
- So I use emacs to edit text files (like this one). It is an
editor that uses the control key a lot to move the cursor around --
you press control-p to move to the previous line for example. I am
continually amazed that my conscious brain will ask the cursor to be
moved to a spot in the buffer and my fingers will just take it there.
My conscious brain does not have to say control-p, control-p,
control-p, meta-f, meta-f, meta-f, control-b. It just says move THERE
and the rest happens automagically.
- If I am preoccupied with some problem at work, I will often find
myself pulling into my house with little to no recollection of the
last 15 minutes of driving. If I retrace my steps I had to handle
this stop, sign, this blinking light, and this left hand turn cross
traffic. One of the reasons why I think it is important to develop
good driving instinct is that we drive so often by relying on the
autonomous parts of our brains. If you don't have hard-wired that red
is stop then if you are talking on your cell phone, you'll run the red
light. Not good.
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