Good description. I also find that I used to be able to hold onto
the first one. Now that seems almost hopeless. Although I notice a
lot of variation. Some evenings I can really seem like a pro playing
so you can turn them over in matched pairs). Other times I'm horrible at
it. I suppose it depends how much exposure I've had recently, but
>
> Let me rephrase something.
>
> Electrosensibles do have problems with their short-term memory.
>
> F.i. I remeber very well what happened in my youth (and that is a very,
> very
> long time ago).
> I am sitting at my desk and I want to get something from the kitchen.
> When standing up, and underway to the kitchen, I am at a lost, because I
> cannot remember what I wanted te get.
>
> Or, you are on a webpage, and want to look for something on another page.
> When changing into your browser, you are completely forgotten what to look
>
> for.
> You know exactly what you had for dinner, but this short-term memory is
> going down the drain.
>
> I am not a brain expert, but this phenomenon does bother many people.
>
> Greetings,
> Charles Claessens
> member Verband Baubiologie
> www.milieuziektes.nl
> www.milieuziektes.be
> www.hetbitje.nl
> checked by Bitdefender
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bill Bruno" <
[hidden email] <wbruno%40gmail.com>>
> To: <
[hidden email] <eSens%40yahoogroups.com>>
> Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2007 21:09
> Subject: [eSens] neuropsych testing
>
> >I just got the results of neuropsych testing, and wondered if anyone
> > else has had these kind of tests and what were the results.
> >
> > The main result was that while I excelled in most areas, I was
> > rather poor and slow in terms of "working memory".
> >
> > I'm not sure if they considered that found the testing quite
> > fatiguing by the end. Conceivably my glial cells are not up
> > to that much activity. I know the math test was first. I'm not
> > sure when the "working memory" tests were. I think it was the
> > one that involved hearing numbers and saying them back, sometimes
> > backwards. I think it's something I could have done very well
> > a few years ago (I memorized 50 digits of pi in high school, and
> > could memorize phone numbers very easily). By the end of
> > that test I remember thinking "this is torture".
> >
> > They also did personality testing and said I'm the type who does
> > not accept that my problem could be psychological. Well, I did
> > consider that it could be psychological for a couple months, but
> > now that I'm convinced it's not, they're right.
> >
> > Any brain experts out there care to comment on any of this?
> >
> > Bill
> >
>
>
>