
If you ask for directions to my home I’ll always tell you to turn onto my street from the main road on the east. I would never tell you to take the road from the west because I can’t remember the street name, even though I’ve lived here for six years.
Scientists believe Internet search engines are causing poor memory. I can’t remember which scientists. And although I read the article, I’m a bit hazy on the details. The study suggests a so-called “Google effect”, when people who frequently look up information online increasingly have trouble retaining info because the mind only needs to remember where the information can be found and starts using the Internet as a form of external memory.
Many couples discover a similar phenomenon. One partner remembers the addresses of favorite restaurants and the other remembers dal hariyali is the dish you both like on garlic nan. If your spouse leaves you, you may find yourself scratching your head to remember the address or even the name of Delhi Darbar, the restaurant you visited once a month for years, which is in fact the place where you met the woman who caused your wife to walk out.
This is why I can’t remember street names: I’m responsible for a sense of direction, and my wife remembers the streets. I actually have a very good memory for useless trivia, but certain categories of my mind seem to have declined since marriage, and I assume those categories are my wife’s responsibility in our collective memory. This is my theory for why I can’t remember my theater company’s street, even though I’ve been there dozens of times. If someone says they want to come to my play and they ask for directions I answer, “It’s on the west side of the river, north of the freeway, east of the park, and south of the train station.” Then I give them my wife’s number.
My wife is good at remembering our friends’ occupations, so she can nudge me if I start making fun of travel agents.
I’m good at remembering the title of movies my wife has seen five times. You may find it odd to hear my wife ask me, “What’s my favorite movie?” and I answer, “Strictly Ballroom.” Perhaps you wonder why she wouldn’t know the name of her favorite movie, and it may even seem like she was asking because she wanted me to choose one for her.
My wife is terrible with faces but great with names. I’m great with faces but terrible with names.
If we see you approaching us at a restaurant, we’re probably whispering:
ME: That guy over there. We know him from some place.
WIFE: He doesn’t look familiar.
ME: I’m sure he used to have a beard, and maybe he was wearing glasses last time. His wife is tall and has red hair. They have two kids but I don’t remember the names.
WIFE: Oh, his name is Brian. That’s my brother.
Although she’s great and I’m terrible with names of people we know, I’m great and she’s terrible when it comes to names of celebrities or historical figures. Last week she was watching TV in another room and shouted to me:
WIFE: What’s that cowboy movie with Richard Branson when he has the harmonica?
ME: I don’t think you mean Richard Branson. He’s the billionaire tycoon who owns the Virgin businesses.
WIFE: I must be thinking of Charles Manson.
ME: He’s the Helter Skelter killings guy.
WIFE: I thought that was Marilyn Manson.
ME: Marilyn Manson took his last name from Charles Manson and doesn’t seem a likely candidate for a western. Are you thinking of Charles Bronson? If so, the movie is Once Upon a Time in the West.
WIFE: That’s the one!
I can always remember her face, although I sometimes forget her name. She remembers my name, although she often appears confused when looking at my face. I’m sure we could help each other fill in the blanks–if only I could remember where she was.
Tori Nelson
July 18, 2011
Can’t shake the image of Marilyn Manson wearing chaps and playing a harmonica. I wish I could forget 🙂
The Good Greatsby
July 18, 2011
I would have a hard time rooting for Marilyn Manson to win his shootout.
gerknoop
July 18, 2011
Your convo with your wife sounds hysterically similar to many I often have my husband! I am a ding dong at remember celebrity names! However he remembers not only names and faces but just about everything else! I don’t need a brain at all and so it has severly atrophied
I fear! I used to be good at all sorts of stuff….now I just let him do it! I don’t know how I run a business….I’m gonna go ask him how I do that right now!
The Good Greatsby
July 18, 2011
I hope I provide some reassurance that you are indeed an intelligent person. My inability to remember certain very simple things makes me feel like a fool but blaming it on selective memory makes me feel a whole lot better.
thelifeofjamie
July 18, 2011
What wonderful teamwork! Are you any good at movie lines?
The Good Greatsby
July 18, 2011
I’m great at movie lines. My wife, not so much. But she’s great at making movie popcorn.
Alaina Mabaso
July 18, 2011
Strictly Ballroom might be my husband’s favorite movie.
I also find that there are separate realms of memory dedicated to the husband and wife. The husband remembers how to reset the internet connection on the computer. The wife remembers everything else.
The Good Greatsby
July 18, 2011
I think we all subconsciously turn things over to our partner. We never notice until we find ourselves on our own and question why we’re no longer good at something.
pegoleg
July 18, 2011
I used to be able to spell reasonably well. Now, thanks to instant spell-checks everywhere I type, that ability has gone the way of the prehensile tail. Y is they’re no spel-chk in commints boxs?
The Good Greatsby
July 18, 2011
Same goes for me. I used to be a major league level speller but now my skills are only double or triple A.
misswhiplash
July 18, 2011
Isn’t life wonderful! I put it down to the fact that I am so intelligent that my brain cannot retain everything that it is supposed to. This is why I have a husband..to fill in the blanks.
Usually it is word that I cannot remember and with a bit of backwards and forwards chat we end up in the right place..
I can’t help being the intelligent one!
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
I think the selective memory is especially helpful in making years and years of marriage continue to seem interesting. I can tell my wife the same childhood stories every couple years and she can act interested because she has genuinely forgot.
manneredgold
July 18, 2011
It’s this routine, if not necessary, marital tag-teaming that makes those matching “I’m with stupid” t-shirts a perfectly reasonable anniversary gift.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
That’s exactly what I tried to tell my wife when I got her that shirt.
molassestadpole
July 18, 2011
One of my favorite movies is Strictly Ballroom, too! I have other favorites, but I cant remember them.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
My wife loves Strictly Ballroom. At least I always tell her she does.
reneedavies
July 18, 2011
I’m convinced that otherwise monosyllabic and uninteresting men make incredible cowboys (see Clint Eastwood, Sam Elliot, and the unusual Charles Bronson). But the very best and the better looking is Terence Hill.
I hope you find your wife soon. If all else fails, remember to look in the library.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
Something about a library sounds familiar. If only I could remember what street it was on.
Leanne Shirtliffe
July 18, 2011
I think I am your wife. Only I don’t recognize your face.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
What’s your name again?
Lunar Euphoria
July 18, 2011
In our collective couple memory, I have no memory for the details of the past; my husband remembers everything in the past, but suffers from memory loss for all plans we make in the future, which is my forte.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
Sounds like you two never run out of things to talk about and then forget.
Lenore Diane
July 19, 2011
My husband (I think his name is Rob) and I are horrible with names. With regards to me, I don’t care how many times I have to be reminded of the persons name. If I forget their name, I’ll ask them. Simple. However Tom, er, I mean Rob, he hates having to ask the name, if he’s already been told.
When we arrive at parties, he’ll whisper to me, “What’s the name of the couple again?” After several years of this, I snapped one night – asking he just ask the people directly. Well, on the 4th of July we went to celebrate with friends. As I got out of the car, Jim – er Rob – was asking our 6yr old son, “What’s Xander’s parents’ names again?”
She's a Maineiac
July 19, 2011
This is how I remember people’s names, Lenore. I just think of their kid’s name and add “mom”. No one knows my actual name anymore, I’m just Christian’s Mom.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
My wife knows if she refused to remind me of names when we went to parties, we would just stop going to parties.
Laura
July 19, 2011
I’ve always had a terrible memory. It’s nice to know that the rest of the world is catching up to me. I think it’s hereditary — my mom often got her kids’ names wrong on the first try. She’s called me by my sister’s name, my niece’s name, my brothers’ names, and even the cat’s name.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
I’m considering changing the kids and pets’ names to all the same name to make sure I’m always right.
Dana
July 19, 2011
I used to think I was great at remembering faces AND names, but ever since I started working on the main tourist drag in my scenic city, I’ve seen thousands of people every day and don’t remember ANY of them. Occasionally, I’ll have a flicker of recognition for the “lady with the oversized peacock hat”, but if she ever took off her hat, I’d be toast.
The worst is when I chat with a customer for a good 20 minutes and then promptly forget them within 2.5 seconds of them walking away. When they return to our booth a few minutes later, I’m already asking them “so do you live in Victoria?”, like we haven’t already shared our life stories. 😦
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
My memory for names definitely gets worse when I meet a lot of people every day. I just don’t even try anymore and this is why I probably can’t even remember the names of people I’ve known for years.
officeoddities
July 19, 2011
This is the best…ever..maybe…I’m not sure I remember the other stuff
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
I’m not sure I remember either. This might be my first post.
Thomas Stazyk
July 19, 2011
If I remember correctly, that was one of the greatest movies of all time.
“looks like we’re shy one horse.”
“No. you brought two too many.”
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
Good movie. Or at least I think it was. I can’t quite remember the name.
Carl D'Agostino
July 19, 2011
Most of Miami is a numbered grid. I could not imagine living in a huge county where everything has names. How do people remember streets to get around in a big city? I’ll take NE 6th Ave and 135th Street any day over Magnolia and Waterbury.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
The area I grew up in was also numbered grids and together with a good sense of direction, I always got where I needed to go. I got in trouble when I moved to Germany and every street had a foreign name.
Binky
July 19, 2011
Memory is overrated, especially now with the internet where you can find almost anything. If it’s not online, it’s clearly not important and not worth remembering.
The Good Greatsby
July 19, 2011
That may be true, but I’ll have to look it up online to confirm.
sgmarinova
July 19, 2011
I wish I was married now. Seems like it saves one a lot of trouble….
georgettesullins
July 19, 2011
“Comme c’est bizarre, comme c’est curieux, et quelle coincidence!” is the reply a man and woman quip back and forth in Ionesco’s “La cantatrice chauve”/ “The bald soprano”. Talk about bad memory or memory loss, they realize at the end of the play they are married to each other! Please read the whole play…wikipedia just doesn’t do it justice.
Try to remember to read it in your next life, because this life seems to have a lot to read.
Renée A. Schuls-Jacobson
July 19, 2011
Hubby is totally my GPS system. I would be lost without him. But he would have no friends without me. I’m his social calendar. I worry about who will be worse off, depending on which one of us kicks first. I won’t be able to go anywhere to meet anyone. But he won’t have anyone to go anywhere with.
thoughtsappear
July 19, 2011
Does this mean your wife is finally over George Clooney?
flippingchannels
July 20, 2011
Ha! As a married person I can totally relate to this. I can’t remember why though, that’s my husband’s job.
ajg
July 20, 2011
Did you ever watch Once Upon A Time In The West?? It’s great. Maybe me a lot more appreciative of Bronson.
HoaiPhai
July 20, 2011
Just the other day my wife and I had to tag-team the finding of the interior lid liner for our induction rice cooker, which we use almost daily. One would trace events up to a certain point and then the other would pick up where the other left off. We found it, not two feet away from the rice cooker’s permanent home on the dining room table.
Speaking of westerns, would anyone know the name of the film in which one guy never shoots anyone but has a little leather donut built into his boot and when somehome hits his homocide button, he drops a rock into the donut and flings the rock at the victim’s head in a wild kicking action? I’m serious about this… it’s been driving me nuts for a couple of weeks.