Wednesday, December 5, 2012

MEDICAL REPORT


The following medical write-up explains so much.
 
Ever walk into a room with some purpose in mind, only to completely forget what that purpose was?  Turns out, doors themselves are to blame for these strange memory lapses.
 
Psychologists at the University of Notre Dame have discovered that passing through a doorway triggers what's known as an event boundary in the mind, separating one set of thoughts and memories from the next. Your brain files away the thoughts you had in the previous room and prepares a blank slate for the new locale.
 
It's not aging, it's the damn door!     Whew!

6 comments:

kkdither said...

I don't want to check the facts for accuracy. I fully accept that explanation! ;>

OrbsCorbs said...

That happens to me all the time. I figured it was early stages of dementia. Now I know that it's the "event boundary" in my brain.

If you live in a studio apartment, do you rarely forget things?

legal stranger said...

Gives a new spin to crossing thru the threshold.

SER said...

Know wonder I'm always so dazed and confused walking around my house

OKIE said...

Here is something I heard. If you go to the refrigerator and forget what you wanted, you are fine.
If you go to the refrigerator and you don't know what it is, then you might have a problem.

OrbsCorbs said...

I often go from the kitchen to my bedroom (2 doorways), or vice versa, and forget why I came.