I am unable to do the magic eye things, my eyes just don’t focus on that way. Good thing I never am required to

  • ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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    37 minutes ago

    My eyes dont work together so i dont actually see depth. I can kind of assume depth with paralax and shadows, but i didnt realize until i was in my 20s that people saw stuff like a 3d movie. For some reason (best i can come up with is the exaggerated differences) i can see 3d in vr headsets (stereoscopes) and red/blue 3d. When real-d came out, i was very confused because it just doesnt look 3d to me at all. Edit: Magic Eye doesnt work for me even a little. My brother can do it and i have tried to the point of tears, with tutorials and everything.

  • Gonzako@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    I have trouble making up context in conversations. I just don’t have that many daily convos that require adquiring context

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      I trained a whole year when I was 18 to be able, gasp, to touch ground (/my toes), after some initial warmup I did it repeatedly!

      My kinetherapeut today: no one is stiff like that, we’ll have you in shape in no time…

      Guess I have really long legs or something 😁

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Couldn’t admit this to myself until my 40’s, but I have a serious mechanical handicap. Doesn’t stop me from trying!

    We had standard tests in elementary school and I jammed out in the 90+ percentile on most subjects. The last part was called spatial reasoning. Here’s 3 shapes, if you put them together, which shape will they make. Stuff like that. Tried really hard, couldn’t do it.

    I can take things apart pretty well, and I’m good at creative solutions, just can’t get the thing back together.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Oh, holy crap, I have the same. I was looking at a Scientific American print magazine a long time ago and in the back there were 2 quizzes. One said take these letters and make as many words as you can, and I knocked that out of the park, so easy. The other was a series of images of pairs of 3d models - like the ball-and-stick things used to show molecules. They said some are mirror images and some are the same, and they were rotated in different ways. Basically said find which are mirrors and which aren’t, how many can you find in 5 minutes.

      None. Not in any amount of minutes. I looked at them for an hour, until I was crying, my brain would not see it. I also can’t read maps unless they are facing the same way as I am, oriented with the actual world, but that must be common because phones do show them that way now.

      • ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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        47 minutes ago

        Funny, i have a really hard time with maps unless they are oriented with north up. The modern gps orientation drives me crazy

    • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I absolutely hate this. If I’m working on site, about 99% of the time I have noise-canceling earbuds in. No I actually want to write my code without having to stop and find my place every 30 seconds while Janet and Kevin talk about their weekend excursions for half the day.

  • csm10495@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    I have double vision (diplopia).

    It’s kind of a super power when I think about it… but not really.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    It’s not relevant to my daily life but it is sometimes a significant limitation.

    I’m one of those that passes out at the sight of blood. A little scratch or something won’t send me but actual injury or a lot of medical stuff will get me.

    About half of the time I get an injection or blood drawn I’m out. They use those high chairs so the nurses have more ergonomic access to the patients? Nope, I get the recliner, because I’m liable to fall out of that high chair and beat my head on the floor and now the nurse has a big heavy mess to clean up.

    Two of my four doses of the Covid vaccine I was out. Was pretty sure it was going to happen each time and I was right twice. Still got all four.

    I’ve done it to my dental surgeon almost every time I’ve seen him. Has a nasty habit of playing a video tape that explains the risks of tooth removal, and I seldom retain consciousness through the part about possible nerve damage. They tend to leave you alone in a room while this video plays. Even if I stay conscious I go weak and can’t really move under my own power, it’s really fun to be alone like that.

    I’m careful to warn everyone who works in the shop with me that - if you are injured - I’m not going to be able to drive you to the emergency room, you’ll have to wait for and pay for an ambulance. So put on your safety glasses and partake in my large collection of push sticks.

  • Yeahigotskills2@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Turns out I only have one kidney. Went in for a scan of my bladder (which was fine), and the nurse doing the scan just casually mentioned it. I had no idea. I was 43 at the time.

  • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    I never learned to ride a bike and every attempt has been met with injuries as soon as I build a modicum of confidence. But I can rollerblade like nobody’s business, so I got that going for me.

      • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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        9 hours ago

        I know – same! I fall constantly on traditional skates.
        My wife is the opposite. She can’t figure out in-line skates, but traditional skates just work for her.

    • FishFace@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I had a dream I was rollerblading last night… the last time I put on roller blades was in 2006!

    • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      How do you slow down / stop with rollerblades? I had the reverse experience: any kind of hill, I’m fine on a bike but I always crash on rollerblades. I would love to learn though.

      • anarchyrabbit@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Most common way is to put one foot behind and angle it perpendicular to the way you going, this cause friction between the wheels and the surface causing you to slow down. Experienced rollerbladers can do this with both feet at the same time.

      • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 day ago

        I’ve never really thought about it. I’m not a fancy skater – my skates do have brakes, so my technique isn’t such that I have to plan for never using them.

        If I have the width I’ll slalom down hills to bleed speed - even doing little loops up the hill at the turn of each switchback to bleed off speed. If there’s not enough room to slow down, I might bomb though if it’s safe to do so (because that’s why roller blading is so fun, anyway). I might skate on one foot and drag a wheel behind or make my toes point toward each other slightly, just out of parallel - the greater the angle, the more drag the out of alignment wheels produce. I often tend to drag a wheel or use the brake, then spin to stop, before resuming.

        There are other techniques for stopping or slowing down, but those are my go to’s.

        • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          If there was a sidewalks width path going down a hill with grass on the sides, could you go down it? Or would you have to go another way?

          I crashed pretty hard doing that but I didn’t know how to slow down.

          I’ll have to get some rollerblades and try those techniques on a road.

          • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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            15 hours ago

            In that instance. I’d probably drag a wheel, or use the alignment of my feet to slow myself down, paired with an occasional spin stop.

              • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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                7 hours ago

                I guess I also want to add that when I go out, I’m always in a helmet, knee and elbow pads, and wrist guards.

                You never quite know what’s going to happen out there —
                A few years ago on a wide trail, someone in front of me panicked right as I was about to pass them and they moved directly into my path. I had to bail off the trail to try to “run off” my momentum, but they stepped more into the way and caught my skate with theirs just before I could get a foot down. I wound up in a semi-uncontrolled fall that saw my wrist guards taking the brunt of a tree I was going to dodge if I’d had my feet.
                Last year on a freshly paved road, my wife let out blood curdling scream from behind me as we were bombing down a hill. I swung into a power slide to stop but instead of sliding, my wheels just kept traction and I suddenly found myself heading for a curb at about 20 mph with only a few feet to maneuver. It was bad, too. Curb, couple feet of grass, then broken and uneven sidewalk, followed by mangled and rusty metal fence. Clipped the curb and went down hard on my pads and helmet – cracked my helmet on the sidewalk. Walked away fine. (Buy good helmets and always replace your helmet after a crash.) My wife was fine. She hit a small rock and panicked. Didn’t even fall.

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    some people have mentioned. on occasion. that my spelling and grammar may not be perfect. My artistic ability is really limited to. Can’t think of others but many likely do effect my daily life. My wife could likely give me a good list to work off of.

  • DominusOfMegadeus@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    I I don’t know what Roblox is. I do know what discord is, but I seem to be unable to use it correctly? Also, although I have downloaded some stuff from GitHub a few times, I can never remember how to do it the next time, and the layout and UI make zero sense to me, every time.

    • krashmo@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I’m with you on github for sure. I assume people who use it regularly think it has a decent layout but to me it seems so random and disjointed that I can’t imagine how that’s possible.

      • tomjuggler@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        As someone who uses GitHub everyday, I don’t think about the layout at all. The uploading, downloading, version control etc is all done with terminal commands or desktop tools. So separate from the website (but my code still ends up on there).

        If I ever have to go to GitHub.com in a browser it’s only to copy a repository URL and I always marvel at how ugly and convoluted that website looks.

      • felsiq@piefed.zip
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        2 days ago

        GitHub and all the other sites like it are a bit odd from a UI perspective cuz they’re catering to both regular users (including the “where exe” crowd) and devs, who need to access the million options git gives and all the extras it doesn’t (automated build and testing systems, for example). Going to a project and downloading prebuilt binaries is kinda a tertiary purpose for them, so the UI is more focused on the project’s source code + build instructions and the tooling to work with those instead.

        • krashmo@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Yeah that’s what I meant by “people who use it more probably think it has a better layout”. I’ve tried to use it in the fashion it was designed on a couple of occasions but the version control / repository categorization functions didn’t make sense to me. I assume it would if I did those things more but I also think it’s laid out differently than I would like even for those purposes.

  • grasshopper_mouse@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I can snap with my left hand but not my right. I’m right-handed so in theory my right hand should have enough dexterity to do it?