segueable comments on Lights, Camera, Action! - Less Wrong

31 Post author: Alicorn 20 March 2010 05:29AM

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Comment author: Morendil 20 March 2010 02:58:48PM 1 point [-]

A lot of my thinking takes the form of internal monologue; talking to myself, or adressing an imaginary audience, or sometimes adressing an actual person who's involved in whatever I'm thinking about. (An interesting aspect is that I almost never imagine being talked back to.) Contrary to Alicorn's observation thinking-as-soliloquy seems pretty common here.

Some of my thinking feels like a smoldering fire, a background process that needs to be given time to run its course, to be tended and protected even though it's invisible, but will eventually break to the surface.

Comment author: segueable 22 March 2010 03:40:17AM 1 point [-]

Sometimes my thinking takes the form of actually talking to myself out loud. But this is usually only when something is really bothering me or I have some grandiose or noble plan, which I'm probably procrastinating about or likely to forget (don't tell me that, though). I'm usually driving when I do this.

Comment author: David_Gerard 13 January 2011 05:43:22PM -1 points [-]

Sometimes my thinking takes the form of actually talking to myself out loud. But this is usually only when something is really bothering me or I have some grandiose or noble plan, which I'm probably procrastinating about or likely to forget (don't tell me that, though). I'm usually driving when I do this.

All the time my thinking takes the form of talking to myself out loud, to the point where my girlfriend kicks me because I've woken her at 5am again. It tends to take the form of roleplaying situations - at the least, imagining myself explaining something to someone else. I have no plans to stop this behaviour, because it's how I actually get lots of thinking done.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 13 January 2011 06:32:08PM 0 points [-]

Like you, I find this a useful technique. But I often note when I do this (most often when driving) that the other person in the conversation doesn't do much beyond nod and ask me to clarify further.

The exception is my erstwhile therapist, who when I imagined having conversations with her would ask me questions that forced me to completely rethink what I was saying. I would occasionally relate these conversations to her; she seemed to find them amusing.