magnetic_pole (
magnetic_pole) wrote in
covidcoffeecorner2020-05-13 02:58 am
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Daily discussion post: superpowers
Folks, what are your superpowers?
Before you protest that you don't have any, let me assure you that you do--you just haven't thought about them that way. My partner R, for example, can always spot an extra space between words in a page of text. On screen, on paper, doesn't matter. She's pretty amazing at catching typos, too. See? Superpowers.
I have the power of not-getting-lost. Drop me off in a completely new city, and I'll navigate with aplomb. An old housemate of mine has a favorite story about the time a long-distance bus dropped the two of us off at the side of the road in a remote part of Greece. The driver definitely knew where we were going, despite our embarrassing lack of language skills---I'd copied down the name of our destination and showed it to him, and he'd nodded and smiled and helped us put our luggage away. When he stopped the bus and gestured furiously for us to get off, I discovered a superpower I didn't even know I had: navigational skills for the win! We were going to a port city, so we just kept walking downhill until we finally met the water, and from there it was easy to see how to get into town.
I've also got the power to smell food that's bit off, but honestly, that's more a curse than a superpower, so best not to dwell on that one.
So, folks, what are *your* superpower? What can you do that your friends and family generally can't?
Before you protest that you don't have any, let me assure you that you do--you just haven't thought about them that way. My partner R, for example, can always spot an extra space between words in a page of text. On screen, on paper, doesn't matter. She's pretty amazing at catching typos, too. See? Superpowers.
I have the power of not-getting-lost. Drop me off in a completely new city, and I'll navigate with aplomb. An old housemate of mine has a favorite story about the time a long-distance bus dropped the two of us off at the side of the road in a remote part of Greece. The driver definitely knew where we were going, despite our embarrassing lack of language skills---I'd copied down the name of our destination and showed it to him, and he'd nodded and smiled and helped us put our luggage away. When he stopped the bus and gestured furiously for us to get off, I discovered a superpower I didn't even know I had: navigational skills for the win! We were going to a port city, so we just kept walking downhill until we finally met the water, and from there it was easy to see how to get into town.
I've also got the power to smell food that's bit off, but honestly, that's more a curse than a superpower, so best not to dwell on that one.
So, folks, what are *your* superpower? What can you do that your friends and family generally can't?
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Right now, I have no problems calling it a superpower because it is super useful!
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Right now, that IS a superpower when your freezer is mostly full and you're self-isolating and you have to leave the house so you shop, and since you're only shopping once a month you buy a LOT, and suddenly you have a lot of extra food to process.
It's all gone into the freezer, though we had to eat some icecream to make it happen.
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My superpower is packing a suitcase. My partner travels frequently for work (well, he did up until now...) and he is hopeless at packing neatly into a suitcase. Our usual routine is that he gathers everything he needs for a trip (which always includes extra clothing for running, running shoes, his portable nebulizer, and various other things beyond just clothing for business meetings), and the suitcase he wishes to use and I pack it. He prefers a carry-on if possible and he has sometimes boggled at what I can fit into it. :) Like others who've replied here with similar superpowers, it's easy for me; I love puzzles and this has always seemed to me to be a 3-D puzzle.
Meanwhile, his superpower is the same as yours: he has intuitive navigational skills that have always blown me away. This is useful, because mine are completely hopeless. (His first initial is J, and I often quip that I don't need GPS if he is with me because I have JPS!)
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I also cook by smell. I can tell if something needs more of a particular spice by smell without tasting.
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(I will do nearly the exact same search as someone else, and get the info in 20 seconds that takes them 20+ minutes, sometimes hours. Most recent notable success was a friend who half remembered a Methodist hymn she'd learned as a kid, gave me a broad sense of the way the tune went, and I sent her a link to sheet music under 30 seconds later.)
It also works with other search tools, but not quite as brilliantly.
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I immediately asked him if possibly he was looking for "Devil in the White City." Ding ding, I was a winner.
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This comes from handling navigation duties on family trips as far back as when I was eight. Later on, I looked back on that and appreciated how my parents had given me room to learn a useful skill.
Much later, I finally realized the real reason was that my parents are both terrible with maps. I'm grateful that we live in a world where satellite navigation is a thing.
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I also know a lot of fiddly grammar and style rules, like how to use a comma correctly or the difference between "which" and "that." I am not actually a prescriptivist when it comes to grammar, but it's still handy knowledge.
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YOUR ICON
Re: YOUR ICON
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A less-trivial superpower I have is establishing and maintaining boundaries with other people (in the pursuit of a mostly drama-free life, haha). Verbally, through physical space, body language, and whatever else I'm unaware of, I've been successful with most roommates, friends, profs, coworkers, people I've dated, casual acquaintances, and strangers. I think my mom and I are fairly similar in this, though she's better at it; my dad and sister are notably worse at it because they're often bad at saying no to things.
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Generally speaking I'm mega resistant to hangovers (though finally in my 30s that superpower is fading) and pretty good at waking up before my alarm.
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Waking before the alarm is a great one, and one, I think, fairly uncommon in youngsters.
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I'm good at seeing how stuff can fit (or not!) or be best arranged in a room. Like evaluating available space and paths and stuff. Hm. I'd say also putting together outfits or matching colors.
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As for as other talents, hmmm. I can do math in my head really quickly - calculating sale prices, the amount needed for tips, things like that. And I'm aces at proof-reading, as well. (Sometimes to the annoyance of others, when I spot mistakes in store signs, letters sent home by school, etc. My daughter just rolls her eye at me if I try to point it out.)
The person with the true superpower in our family is my teenage son, whom we have literally named, "The Super Finder" for years. He's not always great at finding his own stuff, but if you've misplaced something? He's fantastic at locating it.
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And a trick like that, that calms babies and toddlers in situations where a screaming wee 'un in inconvenient - that's a really good thing.
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I can see a bad edit/flash frame in moving video, due to decades of linear and non-linear editing experience. I tend to get stuck on continuity errors for the same reason- like when the shot changes on a TV show and a character is standing in an entirely different position, or battle scars being substantially different degrees of bloody from one second to the next. Yeah, I'm a blast to go to the movies with, lol.
Also, I can parallel-park a car the first try every time- even though my sense of spatial relationships is *awful*. That one makes no sense. All I can figure is that the uncle who taught me to drive is a very good teacher.
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It would be interesting to go to a movie with you - and an education, I'm sure!
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I am also great at remembering small details about people. I am very bad at remembering faces or being able to put a face to a name but if I get a name and an incidental detail I can usually remember the person. This is handy but I do have to rein it in because it comes off as a little creepy? And it's less useful at a remove because the intermediary person doesn't necessarily know which small detail my brain glomped on to about the person I met at her party.
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Language-learning is another superpower I have. I haven't used it as much in the past 5-10 years as I did earlier. But I learn languages and remember vocabulary really easily, and I'm good at grasping different kinds of grammar etc. It used to be that once I had learned certain basics of a language - enough grammar and vocabulary, let's say to an early intermediate level - I could then just sort of spend time with that language and... sort of absorb more. Like after a certain point, just by exposing myself to texts, songs, conversations etc. I'd be able to intuit what a lot of things mean, figure out word meanings from contexts, get a feel for what different constructions mean and so on. It's rather like how we learn our native languages as children. I've heard you're supposed to lose that ability after childhood, but seems my brain didn't get that memo. (My brain didn't get a lot of memos, but it seems like this was a useful one to miss!) Of course there are mistakes in the process, and sometimes I'd still need to check things out in a dictionary, but mostly it worked. I miss doing that properly... Just haven't had the energy for proper language studies for years now because of RL reasons.
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I have the same superpower of navigation! I've always been good with direction and reading maps. Not to say I've never gotten lost, oh I have, but rarely.
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But that's a very subjective thing.
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Others may well look and disagree.
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