by Jenise » Mon Aug 17, 2020 12:15 pm
I have dozens of memories of living on Thunderbird Lane. I could draw you the floorplan, and I remember all the neighbors by name. One of them, Mrs. Clifford, was my favorite; she bought lollipops for neighborhood kids but saved the green ones for me. I remember I couldn't say the 'r' and called them 'geen'. I remember the grocery store we shopped at, and the places we'd get pizza and barbecue. Tons of details. We moved to Bryn Mawr Way at the other end of town when I was three, about five miles away so a whole new world, I was there from age 3 to 13. To this day I remember all the neighbors there too, and their house addresses and phone numbers. I remember every phone number I've ever had.
I didn't even understand that I was unusual until high school when I took shorthand. I mastered the proficiency require for an a after two years/four semesters in the first 10 weeks. You only had to show me a new symbol and how to connect it and I knew it like I'd always known it and could write it as fast. They sent me to competitions and I took first in every one I went to. That's memory.
Professionally, for a few years I was the department administrator for an engineering department of 400 people. Our engineers went all over the world. My memory became the stuff of legend. I remember when a guy named Dennis Barlow stopped me in the hall, and said Hey Jenise what's my employee number. Without batting an eyelash, I answered "06103". I knew everybody's numbers, and he told everybody about that. (I recall even now that his middle name was Andrew and he lived in Buena Park with his wife Debbie.) After that I was stopped often with that question.
Another example: 20 years later, now married to Bob, I was at a biz function of his and introduced to one Larry Stella. "Laurence with a 'u', middle initial J?" I asked. Yes. I had never met Larry, but when I went to work at Fluor he had been one of our engineers on a long assignment in England, and quit from there to take a new job. So I had no idea what he looked like, but I knew his file because I'm the one who processed his termination. So, to his gaping jaw, I just did a brain dump, "You were Sr. Cost Engineer when you left Fluor to join Daniels Co in Greenville, South Carolina. Your employee number was 22863. You were making $3230/mo when you quit. You had a son and two daughters...."
So while I'm not at all foolproof, I have a far better memory than most. About four years ago we went to a rally in Montana for people who own the same brand of tiny RV we do. We knew no one there. On the first night there was a mixer at which I met around 80 people. The next night about 40 of them came to the wine tasting I hosted and I was able to introduce each one in the group by name. I do not know why this stuff sticks but it does. It's not like I try, it's just there when I need it. And talk about a great party trick.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov