Came up a few days ago (at a different url, oddly) and the comments are worth looking through.<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22193451" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22193451</a>
So I think I deliberately trained myself out of having an internal monologue.<p>I don't have an internal monologue most of the time, but I can definitely turn one on and off when I choose to. I also have a distinct memory related to this. I think I was a teenager at the time, and I don't remember what I was thinking about, but my train of thought got stuck because I couldn't remember the right word for a specific concept. Then I realized--wait a minute, I know what I'm trying to think about even if I don't have the word for it, which means I don't need to use words to think about things! So I stopped using words to think about things.
Since that other thread seems dead now...<p>I'm one of those people. And from my point of view it would be a terrible burden to have to have that. Because at my speed (or broadness) of thought i imagine i'd have to wind up/fast forward that voice to an incredibly shrill voice, and even then it would be insufficient by several orders of magnitude. It would be like trying to press a river trough a straw. I'm just wondering about how common/uncommon this is. After reading the other thread(s) it 'seems' like the (sub)vocalizers are the majority?
Fun fact: i do think while i'm asleep! my friends were shocked when i first told them about that. I don't know how to describe it, but i can think, alter my dream, reason about things, etc--and i used to do math and solve coding problems too.<p>the worst part is that my dreams are too tough. when i'm sad or something things get very rough on my dreams because everything seem so real.
I'm surprised that some people can't do it at all. I learnt to read aloud first, then read silently which I always remember doing by sub-vocalisation. I would have thought if you could read by sub-vocalisation then you could talk to yourself. Possibly, other people read without sub-vocalisation which I suspect would allow you to read faster.
Guess I don't, though I do often hear a "speaker" when reading text.<p>Also usually can't recognize faces using System 1. Which means I often don't see someone I know until they've long-since decided that I'm ignoring them. :-/
I had no idea. This has blown my mind almost as much as when I simultaneously discovered that aphantaisa was a thing and that I have it. The biggest thing to come to grips with was the realisation that others don't have it!