Glen writes:

< I can't help but think you narrative people will be (are) way more robust to 
dementia than I'll be. When my abilities to re-reveal the detail of the state 
of the world begin to seriously wane, I'll be thoroughly screwed.

I know a learning-disabled person that has good verbal conversational skills 
but can't learn skills of any consequence.   Another person I know has dementia 
but still forms plausible sentences.   It takes a moment of observation before 
recognizing there is something missing in these two people.  It is only the 
appearance of robustness.  It comparable to motor skills for walking.

[⛧] It seems circadian. But it may not be. "Vacations", which I put in quotes 
because I don't really take them, screw with me in a similar way. Fugues, both 
work-Flow and extracurricular-Flow, also do it. A good mobility workout 
re-configures the space around me and feels like it re-configures my conception 
of the world, too. It's similar with concentrated 1 or 2 day work episodes. >

I've noticed a potential downside to these resets.  If one works with people 
that are driven toward falling into ruts (or less negatively, "taking on 
roles"), this can come off like indifference to the tribe identity.  For me, 
vacations are mostly a way to recognizing the rut I am in, only to be forced 
back into it.   I don't find them very useful.   What's needed is a daily 
maintenance protocol where productivity can occur without being driven into a 
miserable situation in the first place.   Vacations should be one of many 
outlets for growing curiosity and being sufficiently random.

Marcus
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