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The phenomenon of walking backwards to remember a lost thought

English Language & Usage Asked on February 19, 2021

I used to have "senior moments" long before I actually became a senior, such as walking from one room to another and forgetting what I was…

An older friend advised me that in moments like these to go backwards and catch the moment in which you lost the thought. Her suggestion seemed to mean actually walking backwards…careful that step. But since then, I have found that while thinking back in time can help, just walking back in your steps slowly to the actual physical location where you lost the thought will bring the thought back.

It’s the opposite of Déjà vu.

Déjà vu implies a circular short circuit of the brain.

You cannot control Déjà vu.

Is there a name for this phenomenon?

2 Answers

I'm having difficulty finding more convincing supporting evidence, but I'm happy with the content. From HiNative (amended):

  • Can retrace your steps have a figurative meaning? [nuriavivo ]
  • Yes. You could say: I thought about my day [...] I retraced my steps.

You didn't physically go back and walk through your day all over [...] you 'walked through your mind' to replay your day. [SCLCJ]

  • Yes, it means to remember what you did earlier. Usually so that you can remember where you put your keys (or any other lost object). [Chook 15]

Here is a quote from a novel, the figurative use forced by the phase ('sit knitting') construction:

  • He sat retracing his steps and that's when it hit him ....

[G Lusby: Serial]

No doubt backtrack can be used in a similar way, but care needs to be exercised in utilising this sense; the default figurative sense (listed first by Collins and Macmillan) is 'to withdraw from an undertaking / stance ...'.

Answered by Edwin Ashworth on February 19, 2021

Here's a scientific fact: Walking through doorways causes forgetting.1

Psychologists call this phenomenon the "doorway effect." Your small notion to, for example, go to the kitchen for a vitamin is apt to get cleared from your working memory buffer as you experience an "event boundary"—the literal passing through a doorway here—and your brain prepares to handle new information.

Though there is plenty of anecdotal evidence that returning to the room you came from can jog your memory, research shows that the notion of "context-dependent memory" does not play out in this situation.2

Maybe that's why this room-return-memory-jog phenomenon doesn't have a name.

Whether it's real or not, I'd be quite surprised if walking backwards yielded any better results than turning around and walking forward—at any speed.

In the meantime, maybe we can just call it . . . a do-over.3
 

1 How walking through a door wipes your memory
2 Walking through doorways causes forgetting: Further explorations
3 Just for fun


Answered by Tinfoil Hat on February 19, 2021

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