Magnus

 

It shows: My numbers
This is what you see:

These are my numbers, and the "chart" I use when I calculate for instance. This can either help math skills or make it harder and it differs from person to person. I can't handle it and therefore I cannot do algebra. Just CAN'T. It's like a mental block. But I feel very comfortable with learning languages. Especially by speaking (I know there must be some errors in this text, hehe).

The 1-3 region is seen from point "A".
The 4-6 region is seen from point "B".
The 7-10 region is seen from point "A" (it moves a little).
The 10/11-20 region is seen from the air above "C", maybe a 30 degree angle or so.
The 20-130 region is seen from point "D".

This is what I could not show better and what's missing: 1-130 is seen pretty much like I showed it here. This is "the big picture".
But as soon as I think of a specific number I move in to a 3D landscape where I can get closer to the numbers (they are placed as shown) and move from point to point depending on the number. The numbers are 2D, but I can follow the "visual road" to get closer. You can describe it like zooming in on a high-resolution picture. Except for the fact that you sometimes can turn around and look back (when counting backwards for instance) and see the track mirrored from "inside" the picture and out.

I can't tell the colours of anything in this world, which is strange because it visualizes so clearly, but as soon as I try to decide a colour for either the background or the numbers, I can't tell which. I think the background must be black, but I don't know for sure.
All numbers up to 20 are placed on a hill while 20-130+ is very steep and almost straight up. As if you were on the ground looking up a ladder where 110 is placed in the mid-air to the right of the ladder. BUT this is only when visualizing 20-130 or calculating number by number. If I for some reason think about "just the number 110" then I see it from somewhere around the area of "90". I must have thousands of standing-points in total and some numbers have more than one angle to view them from.


Start