Why do people sometimes forget what they came into a room to get or do, but remember it a couple of hours later completely unprompted?

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Why do people sometimes forget what they came into a room to get or do, but remember it a couple of hours later completely unprompted?

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30 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’ve heard it referred to as *”doorway dementia”*. Sometimes I have to retrace my steps before what I left to investigate dawns on me again

Anonymous 0 Comments

**Destinesia**
– an instance of forgetting the purpose of a journey upon reaching the destination.

Anonymous 0 Comments

**Destinesia**
– an instance of forgetting the purpose of a journey upon reaching the destination.

Anonymous 0 Comments

**Destinesia**
– an instance of forgetting the purpose of a journey upon reaching the destination.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If this happens like way more than normal then it is also an ADHD indicator btw. Just chiming in, other people have covered it really well

Anonymous 0 Comments

If this happens like way more than normal then it is also an ADHD indicator btw. Just chiming in, other people have covered it really well

Anonymous 0 Comments

If this happens like way more than normal then it is also an ADHD indicator btw. Just chiming in, other people have covered it really well

Anonymous 0 Comments

We have a certain amount of working memory, which is basically the amount of space we have in our brains to hold what we’re currently thinking about. This is what RAM in computers is modeled after! Like computers, we also have another section of our memory that’s like a hard drive. Not immediately accessible, and more like long term storage.

We have a very limited amount of working memory, and our brains are always needing to decide what to discard in order to make space for new things that we need to hold in working memory. When you walk into a new room there’s a rush of new and presently relevant information that your brain wants to prioritize, and sometimes the information it decides to kick out is the task you wanted to accomplish. So you no longer have that task in working memory.

That task is still in your long term memory, but in order to get something out of our long term memory it basically needs to get triggered, it’s no longer immediately available. You’ll remember in a couple hours when something happens to trigger the recall of that particular memory/task.

This is oversimplified but this is the basic idea!

Anonymous 0 Comments

We have a certain amount of working memory, which is basically the amount of space we have in our brains to hold what we’re currently thinking about. This is what RAM in computers is modeled after! Like computers, we also have another section of our memory that’s like a hard drive. Not immediately accessible, and more like long term storage.

We have a very limited amount of working memory, and our brains are always needing to decide what to discard in order to make space for new things that we need to hold in working memory. When you walk into a new room there’s a rush of new and presently relevant information that your brain wants to prioritize, and sometimes the information it decides to kick out is the task you wanted to accomplish. So you no longer have that task in working memory.

That task is still in your long term memory, but in order to get something out of our long term memory it basically needs to get triggered, it’s no longer immediately available. You’ll remember in a couple hours when something happens to trigger the recall of that particular memory/task.

This is oversimplified but this is the basic idea!

Anonymous 0 Comments

We have a certain amount of working memory, which is basically the amount of space we have in our brains to hold what we’re currently thinking about. This is what RAM in computers is modeled after! Like computers, we also have another section of our memory that’s like a hard drive. Not immediately accessible, and more like long term storage.

We have a very limited amount of working memory, and our brains are always needing to decide what to discard in order to make space for new things that we need to hold in working memory. When you walk into a new room there’s a rush of new and presently relevant information that your brain wants to prioritize, and sometimes the information it decides to kick out is the task you wanted to accomplish. So you no longer have that task in working memory.

That task is still in your long term memory, but in order to get something out of our long term memory it basically needs to get triggered, it’s no longer immediately available. You’ll remember in a couple hours when something happens to trigger the recall of that particular memory/task.

This is oversimplified but this is the basic idea!