| Yes. Same goes with me. My partner and parents know that I have this. I don't tell it to others. I also go to the same location through many roads, but only once I have one etched into my mind. I have to use G-Maps 7-8 times for visiting the same location if there are even days-wide gaps. I am also bad at getting directions in maps. I have to orient and reorient one multiple times to figure out where I am, which way I am looking, amd which way I need to go. I often just walk 10-20 meters to figure out which way I am looking or need to go. Yeah, I am missing the "location module", too. I have had this long before I had access to any sort of digital maps or GPS. And, for me, Google Maps has been a lifesaver. If I go with the help of it 8-10 times, I never ever forget the road again. This is so weird for me given I have so good memory since my childhood. I could always memorize things real fast, without any superficial tools like mnemonics, flash cards, etc. |
It's inconvenient for some things, like carpooling, and it can annoy close others to "never remember." Even if I try to focus on getting somewhere, attention never lasts for long.
I've tried heuristics and patterns, like "if I exited the highway and turned left, I need to turn right and merge to return home." But none seems to stick. I forget if I needed to turn left or right out of the retail place!
And this is a long way of saying I had to quit games like CounterStrike because of it, unable to really keep up with siblings and so on, so a part of my identity is wrapped up in this disorientation mode. I ask them how they "avoid getting lost," and to them it's second nature. They were already experts in it.
Maybe there is a better algorithm to orient oneself, something like when we need to print and "see all the env vars," to make it _so concrete_ (like Dr. Ng likes to say), that _now_ we can get to the heart of the problem we were working on.