The Intuitive
Conceptual + Aphantasia + Episodic
The Lived Experience
Your mind is entirely devoid of internal words and pictures. Instead, you process the world through strong conceptual frameworks and deep sensory-motor recall.
You remember the past not by seeing it or hearing it, but by 'feeling' the physical and emotional state of the moment. You operate purely on gut feelings, conceptual shifts, and somatic memory.
The Superpower
You are the ultimate abstract memoirist. You can instantly recall the state, mood, and conceptual flow of a past experience, making you incredibly fast at returning to deep 'flow states'.
How to Design for Them
You rely highly on smooth gesture-based inputs, haptic feedback, and muscular flow states. You navigate software by physical habit and conceptual rhythm.
Dense instruction manuals and complex graphical mapping explanations are frustrating barriers to your intuition.
How to Learn
The Blueprint Method: Avoid studying through long lectures or reading aloud. Instead, turn information into mind maps, spatial layouts, and flowcharts.
You learn by seeing the 'architecture' of a concept before you ever try to attach words to it.
How to Communicate
The Conceptual Bridge: You process in silence, meaning your ideas are complete networks of meaning before you ever put a word to them.
Give yourself permission to say, 'I know what I mean, but I need a minute to find the words.' Don't let highly verbal processors pressure you into rushing your speech.
Structural Empathy: You feel empathy somatically or structurally, not visually. If a partner tells you to 'visualize a future together,' you might feel locked out. Remind them that you feel their pain as a physical weight or a logical truth, even if you can't picture it.
How to Love
The Co-Author: Your past is alive. When you think of an argument, you re-feel the exact emotion and tone of voice. Watch out for holding onto emotional grudges because the pain feels fresh.
You love deeply through shared memory-making. Keep journals, celebrate anniversaries, and take photos—your brain thrives on building and revisiting a shared romantic narrative.
