We spend so many years doing research on how the brain functions but it remains a mystery.
I have a complaint about the brain: the information I study only for a short while does not get committed to my long term memory or even my short term memory (or at least, I don't recall it in detail). I always have to commit months and years of repeated exposure and focus on something in order to fully understand it. Though, I might be wrong about that. Perhaps I get annoyed when I really know something in January and then a year later I know next to nothing of it and I become frustrated; I feel as if my brain has let me down. I once committed this stuff to my long term memory (or did I), then why, months later, does my brain not pick it up anymore? Can't my synapses reach each other?
Now, I am not a medical expert but the basic principle of brain function and memory is that a synapse gives off a chemical reaction to another synapse. When the brain is exposed better and longer on something, then the synapses' chemical paths traverse various synapses, intertwining with each one. This complex convolution of chemical brain activity enables the brain to deeply understand something. It is a most wondrous phenomenon.
My question is.. why does my brain behave this way? Why do other people seem to have it easier to recall things? I'm not dumb and I'm much smarter than average. Do I not commit material enough? Do I commit it with the wrong frequency? Why does my brain sometimes refuse to give me the information I want to recall? What do I need to do to keep that information there? How long does it take for me to internalize a concept? I always feel like a snail compared to others because I always need to have eons of alone time with a subject in order to comprehend it. I feel like everyone is a grunt worker and I'm a scientist.
I hope someone understands my problem.
So many questions..