Interesting OP Zergling.
By brother (ISFP), used to remember phone-numbers by how he dialed them (when he was 7-8 years old). We all thought it was cute (he's the baby in the family).
* That's how I remember numbers & codes (bank account numbers
) too. So for e.g. if a keypad is different from the one I normally use (e.g laptop row vs numpad), I'd normally screw up the input. If I'm asked to recite the numbers, I'd screw it up too, unless I do the air-typing Randomnity does.
I think about people rarely in concrete words. My mind sees people in something akin to flashes and swathes of colour and forms that may not be anything like their physical self. Someone strongly emotional (even online) I'd almost physically feel as a wash over me and I'd fight not to take on their colour. Shades of them may remind me of someone else and the figures overlap then. When I'm not forcing myself to focus, I could call someone by a different name because of the overlaps
If given a concrete problem at work, I see it in multi-dimensions, as part of a free-form lego structure to draw an analogy, where how it is meant to be/how I want it to be is the open bone structure, and the tools and pieces are in different shapes and colours, and i fiddle around with them like tetris blocks to get them into the structure.
Objects are in terms of sensations - e.g. when you say "book", I'll get an indelible smell of old paper and ink and feel the fragile edge of a page under my fingers.
Actions bring about the same - sensations. e.g. "dance" brings about the smell of hardwood floors, the physical cold of a studio, the memory of curving into a partner, the blankness of mind when the music takes over and I don't even see myself in the mirror, but as a flame reflection in colour, of the music.
When I have to verbalise things is when I draw upon language to "interprete" what my mind sees. It is not always enough.