Article 6BHW2 ‘Sometimes I don’t recognise my own family’: life with face blindness

‘Sometimes I don’t recognise my own family’: life with face blindness

by
Emine Saner
from on (#6BHW2)

Can long Covid make it harder to identify acquaintances, friends, even close relatives? Scientists are investigating a possible link

The other day a man waved at Stanley Chow, and went over to him. I said: Have we met before?' Which is kind of the last thing you want to say." It happens a lot - he finds it hard to remember new people's faces. Anyone I've spoken to once or twice I do forget quite instantly," he says. If I meet someone new, I'll make a point of following them on Instagram or Facebook so their face becomes ingrained in my memory somehow."

Around six months ago, a friend phoned Chow to complain he had blanked" a mutual friend, but the 48-year-old illustrator just hadn't recognised him. That unsettled me for a few weeks." Now, he says, I always make an excuse, like: Since Covid I can't remember faces as well as I could.'" He's not plucking that idea out of thin air. He says he has always had a small degree of face blindness - where people have difficulty recognising or remembering faces - but he believes the Covid infection he got in early 2021 made it worse.

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