I know exactly what you mean, muscle memory is different though as it invokes a physical response as opposed to a psychological one. With martial arts, you train your body so that you replace your reflexes, since reflex reactions follow a set order, the sensory organs send the information to the spine which then relays the information to both the muscle and the brain simultaneously. This means that you react without thinking, a fraction before you even realise what has happened. This works because normal reactions require the information to transfer to the brain for processing before receiving the response which takes significantly longer in its own minute way.Hi Crystal, sorry I haven't made time to reply, there's never enough time to give a considered response...
The red carpet doesn't have any special significance by itself, but it was there on the Christmas Eve when we were in a rush to get to the Christingle service at church and Mum thought I'd broken the gas fire; it was there in the 90s on Saturday afternoons when I was watching Airwolf, Baywatch, A Team, the wrestling, Catchphrase, Blind Date, and eating fish fingers chips and beans; it was there when Mum watched Coronation Street or read the paper and solved her crosswords in the evenings, and when we played Ludo or Scrabble or Monopoly, or unwrapped Christmad presents together.
It seemed pertinent to your original post on muscle memory; in karate the idea is to build these set routines of movement, then to train ourselves to react by default in a set prescribed manner to certain stimuli, ie an opponent's particular attack or movement. I find that I'm forever seeing connections and similarities or equivalences between things: in memories of the past, in music, body movements of all kinds, even people interacting. It's very mundane for the most part; self-explanatory occurrences that don't warrant a second thought, but every now and then there's a rare gem, like a piece of old carpet stuck under a gas valve, that opens the floodgates and completes all the half-forgotten pictures in my head.
What you are referring to with the carpet is an emotional response caused from state recollection memory. So to simplify if we use the multi-store memory model in psychology as a base you have sensory memory, short term memory and long term memory. Its super simple but it works for a basic explanation. So there are several ways things can move into your long term memory, the most common being repetition which is how many learn things in school. But the way you refer to has 2 more precedent reasons. The first as I mentioned is state memory. There was a study conducted with losing keys and to sum up, the participants lost them when drunk and were unable to find them when sober, but once intoxicated again, they were asked to find their keys and could instantly find them. This is because the conditions when they lost the keys were replicated, which is why once you see certain places you can remember paths you haven't used in years from key features because they allow you to retrace your steps mentally, effectively anyway. The carpet would therefore be a linking point to all of the minor memories, being that, same place, etc its easy to forget, but once you see the carpet you recall various memories that were associated with its presence.
The second is the significance. One of the key ways things jump to our long term memory is through emotional significance, if something is highly impacting then you will recall it very easily and vividly often, this is because we take a lot more notice of the event. This is why you can recall various important events in your life years after they happened but you can't recall what you did this morning. So with these two working together, particularly with the Christmas events for example, you recall many details because it is an emotional holiday that invokes many responses on its own, when adding in the state recollection, it is like opening the floodgates in your mind. I hope this explains things for you. Sorry its so long winded and rushed (what an odd combination of words) but my brother is pestering me atm so gotta brb. Take care!