Your early childhood memories might not be exactly what you remember, they can change over time, like a story that gets retold and tweaked each year.
Imagine you have a favorite toy, let's say it's a red teddy bear. When you were little, you remembered playing with it every day, even when you were sleeping. But now, as you get older, your memory of those days might not be exactly the same. You might remember playing with it sometimes, but maybe not every single night.
Memories are like pictures in a photo album. When you're little, you take lots of pictures, but they aren't always clear or perfect. As time goes on, some pictures get faded or mixed up with other memories. That’s why your early memories might look a bit different now, it's not that they’re false, just that they’ve been reshaped over time.
Sometimes, people talk about the memory, and that can change how you remember things too. So even if something really happened, the version of it in your mind might be like a drawing that got colored in again, still fun, but not exactly the same as before. Your early childhood memories might not be exactly what you remember, they can change over time, like a story that gets retold and tweaked each year.
Imagine you have a favorite toy, let's say it's a red teddy bear. When you were little, you remembered playing with it every day, even when you were sleeping. But now, as you get older, your memory of those days might not be exactly the same. You might remember playing with it sometimes, but maybe not every single night.
Memories are like pictures in a photo album. When you're little, you take lots of pictures, but they aren't always clear or perfect. As time goes on, some pictures get faded or mixed up with other memories. That’s why your early memories might look a bit different now, it's not that they’re false, just that they’ve been reshaped over time.
Sometimes, people talk about the memory, and that can change how you remember things too. So even if something really happened, the version of it in your mind might be like a drawing that got colored in again, still fun, but not exactly the same as before.
Examples
- A child remembers being a baby, but that memory might be made up by their brain later.
- Someone thinks they remember being 3 years old, but they were actually 6.
- Your first day of school might not be as vivid as you think, your brain filled in the blanks.
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See also
- How Does Aphantasia: Why Some People Can't 'See' Mental Images Work?
- How Does Hippocampus and Memories Work?
- How memories form and how we lose them - Catharine Young?
- Why Can’t I Remember My Dreams?
- Joe Rogan - Why Can't We Remember Dreams?