Munster46 wrote: » I’m trying to recall my youth and I feel like I’m missing years. Wondering how everyone else’s memory is?
CelticRambler wrote: » Every so often myself and my three siblings end up discussing some event that happened in our collective past. There are usually four different versions of the same memory! :rolleyes: Often enough, though, one or other of us will have absolutely no recollection of whatever it was, even if we were there. Sometimes the one who does remember has the photos, so it's debatable as to how much is real memory, and how much is remembering what's in the photo.
Ansley Disgusting Switch-hitter wrote: » In effect, it's reckoned we remember less than 1% of our lives. Pick a year at random, say 2007, can you recall one event for each day of that year? Highly unlikely. We'll remember major events and may recall specific items for some noteworthy reason but most vanishes.
erica74 wrote: » For example, one of our dogs is a rescue german shepherd, and right now, she's very old, she's deaf, she's overweight, it takes a while to wake her up, she's very stiff when getting up and much slower on her feet. She's around 10ish and we've had her for 6 years. When we look at her now, we can't remember a time when she wasn't old but recently, I plugged a hard drive into my laptop and found videos of her, when she first came to live with us, running around, rolling around, playing with our other dogs, it felt strange to have forgotten that so quickly.
Frank O. Pinion wrote: » Remember, :eek:when you remember a memory, you not actually remembering the memory, but only the memory of the last time you remembered the memory. So, it's not a true 1:1 memory, plus your brain distorts memories every time you remember them.
Frank O. Pinion wrote: » Remember, when you remember a memory, you not actually remembering the memory, but only the memory of the last time you remembered the memory. So, it's not a true 1:1 memory, plus your brain distorts memories every time you remember them.