Every time you recall a memory, your brain rebuilds it from scratch, making it vulnerable to contamination by your current mood, beliefs, and experiences; this process means you don't replay the past but rewrite it, which explains why eyewitness memories change dramatically within weeks and why people can remember events they never actually witnessed.
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27 травня 2026 р.本站添加:
Think of your earliest memory.
You probably feel like you're [music] watching a real recording.
You're not. Every time you remember something, your brain rebuilds it from scratch, [music] and every rebuild is slightly different.
This is called reconsolidation, [music] and it's terrifying. Here's how it works.
When you recall [music] a memory, the neural pattern that holds it becomes unstable, editable, vulnerable. Your current mood, your current beliefs, even what you [music] ate for breakfast, all of it bleeds into the memory before it's stored back.
You don't replay the past. You rewrite it. Studies show [music] eyewitness memories change dramatically in just weeks.
People remember [music] crimes they never witnessed, childhoods that never happened. Remember, [music] you don't have a memory. You have the latest edit of one.
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