Endless Memory; Mind Reading; Mindfulness | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @vickymintz29
    @vickymintz29 23 дня назад +237

    This research proves that childhood trauma is the worst crime in humanity. Childhood trauma creates adulthood drama.

    • @cmnichols30
      @cmnichols30 20 дней назад +11

      💯

    • @n.m.patterson7630
      @n.m.patterson7630 19 дней назад +5

      So true.

    • @n.m.patterson7630
      @n.m.patterson7630 19 дней назад +10

      I believe that is the best way to keep you from potential

    • @dianaelaine6485
      @dianaelaine6485 18 дней назад +5

      Everyone experiences trauma. It is inevitable.

    • @teokennedy9785
      @teokennedy9785 17 дней назад +5

      This is true, but this is one side of it! You can overcome trauma. Too me trauma is only trauma if you don’t do the work

  • @jeranbrown82
    @jeranbrown82 24 дня назад +170

    Mindfulness changed my life. It’s how I’ve maintained 7 years of sobriety so far.

    • @junesmith4159
      @junesmith4159 23 дня назад +10

      Congratulations!

    • @barzastephanski4559
      @barzastephanski4559 23 дня назад +4

      I'll drink to that

    • @amyjones7962
      @amyjones7962 23 дня назад +13

      I’m 30 days free today!! 😊

    • @JohnGlen502
      @JohnGlen502 23 дня назад +6

      @@amyjones7962 It only gets better.

    • @nollieflip1
      @nollieflip1 23 дня назад +6

      Some people are so mindful that they never become addicted in the first place!

  • @mehndyigbadyu3046
    @mehndyigbadyu3046 23 дня назад +125

    This is beautiful. And when she said “it makes me live intentionally because I know I will remember it and want to look back at a great memory everyday”. If more of us lived like that we would remember more. Or emotions would be elevated and we would store the memories. The more we exercise this lifestyle we could develop some of these abilities! So interesting!

    • @LadyRebecca363
      @LadyRebecca363 22 дня назад +1

      Her voice 🤯🙃😖 I Jus' can't do it ..

    • @TheWormzerjr
      @TheWormzerjr 21 день назад +3

      mi glad we are all unglue individuals with unique abilities and personalities

    • @sallygoodman5466
      @sallygoodman5466 21 день назад

      😂 ​@@LadyRebecca363

    • @timkevwitch862
      @timkevwitch862 13 дней назад

      Kinda scary and exciting at the same time! This is probably how neuro link was developed!

    • @sweetssweet1374
      @sweetssweet1374 9 дней назад

      Amazing insight. I was thinking that she's so delightful and lovely, having this type of memory must be a joy.

  • @VernaFerguson
    @VernaFerguson 25 дней назад +33

    My father had this kind of memory . He often would start the day talking about what happened in his life on this date in the past. It was such and such s B- day the last time he was around that person on their bday. The day of the week what the weather was that day etc. The best thing I remember about his memory was when he would talk about our day of birth or 1st day day of school etc. I was born during a heat wave I know because of his memory. Downside he couldn't forget.

  • @kittyokat13
    @kittyokat13 23 дня назад +77

    OMG! Someone who perfectly put into words How my memory works!!!! I see it in my head like a Video to!!!!!!!!!!!!! All the way back to 18 months old and I'm 58!!

    • @ankiking
      @ankiking 23 дня назад +14

      Hope you join the research.

    • @GenX1969
      @GenX1969 23 дня назад +8

      Do you remember learning to walk?

    • @skeezix8156
      @skeezix8156 22 дня назад +11

      Once I’d given exact descriptions of the home layout to my parents when I was two years old they finally believed me. I gave them the description in my 30’s, hadn’t stepped foot in that house or seen pictures of it since 1971. Most of the time I just keep these things to myself. Sometimes it makes me feel crazy

    • @Spreadingwingsmine
      @Spreadingwingsmine 20 дней назад +3

      Don’t look up what edging is

    • @periklisspanos7185
      @periklisspanos7185 20 дней назад +1

      Do you remember learning to work

  • @luisfilipelopes2900
    @luisfilipelopes2900 28 дней назад +76

    I would love that you would follow this old interviews and see where we are today! Thanks for this amazing look into the mind!

    • @whanethewhip
      @whanethewhip 24 дня назад +11

      I'm fairly certain that at least one of them is in Vegas counting cards.

    • @LookListenLearnLive
      @LookListenLearnLive 16 дней назад +1

      Where we are today is Apple and other companies have implemented brainwave reading into their devices such as airpods. This is a recent announcement. But look how far back it was in development. So you know at this point it's way beyond airpods.

    • @Sammasambuddha
      @Sammasambuddha 10 дней назад

      ​@@LookListenLearnLive
      If they read your mind, they can change it.

  • @tehf00n
    @tehf00n 23 дня назад +24

    I'd become a police detective if I had autobiographical memory. Or a programmer.
    Wait.... I am a programmer. I forgot.

  • @TheApryl
    @TheApryl 25 дней назад +39

    Being able to forget is a gift. I wish I could forget more. I feel bad for people with perfect recall. I'm so glad painful memories fade with time.

    • @sueferrer3892
      @sueferrer3892 23 дня назад +7

      It's much worse to not remember entire years of your life!

    • @Blessed10000
      @Blessed10000 19 дней назад +1

      ​@@sueferrer3892not necessarily

    • @zbigniewkosior2517
      @zbigniewkosior2517 16 дней назад +1

      Same here I am glad some memories fade😢

    • @mialite7959
      @mialite7959 13 дней назад +2

      Painful memories do not always fade with time. PTSD, CPTSD for instance. Trust me, I have both. Those were lies that were told. Same with: "Love concurs all".

    • @Sammasambuddha
      @Sammasambuddha 10 дней назад

      I'd like to add... personally, I can remember everything I see. like a book. I flip pages in my mind. But, not dates or what I ate for lunch. Just the things I thought were important at the time. Something like mindfulness, I imprint the moment. Once to test myself, I read the entire medical encyclopedia with hundreds of full color pages of the human body. I focused on it. It's been 12 years and can see anything in that book. Doctors ask me if I'm a doctor. Ha!
      But I digress. I do not have emotional ties to my memories. I've been attacked, wronged, cheated on, etc...but when I flip back, nada. I tell people it's like a switch, click, and I no longer care. However, I can feel it if I choose, but it often leads me to clenched fists and grinding teeth. So I choose to feel the good memories. It is uncomfortable for others when i remember the terrible things they did, and I remind them, cuz they forgot.
      😅

  • @maybeebuzzy2265
    @maybeebuzzy2265 29 дней назад +47

    This is endlessly fascinating.
    That said, I'm grateful for selective amnesia, since total recall would push me over the edge.

    • @runnergo1398
      @runnergo1398 28 дней назад +2

      And then there are false memories. Maybe something from a dream. Maybe something you "thought" you experienced and never did. But after so many years, you convince yourself that you did experience it.

  • @jacarta2007
    @jacarta2007 Месяц назад +201

    Actually, forgetting is a blessing in so many ways. Remembering everything can make you miserable because you can't let go of anything. It can overwhelm you. Plus, your memory can become a garbage heap.

    • @nychris2258
      @nychris2258 Месяц назад +35

      You'd think so, but those people dont seem miserable at all. Fascinating.

    • @SophiaOfAthens
      @SophiaOfAthens 29 дней назад +6

      Like every thing in life, it's all about how you handle it. I know someone who has really good memory, but let's that get in the way of his happiness due to focusing too much on the past, and negative things.
      I have always wanted to have good memory because it would have come in handy many times throughout my life when I was accused of saying or doing something, and not remember it.
      God, the irony is that I remember those times, but not what they were about. Isn't that peachy?
      I get the cons that come with a good memory, but I'm not sure I agree the brain has a limit to what it can remember. Meaning I don't think it has a storage limit. Though scientists have posited our brains can handle 250 Petabites of information, so who knows. I doubt anyone has ever filled there entire brain with that much data.
      Though now that I think about it, there could be molecules which actually restrict access to the rest of the storage.
      You can see this by looking at how various people react throughout their lives as they come across new information.
      Honestly, I could keep going, but this comment is long enough.
      Enjoy your day. ​@@nychris2258

    • @butreally289
      @butreally289 29 дней назад +6

      @@jacarta2007 Sure, I saw an interview with a woman who remembered everything and had a traumatic childhood and even adult life. She is tortured by her memories. ‘Taxi’ actress Marilu Henner also has this ability but it causes no issues has she’s had a great life!

    • @michelem.leppard4865
      @michelem.leppard4865 29 дней назад +1

      😊😊😊

    • @HDCTimes-720
      @HDCTimes-720 29 дней назад +6

      Both remembering and forgetting play an important role in life. Remembering helps us preserve valuable memories and learn from the past, while forgetting helps us not get stuck in negative things. It is the balance between the two that can help us maintain mental health and create a harmonious life.

  • @from-Texas
    @from-Texas 23 дня назад +17

    I remember knowing a friend in highschool that had this type of memory. He became a meteorologist and his brother was a space shuttle captain!

  • @shadabamarkhil780
    @shadabamarkhil780 Месяц назад +54

    It’s amazing how the brain can store and retrieve such vast amounts of information. This phenomenon not only highlights the potential of human memory but also opens up new avenues for understanding how our brains work. Truly a remarkable and thought-provoking subject!🧠

    • @NCfrost82
      @NCfrost82 Месяц назад +3

      So jealous right now.....im missing chunks.

    • @runnergo1398
      @runnergo1398 28 дней назад +4

      @@NCfrost82 My problem is forgetting stuff I know. I'll forget a relative's name and wonder why?

  • @patriciagonzalez6903
    @patriciagonzalez6903 22 дня назад +44

    Wow! the more I hear, the more amazed I am at how some human beings are so special! We are created equal, but we certainly have different gifts or "supernatural gifts'.

    • @yunnailavayen5574
      @yunnailavayen5574 17 дней назад

      But" normal idiots will called them " wird,freaks, and will try to hurt them...

    • @tongleekwan1324
      @tongleekwan1324 13 дней назад

      We are not created

  • @SheLsPeaker
    @SheLsPeaker 23 дня назад +19

    How this video found me is a miracle in itself. 😊🎉❤

  • @enosanderson203
    @enosanderson203 22 дня назад +42

    I am Hypnotist and based upon evidence from my clients I have concluded that the Subconscious stores every experience we have ever had. All their memories are available when in Hypnosis. The difference with the 5 in this 60 Minutes episode is that they can access those memories at will.

    • @pinokodayo
      @pinokodayo 21 день назад +8

      I know this isn’t the exact same but often when I have marij***a I can get into a relaxed state and lots of old memories from childhood I’d long forgotten about seem to float up into my consciousness. It’s very beautiful when I have those moments. It feels like those memories had been tucked away in my subconscious

    • @nickzalucha218
      @nickzalucha218 20 дней назад +2

      I would love to try hypnosis..

    • @mistyrious1111starseed
      @mistyrious1111starseed 20 дней назад

      ​​@@nickzalucha218I'm a Hypnotherapist. Hypnosis still fascinates me! The mind is incredible.

    • @enosanderson203
      @enosanderson203 18 дней назад

      @@nickzalucha218 well, why dont you try it?

    • @unleavened7
      @unleavened7 13 дней назад

      Doing this study with subjects who are under hypnosis and given a selection of commands, directives, or other specific stimuli may prove mighty interesting. Potentially lending a little additional credibility to your chosen field of interest and practice. Perhaps propose that idea to the organization who is doing that research.

  • @noname47683
    @noname47683 27 дней назад +18

    “They can do with their memories what you and I can do about yesterday” speak for yourself, Sir! I went to work today thinking it was Wednesday and learning 30 minutes later that it was Tuesday and I was off. 😂

  • @damirmcgrowder
    @damirmcgrowder Месяц назад +49

    Mindfulness is the truth. I practice it every day. Those who know, know. 💙🗽💙

    • @cmdrnbsp7132
      @cmdrnbsp7132 Месяц назад +1

      nerd

    • @Antidemonn
      @Antidemonn Месяц назад +2

      Buddism

    • @Xi_Jinping_Pooh_Shill
      @Xi_Jinping_Pooh_Shill 29 дней назад +2

      All good. But like 90% of people don't. Maybe 95.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +2

      @@Antidemonn - Yes. A re-invention of past practices packaged for today's high-pressured go-getters. For example, Buddhists often practice walking meditation, too, and the emphasis is always on the breath and an empty mind as is yoga in Hinduism.

  • @LynxStarAuto
    @LynxStarAuto Месяц назад +25

    My mom has memory like this. She remembers days, dates, birthdays, the whole shebang

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 Месяц назад +2

      What is the first thing she remembers from her infancy?
      At what age did she realize her ability is not common?

    • @MrTomashek0022
      @MrTomashek0022 4 дня назад

      😊

    • @MrTomashek0022
      @MrTomashek0022 4 дня назад

      😊

  • @gs03ssl
    @gs03ssl 29 дней назад +46

    People with super memory should be historians. Keeping the record of what truly happened for all of us. If there are enough of them keeping the record and correcting the record for us we are more likely to have historical record that's fact based. Otherwise, who cares January 1, 2024, Monday, was a sunny day?

    • @MF-kr4hf
      @MF-kr4hf 26 дней назад

      No One..

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +1

      @gs03ssl - The weather plays a huge role in many historical events. Would John Hinckley Jr. have attempted to assasinate President Reagan if he had to wait in the pouring rain for Reagan to appear?

    • @Bestitwest
      @Bestitwest 14 дней назад

      Did you notice none of them are involved in any so-called serious sciences---the folks with the super memories?

    • @unleavened7
      @unleavened7 13 дней назад

      @@Bestitwest Why do you suppose that is?

  • @TheOneAndOnlyMichelleAngelique
    @TheOneAndOnlyMichelleAngelique 24 дня назад +22

    My mom either got talked into it or she asked for it, but she received anesthesia FOUR times during my birth. It resulted in me living life not knowing why my memories had always been erased or hidden and the cognitive dysfunction I didn't realize I had until the diagnosis 2 yrs. ago. I'm gonna be 54 in Dec. I envy ppl who can remember their life. What I have is an affliction and I've heard it's a good thing. It has never felt like it even once. How the hell can certain ppl, even Marilou Henner who is older than I am, has excellent recall? I got JIPPED!

    • @junesmith4159
      @junesmith4159 23 дня назад +5

      The way I see it, because my memory has always been awful since I was around 7 or so, that when I pass, I will get to see everything just like these folks. The life review.
      I have learned to live in the moment, which is a very good place to be, actually.

    • @nathandouglas624
      @nathandouglas624 23 дня назад +5

      ​@junesmith4159 The only time there is the present moment ❤.
      Past and future are a useful but not necessarily needed in the now. Awareness in the now is. 💜

    • @junesmith4159
      @junesmith4159 23 дня назад +6

      @@nathandouglas624 Yeah, thoughts of my past (I seem to remember the worst of it more than the pleasant) put me in a sad frame of mind. It is just depressing. And seeing the anxiety that my best friend puts herself into worrying about the future, makes me understand more and more, the past is dust, and the future doesn’t exist, so why worry about it.
      Thank you for your response😊

    • @tr7b410
      @tr7b410 22 дня назад

      Try meditation to out maneuver your brains prison.
      You can download all your memories from your akashic records.
      Indeed there have been several people who has had 50% of their brain removed & yet they could STILL FUNCTION NORMALLY...HOW.?
      We have an astral body that can & will operate without the brains influence..

  • @ammasophia4663
    @ammasophia4663 22 дня назад +6

    Up until May 21, 2012 I had a version of this sort of memory.
    Then I had West Nile with encephalitis / meningitis and couldn't get well for literally years.
    Finally, Hyperbaric therapy rejuvenated me, just as the 2020 lockdown with Covid began.
    Covid re~triggered the entire cycle.
    I experienced the felt sense of the day... and my specialty is I remembered dreams.
    I am now 70, so becoming 60 had its own challenges, as I was about 58 when I became really ill from West Nile (which also triggered EBV and CMV latent in my system.
    It is very annoying to no longer be able to do this "thing".
    I still can remember many things from my childhood, and I used to be baffled why others didn't have that tactile type of memory.
    I had literally a jolt to consciousness when I was about a year old and it seems like that triggered a change in me.
    For me, it is grounded in my "felt sense" of the experience.
    The down side is difficult if you have many difficult things in ones life. Remembering all those details is like revisiting that pain which can nver really be in the past.

  • @donelson52
    @donelson52 22 дня назад +8

    Ask any hypnotist; the subconscious remembers EVERYTHING. Trust me

  • @dsiepiela6449
    @dsiepiela6449 29 дней назад +88

    Again another great show. I have trusted 60 Minutes since the 70’s and I have never been let down. Thank you. In a world where things like FoxNew’s propaganda exists, 60 Minutes is a great relief.

    • @TurboShred13
      @TurboShred13 22 дня назад

      They are all propaganda machines.

    • @salinared
      @salinared 22 дня назад +1

      🫰🏾🫰🏾🫰🏾Absolutely!

    • @travisclymer2517
      @travisclymer2517 21 день назад +2

      Trump 2024 🇺🇸

    • @salinared
      @salinared 21 день назад +1

      @@travisclymer2517 real question, how did you manage to rub together enough brain cells to get through this program.

    • @dsiepiela6449
      @dsiepiela6449 21 день назад

      @@travisclymer2517
      So, how much of your hard earned money have you sent to the “billionaire “? Lol.

  • @teresahopemiller1008
    @teresahopemiller1008 25 дней назад +7

    My spouse was like this He was blind and could remember music lyrics, when a song was released the chord arrangement, what radio station it was on, what state he lived in and what he ate that day. the music group, the chart of the song and the mix of the song. whether he heard it on pirate radio, or here in the states. Geographically. He could not do directions at all and yet was a sensational Piano tuner for 50 years. he also remembered personal events of family tragedy that connected to the timeline memory. He was quizzed by his boss , mother and me. i wondered if MIT or a testing of savants or do they do IQ testing of a blind person . My spouse also could remember how to sing a tune after hearing the first time. I miss him dearly. He was called a walking encyclapedia of music.

  • @bradbloodworth642
    @bradbloodworth642 Месяц назад +38

    I always prided myself on having a pretty decent memory, until my second son started to recite, ad verbatim, extensive monologues after watching movies like Lord of the Rings, Avatar, etc. Just blew the entire family away. He can still recall them all.
    If I'm not mistaken, this sort of memory function has been more often found in people with Ausbergers. Evidently its not an exclusive domain for them anymore. Wonderful information amd definitely worth further research and investigation.

    • @Sedgewise47
      @Sedgewise47 Месяц назад +1

      Can’t wait for some genius to figure a way to share this (or _at least_ some approximation of this?) with everyone.
      I do hope and pray that it’ll be something cheap and SAFE.

    • @tomorrowsnews3915
      @tomorrowsnews3915 Месяц назад +4

      I remember every word in every episode of the cartoons I watched when I was a kid, even the commercials.

    • @lucyjackson9408
      @lucyjackson9408 Месяц назад

      Wow! What about now? Can you still do it

    • @jimpowers9553
      @jimpowers9553 Месяц назад +2

      As a medical professional, I don’t like the term Aspberger disorder, as it is just an autistic variant. There are many variants of the spectrum of autism.

    • @YargGlug
      @YargGlug Месяц назад

      Yeah. Likely story. Your son can't do those things. Sorry but honesty is important.

  • @Machivell
    @Machivell Месяц назад +15

    It sucks to recall painful emotions from years ago.

    • @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu
      @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu 28 дней назад +1

      It's always about (suboptimal brain hardware of the mind). It's not about sustainable tech, it's all about reading everyone's brains and surveillance tech, to allow us to use covert behavioral nudges with A.I and data. No need to use the A.I to find sustainable technology, we need to control for brain abnormalities.

  • @user-qv4ze8zm4h
    @user-qv4ze8zm4h Месяц назад +13

    If you have a solid memory that gives confidence. It's like a police officer in your head. While in sleep your heads work to offer you a critical advice investigating all the activities you have done while you were awake. It happens among most ordinary people. How awesome it would be for those with laser sharp memories.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +3

      @user-qv4ze8zm4h - Neither Ms Stahl nor the researchers asked about dreaming, at least not on camera. I would be interested in hearing about whether the people with "superior autobiographical memory" had the same kinds of sorting-out dreams that us memory-impaired have and if they relive long segments of past memories in the dreams.

    • @ammasophia4663
      @ammasophia4663 22 дня назад +1

      @@MossyMozart I am one of those people and I remembered dreams with uncanny awareness.
      This is what I wrote earlier in a response which I will put here:
      Up until May 21, 2012 I had a version of this sort of memory.
      Then I had West Nile with encephalitis / meningitis and couldn't get well for literally years.
      Finally, Hyperbaric therapy rejuvenated me, just as the 2020 lockdown with Covid began.
      Covid re~triggered the entire cycle.
      I experienced the felt sense of the day... and my specialty is I remembered dreams.
      I am now 70, so becoming 60 had its own challenges, as I was about 58 when I became really ill from West Nile (which also triggered EBV and CMV latent in my system.
      It is very annoying to no longer be able to do this "thing".
      I still can remember many things from my childhood, and I used to be baffled why others didn't have that tactile type of memory.
      I had literally a jolt to consciousness when I was about a year old and it seems like that triggered a change in me.
      For me, it is grounded in my "felt sense" of the experience.
      The down side is difficult if you have many difficult things in ones life. Remembering all those details is like revisiting that pain which can nver really be in the past.

    • @jtsjtsm
      @jtsjtsm 6 дней назад +1

      ​@@ammasophia4663So interesting. I'm hate to hear about your health failing. Im glad you were able to find some relief. It is very uncomfortable to just think about not having certain abilities any longer, much less lose the abilities and then have to live with mourning for them. Best wishes to you.

  • @Solscapes.
    @Solscapes. Месяц назад +14

    I wonder how many people would have memories like that if not for lead, anticholinergics, narcissistic abuse, etc.

    • @csmith7404
      @csmith7404 28 дней назад

      Not to mention the pesticides in our fruits which washing apparently doesn't remove, the crap they pump into our air, and whatever they keep putting in our water. Not to mention microplastics. The govts of the world are literally killing us all slowly, and 95% of us just stand by and watch.

    • @PWRFULPATRICIA
      @PWRFULPATRICIA 18 дней назад +1

      Man narcissistic abuse is the cause of memory loss definitely 😢

  • @CollectiveWesterner
    @CollectiveWesterner Месяц назад +8

    Speaking only for myself.....there are plenty of things in life that I am happy to forget.

  • @Ludifant
    @Ludifant 24 дня назад +11

    Another good trade off, I sm the least OCD person I know. My house is perpetually a mess, I leave things out, so I can see them and remember what I was going to do today.

  • @chris.asi_romeo
    @chris.asi_romeo 27 дней назад +11

    Too much memory brings misery. Being able to forget brings joy.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +2

      These people seem to belie your comment.

    • @arizonadreaming4183
      @arizonadreaming4183 20 дней назад +1

      My mom had a stroke and could only remember everything before the stroke. she didn't realize her own son ignored her for 20 years..or remember the death of her other two sons

    • @jtsjtsm
      @jtsjtsm 6 дней назад +1

      Oh my goodness, I find this to be true. I tend to make myself forget because the emotions from recall are much too painful. I also realize as a child I focused too much on silly tv shows to find guidance for happiness. I don't enjoy any of those shows anymore. It feels like a waste of my time and energy. I feel like i wasted so much time living vicariously through people in books and tv rather than having lived the way I truly wanted to live. Competing with family members who controlled the narrative was too hard as a child and exhausting as an adult. For years i lived my life with silence. No tv. No music. No people around me as much as possible. I loved to be in each moment in silence and develop my own thoughts which were motivated strictly by natural and routine sensations of lving. I learned and am still learning to edit my life according to what bought to me and offers to me the most fulfilling moments of peace and beauty and joy.

    • @chris.asi_romeo
      @chris.asi_romeo 6 дней назад +1

      @@jtsjtsm woow you did it well💯👏

    • @jtsjtsm
      @jtsjtsm 6 дней назад +1

      @@chris.asi_romeo aww... thank you. It wasn't easy. I just keep telling myself that slow and steady wins the race.

  • @romeromaine248
    @romeromaine248 29 дней назад +6

    Think you have a good memory, watch this! 😂 These people are so amazing. The violinist sounds amazing. 👌

  • @marcosgarcia2831
    @marcosgarcia2831 Месяц назад +9

    Jorge Luis Borges has an amazing and beautiful short story written about this subject. It is inside the book called Fictions and the short story is named "Funes the Memorious." This little short story fits this documentary theme to its core. I strongly recommend it! I also recommend, of course, reading the entire book, because it is going to blow your mind away beautifully!

    • @cassynicole7615
      @cassynicole7615 28 дней назад +2

      ❤ thank you for this recommendation!

  • @L0R3N23
    @L0R3N23 22 дня назад +5

    I don’t even remember what I ate for dinner last night 🤣

  • @dominicdmello7531
    @dominicdmello7531 29 дней назад +13

    I have some memories, not to this level but one goes back to the time i was 6 months old. I went back to that location after around 50 years and its still exactly the same as my memory.

  • @missshroom5512
    @missshroom5512 Месяц назад +11

    I rarely get jealous but that ladies memory is making me!
    Amazingly cool👍🏼😁

    • @androwaydie4081
      @androwaydie4081 Месяц назад

      As a male I'm only jealous of guys remembering their first date birthdays consistently to avoid sleeping on the couch.

  • @RWB20
    @RWB20 23 дня назад +6

    What if you can remember details of everything but not the dates? I realized for the first time in my life when my memory was destroyed by COVID that how i remembered everything was not how most people live their lives. I had to relearn how to live. But the positive side is that when you can't remember everything it is a lot easier to live cause you just don't care about things as much.

  • @Ludifant
    @Ludifant 24 дня назад +9

    'normal' is the worst word we have, right after 'should'. Next ones are 'right', 'true' and 'good'. If we'd be honest we'd just go around saying to people: "hey, you don't meet my expectations!"

    • @echo-trip-1
      @echo-trip-1 21 день назад +1

      Normal is a totally legitimate and useful word. it’s just that people don’t understand what it means.

  • @hectoralmonte3629
    @hectoralmonte3629 Месяц назад +62

    I forgot what i was going to say.

    • @cooldog60
      @cooldog60 Месяц назад +7

      I know all about that.

    • @DonShew
      @DonShew Месяц назад +5

      😂😂

    • @nitramja7738
      @nitramja7738 25 дней назад

      I remember doing that once too!

    • @mellio9077
      @mellio9077 23 дня назад

      lol! same here 😂

    • @ryleitdept
      @ryleitdept 17 дней назад

      oh! where am I?

  • @pamt9543
    @pamt9543 22 дня назад +2

    Mindfulness is like a superpower. The people who have that "photographic memory" are like xmen lol. For me, mindfulness saved my life. DBT really helped me mature my skills of being mundful. When i achieve that state, its like a free flow dream state.

  • @VonBluesman
    @VonBluesman 29 дней назад +8

    Imagine government authorities pointing a red laser on your forehead and saying, you are lying, your brain scan says so and you are sentenced to jail. 😱

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +3

      Or anybody trying to manipulate your memories.

  • @mdb1239
    @mdb1239 Месяц назад +7

    These exceptional people demonstrate that all of us store the memories in our brains. We just can't retrieve those memories at will like these people can. It doesn't seem totally fair. Perhaps the latest MRIs can differentiate these special peoples' memory retrieval mechanisms and how they differ from the majority.

  • @rand49er
    @rand49er Месяц назад +7

    Life sometimes gets so busy and demanding, I get away from meditation. I tell myself, "Oh, once I get past [fill in the blank], I'll get back into it." I just need to do it. Period.

    • @suzanneemerson2625
      @suzanneemerson2625 Месяц назад +3

      Yes, you do. When you don’t “feel like it,” that’s the time you need it most.

    • @Infernotaco15
      @Infernotaco15 29 дней назад

      ​@suzanneemerson2625 That is good wisdom. Never thought of it that way. That has been my issue now for awhile. I think it is because my partner doesn't do it, and I don't have a good space to practice.

  • @rnicholson6579
    @rnicholson6579 20 дней назад +1

    My fiancé's mother had this type of memory. Her family learned never to argue with her as she was always correct. She was exceedingly hyper & talked as fast as a machine gun.

  • @rogerallan6763
    @rogerallan6763 27 дней назад +13

    Can anybody else here in 2024 see how this type of technology IS A GIGANTIC PROBLEM FOR OUR AUTONOMY AND INDIVIDUAL AS WELL AS COLLECTIVE FUTURE.!!?!???!???!😣

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +6

      Of course!

    • @aetheryl4937
      @aetheryl4937 21 день назад

      The public consciousness and scientists will herald this as miraculous and how much good it can provide to everyone... when in reality, its applications are primarily oppressive (marketing, manipulation, and a form of mind-r*pe). This is stuff straight out of 1984 and yet, Americans will embrace all the positives of this technology, without ever considering the myriad (or the exponential multitude) of negatives. There is this huge push to merge humans with computers, and I personally think it's evil and a source of control, really no different than unwanted mass surveillance. It predominately causes more harm, than good, IMO. In contrast, while CRISPR can transform medical treatment, we already know since curing disease isn't profitable, instead it will likely be weaponized, or mostly remain only accessible to those that are rich and want to live forever. Science and industry has this obsession with neuroscience for a reason... and it's not altruistic in nature.

    • @Adoubless
      @Adoubless 21 день назад +1

      Or a gift. Who controls the history? Only those in power.

  • @lovepeace9902
    @lovepeace9902 11 дней назад

    I have photographic memory and in University reading countless documents and books for a reseach and going to exams (I did 3-4 exams at once so I had to read 3-4 books) gave me cronic migraines. My neurologist told me that the information overload caused it. While working I had no migraines. The gift would be great for doctors etc. but in my field you don't have to memorise everything.

  • @Cris-ge4yl
    @Cris-ge4yl Месяц назад +7

    Why would I want to remember everything? There are some things I don’t mind forgetting

  • @SatoshiOfBitcoin
    @SatoshiOfBitcoin 26 дней назад +11

    I have HSAM. But mine is videographic, I recall entire conversations. I can sit in a courtroom and recall exactly what someone stated on the stand and the questions asked even if its hours long but not all of us do this in the same way, what we all seem to have in commin is this freaky innate comprehension of calendars and how they work. I don't do this by date, I do some different with time to organize info in me, but like Marilu Henner? I can tell you every detail...I actively choose what to place in my Instant Recall bin as although science says it's impossible, my memory is videographic and it can go off mistakenly, someone might ask me something or make a comment and Boom, its as if my mind becomes a moving camera and I recall it all. Note thst they said that they DON'T have photographic memories. The emotion never goes away, it IS as if events are REtranspiring emotionally. As I recall it and it's frustrating as ppl around you don't seem to be drinking in the experience of life as we're living it. And yes, it gave me insight otgerw didn't gave so Bitcoin isn't what SV & DC claims and fights about, disagrees about. You DO remember every single thing that you're exposed to, this? You just don't instantly, effortless recall it. Trust me, your brain is puny as compared to your mind, your physical brain must accomodate your mind, the amount of info can overwhelm you. We all develop ways to handle and organize what we're exposed to and that we label "memory" ex post facto.

  • @chinookvalley
    @chinookvalley 24 дня назад +4

    I don't think this is that rare. BEFORE MY CAR WRECK and TBI at age 35, I could remember millions of numbers, people's names, birthdays, their and their families birthdays, long lists of items... But, I could also remember being in the crib, and who was there, what was said, the weather,... I think if we can tap into it at a young age, it becomes part of us. My parents told me to always believe what I saw and what I remember to be true, because they said I was always correct.

  • @lovemylife816
    @lovemylife816 8 дней назад +1

    My brother is like that - has been since he was a kid and he's in his 50's. He'll describe colors, sounds, what you were wearing, even verbatim words he's heard and what others were doing in the room. Anything he noticed sticks forever. He always says he 'sees' it again and he's not in any way like someone with autism (I work with individuals with autism).

  • @BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat
    @BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat 24 дня назад +7

    Amen. I have OCD & ADHD, RSD, a little dyslexia, CPSTD from Narricistic Abuse (like many people today) and can relate to negative/humiliating experiences from 30 years ago like it was it was nothing. My mind also catalogs memories by location, person, activity but I have extreme time blindness so I wouldn't be able to calculate dates. I am grateful for these videos because it may explain why it is hard to let things go. I've tried to focus on good memories with people, always aware no one is perfect but sometimes have to distract myself to change the strong emotions with the memories. Reframing/CBT and acceptance and commitment therapy helps but the OCD link may explain why getting over things is harder for some then others. Grateful for this video ❤

    • @birunz
      @birunz 23 дня назад

      jesus...

  • @JODYCARROLL
    @JODYCARROLL 23 дня назад +3

    This has to draw in folks like Jimi Hendrix and Picasso for instance in relation to the almost immediate infinite creative understanding of things. Creatives like that do things as if they are pulling from multiple lives or something while the rest of us labor to climb.
    This is also why we get told about remembering our whole whole life when we die. I would say a filter has been placed over our mind for this life.

  • @alexzhu4710
    @alexzhu4710 Месяц назад +7

    I can’t imagine what their lives are like and I don’t know whether it’s a gift or curse.

    • @jinka6171
      @jinka6171 Месяц назад

      I have it somewhat…..and it is more of a curse…….useless information….for the most part

    • @alexzhu4710
      @alexzhu4710 Месяц назад +1

      @@jinka6171 sorry friend , not meant to offend, but I m just curious, if someone offends or even hurts you, and with the time elapse, can your hates also die away? If it can’t, then I believe it’s more a curse.

    • @nitramja7738
      @nitramja7738 25 дней назад +1

      ​@@alexzhu4710people are able to forgive and let go of pain and suffering that someone may have caused them in the past and still remember the time it all happened with all the details.
      I'm only guessing that it would be the same for these people that have extraordinary memories.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +1

      @@nitramja7738 - You don't have to guess. The people in that segment who addressed it all said that recalling past painful memories are emotionally like living through them again - ie: relationship breakups and the woman, who at 13, suffered an emotional trauma when she had to move away from her school and friends.

  • @grafito4438
    @grafito4438 Месяц назад +7

    Thanks for putting the year of filming. It's not fun to see the same videos given new upload dates.

  • @singlespies
    @singlespies Месяц назад +9

    Interesting that when asked about events on a certain date they always include in their answer the day of the week - even if that was irrelevant to the answer. I wonder if the day of the week is somehow bound up inextricably to the way they access memory.

    • @lalathebenificent1335
      @lalathebenificent1335 27 дней назад +2

      Yes, like sequencing

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +2

      They all mentioned "seeing the memory", so the memory must come as a visual block. I imagine. (Not that I am in the position to know. ^_^ )

    • @eze3572
      @eze3572 20 дней назад +1

      Yes that was what I was thinking. Like they are using a diff filing system.

  • @border2beachwithchipleach63
    @border2beachwithchipleach63 24 дня назад +3

    The future sounds less exciting and more dystopian after watching this.

  • @kristinemunholland8980
    @kristinemunholland8980 26 дней назад +12

    I'm very curious about the IRB (Institutional Review Board) that ok'd the suicidal ideation study. This is an INCREDIBLY at-risk group. Was this cleared by both Dr. Brent and Dr. Just's universities? What intervention are they offering the participants AFTER the fMRI? Asking suicidal people to contemplate words associated with death would, it appears, increase their attention and possibly motivation towards the act. It is worrisome to me that this segment on 60 Minutes doesn't address the reduction of harm I am assuming these researchers HAD to offer in order to recruit these participants.

  • @elitemortgagetraining
    @elitemortgagetraining 19 дней назад +1

    This is so incredible. I have never seen anything like it before. I cant remember the clothes I wore on Monday lol

  • @Mr--_--M
    @Mr--_--M 24 дня назад +5

    Few hundred years ago they'd either be worshipped or burned alive for their abilities.

  • @roxxyredandsweetiemow4028
    @roxxyredandsweetiemow4028 17 дней назад

    I suffer from PTSD and amnesia associated with it. I've always wondered how to regain or even just improve my memory. I find this all amazing.

  • @puiacalinadrian
    @puiacalinadrian 25 дней назад +12

    Shock, this is from 2009, we want the follow up for 2024✌️😎

    • @zoni36
      @zoni36 23 дня назад +4

      Go to the 4th section , around 40 mins. They do a ‘10 years later’ update

    • @wildone106
      @wildone106 21 день назад

      Look at the state of society now..do you really think its better

    • @puiacalinadrian
      @puiacalinadrian 21 день назад

      @@wildone106 it's worse

  • @SayNoToAuthoritarianism
    @SayNoToAuthoritarianism 20 дней назад +1

    I wish I could remember what I did a few days ago. Sheesh. For me, time just melds together. I can remember things, but I CANNOT tell you when it happened.

  • @altspecs342
    @altspecs342 Месяц назад +3

    Thank you for reminding us of this.
    ❤️

  • @patriciaschaefer7146
    @patriciaschaefer7146 8 дней назад +1

    Fascinating, but terrifying in the wrong hands

  • @ImeldaFagin
    @ImeldaFagin 28 дней назад +4

    I’m curious about why people remembers the actual dates. I don’t have the type of recall these people have but the vivid memories I do have of my life are not linked to particular dates.

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 25 дней назад +1

      From what age does a person even need dates?

    • @ankiking
      @ankiking 23 дня назад +1

      Probably a way of sorting the data since they remember the order of the days anyway.

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 22 дня назад

      @@ImeldaFagin They must feel the relativity of their experience, on some synesthetic level... and through these representations, locate the memory on a "synesthetic" map. I guess!

  • @maraloucartwright8758
    @maraloucartwright8758 10 дней назад

    How useful as a retired Elimentaray School Counselor, to find that that there are Doctors and Educated people who believe in the the depths of the brain. Thank you for this 60Minuntes about the brain.

  • @philipjones3793
    @philipjones3793 Месяц назад +3

    And now; 10 yrs later we see that Google actually went "nefarious" mode. Sad state of affairs we live in now.

  • @williamrunner6718
    @williamrunner6718 25 дней назад +2

    It almost reminds me of something like a computer program that places temporary files so that it can remember where it last went. The files will stay there forever as long as they aren't deleted.

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 25 дней назад

      A bit like development/aging, reproductive cycle, etc.

  • @bezillions
    @bezillions 24 дня назад +5

    The most fascinating thing is those people haven't used their abilities to do anything the average person can't do, so why didn't it ever occur to any of them to lean into the ability and do something novel?

  • @HDCTimes-720
    @HDCTimes-720 29 дней назад +2

    The episode on autobiographical memory is impressive and expands our understanding of how memory affects our cognition.

  • @rockerchick4368
    @rockerchick4368 Месяц назад +4

    My cellphone reads my mind. Facebook posts, my music preference. 📱 😊😮😮

    • @yobardoYobardo
      @yobardoYobardo Месяц назад

      It reads your mind only if you allow it

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад +1

      @rockerchick4368 - Those marketeers read your past choices in what you buy or what kinds of 'net sites you search for. Confuse them - mix things up when you can. If you are 18, comparison shop for local morticians. If you are 80, instead of buying Centrum Silver, buy a graphic novel. Let the faceless corporations know that you won't be pigeon-holed!

    • @vortexofdew8489
      @vortexofdew8489 9 дней назад

      😊 hey there at
      @rockerchick imagine seeing you here a great minds and you are exactly correct ! it will read your thoughts😮
      I have very recent documentable experiences with Witnesses no words spoken no sounds made never looked at anything on that page at all and boom🎉 an ad on my Xitter account for McDonald's hash browns having not eating there in 20 years and just passing by McDonald's and wondering if they were gluten free in my mind 😮crazy stuff 😮😅hope you're doing well😊 great minds think alike❤

  • @Sawdust5764
    @Sawdust5764 22 дня назад +2

    I can't even remember where I set my bong down just five minutes ago

  • @moretoexplore6736
    @moretoexplore6736 Месяц назад +4

    Wondering if and how this technology could help people who have serious mental illnesses and PTSD. Could it help us get to the root of the mental illness, and thereby assist the medical profession making treatments more patient-specific.

  • @tomb5552
    @tomb5552 20 дней назад +1

    It’s strange that events are stored by the date. How many of us tie everything to the date, not many.

  • @LookHereAye
    @LookHereAye Месяц назад +3

    I can't even remember what day is today. This is Nuts. I don't know if this is good or bad.

  • @Batise
    @Batise 9 дней назад

    I worked in a State Hospital in Calif. during the 60's. I cared for a patient who was severely autistic but she had perfect recall about the past. Not only her own experiences but everything that happened that she was exposed to. Very sadly, after I was transferred to a different ward, she was ignored by staff. this was during the time Regan was governor and he had put a freeze on hiring new staff and the patients were basically ignored do to lack of nurses.

  • @vickiebillingsley7842
    @vickiebillingsley7842 Месяц назад +4

    I’m 63and I was 4 when my dad collapsed had a heart attack and he died I was 4 and I remember it like it’s playing like a movie ❤

    • @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu
      @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu 28 дней назад

      It's always about (suboptimal brain hardware of the mind). It's not about sustainable tech, it's all about reading everyone's brains and surveillance tech, to allow us to use covert behavioral nudges with A.I and data. No need to use the A.I to find sustainable technology, we need to control for brain abnormalities. Who cares about sustainability and starving children, we need to control and read all minds.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад

      @vickiebillingsley7842 - It gave you that big shot of adrenaline they spoke about. I am sorry that you have suffered through that memory all these years.

  • @lauriesaenz6209
    @lauriesaenz6209 23 дня назад +2

    The beam of light to the center of the forehead is directly into the Pineal Gland😢

    • @marythecontrary
      @marythecontrary 22 дня назад

      Is that what the “thermometers” were for during Covid?

  • @targetedtruthfinder
    @targetedtruthfinder 29 дней назад +5

    Too late reading thoughts already happening with light and EF waves however know this..while these can help us it also can be used to damage the brain and cause pain

  • @MrEerilybasic
    @MrEerilybasic 29 дней назад +1

    We don't "let go" of our memories as much as we "let go" of the emotional overload from a bad memory, slowly, over time. I, anyway, have a flashbulb memory of seeing the second plane crash and burst into flame, but time has removed most of the sting of the fear and anger I felt, and the hopelessness and impotence I experienced as the towers fell one by one.

    • @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu
      @NicholasWilliams-uk9xu 28 дней назад

      It's always about (suboptimal brain hardware of the mind). It's not about sustainable tech, it's all about reading everyone's brains and surveillance tech, to allow us to use covert behavioral nudges with A.I and data. No need to use the A.I to find sustainable technology, we need to control for brain abnormalities. Who cares about sustainability and starving children, we need to control and read all minds.

  • @lucyjackson9408
    @lucyjackson9408 Месяц назад +3

    Fascinating stuff!

  • @timkevwitch862
    @timkevwitch862 13 дней назад

    This is scary and wonderful at the same time! This is probably how neuro link was developed.

  • @TheBuckeyeBusinessman
    @TheBuckeyeBusinessman 28 дней назад +7

    I’m still waiting for people who have audiograpgical memory…they remember everything they hear. I know they are out there.

  • @RemyCoda
    @RemyCoda 22 дня назад +1

    I'm convinced that even considering the downsides, I would absolutely love to have this "condition" if you will. I feel like I am definitely on the other end of this. I sure wish I could remember more things, more easily. I feel like it would make your life feel fuller, longer, and more meaningful.

    • @paulanderson3898
      @paulanderson3898 19 дней назад +1

      I have thought the same thing but think would be difficult as well with past hurt.

  • @1983mojo1
    @1983mojo1 Месяц назад +4

    I have CRS.

  • @YessahBlessah608
    @YessahBlessah608 20 дней назад +1

    I have memories like this of when i was 2-3 years old. And certain days of my life!!! But not dates or anything like that. Just particular things that was said and everything and everyone in those moments and what we were doing

  • @2-ddesign172
    @2-ddesign172 Месяц назад +3

    If you suffer from addiction it is not a gift, it is torture-especially in recovery.

    • @jameswilliams3270
      @jameswilliams3270 Месяц назад +1

      Hang in there and see what continued recovery does for you - and what you can do for others. It is sooo worth it my friend. You can do this.

  • @thepsblondie1969
    @thepsblondie1969 15 дней назад

    Love your shows. Glad you're back!

  • @Peacebwyou9295
    @Peacebwyou9295 28 дней назад +4

    This is very intriguing! I miss all of the 60 minute shows & Sunday Morning shows that cover interesting things like this, instead of spending half the show badgering Trump! Bring back things like this !

  • @elisabethdevyt8256
    @elisabethdevyt8256 13 дней назад

    My memory is not exceptional, but I tend to remember more than average. Far more. Also days and hours. I remember all birthdays. Years in wish I traveled somewhere. My results at school. Happenings, the dates. I have a memory of days and hours. My family always asks when and where something happened. Where a picture was taken. Easy to me. But this here is far more! I had an NDE, and I think this plays a role. Extraordinary documentary!

  • @iceyjo
    @iceyjo Месяц назад +3

    They are asking the wrong questions.
    Like: can you learn a language in a week? Do you ever misspell words? Can you quote lines from movies and books? Can they remember how things taste they haven't had in a long time? Remembering facts is one thing but do they learn faster? Can they process information faster than ordinary people? I could ask these people 200 questions.

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 29 дней назад

      James L. McGaugh represents behaviorism.

  • @garyashby8894
    @garyashby8894 2 дня назад

    I used this adrenaline idea in college. I notice that when i went to class tired, the lesson did not take well, but if i was well rested and alert the lesson sunk in better. I then to it to the next step by being well rested and hyped myself up using caffeine and was able to absorb a lot more detail.

  • @Current-Topics
    @Current-Topics Месяц назад +3

    what's the date today?

  • @jlynnho5788
    @jlynnho5788 28 дней назад +2

    Is this why I feel like my phone seems to know what I'm thinking 🤔

  • @darkguardian1314
    @darkguardian1314 25 дней назад +3

    But how is her memory abilities attached to time…
    There are days I don’t know the date and had to look it up.
    What happens to events during those uncertainties?
    I am not convinced it is as presented. 🤔

  • @medusagorgon8432
    @medusagorgon8432 21 день назад +1

    Her remembering the Oscar date is wild. I've never bothered to watch the Oscars, so even if I had this ability would I even know?

  • @allisonmoore8056
    @allisonmoore8056 Месяц назад +3

    All information from the beginning to the end of stored on the quantum field, I believe that their brains have access to that field

    • @amandaknopf9880
      @amandaknopf9880 Месяц назад +1

      @allisonmoore8056 That’s what my brain went to as well! If feels like their brain filters were accidentally (or purposefully) turned off, which allows them access to all events. Reminds me of “life reviews” during near death experiences. Like how she said she feels the same emotions, not only remembers the date. I wish I could find more about how these things connect!

    • @a.s.3676
      @a.s.3676 29 дней назад

      Well, the time-like fourth dimension IS actually metric.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 25 дней назад

      @allisonmoore8056 - You are going to need a lot of proof to convince the world.

  • @aviationmadness4236
    @aviationmadness4236 13 дней назад

    We are super quantum beings. Humans are capable of infinite qualities. My memory is shot. Ive had head injuries. My aptitude for science is just above average. Im an empath. I can lucid dream. I know if i can trust you in a few seconds. Never wrong.

  • @luisfilipelopes2900
    @luisfilipelopes2900 28 дней назад +3

    It has been proven that, with biologically tissues, you can store terafolps of information in one 1mm3. So, I think our normal brain can easily store everything. The thing is cataloguing, how we can access that information. I believe all of us have all our memories. Our brains just chooses to not link that.

  • @wizardofki
    @wizardofki 10 дней назад

    I used to have a memory that was close to what they have. Not exactly photographic or superior autographical, but really strong. My mom and dad divorced when I was two years old. Throughout my childhood, when I would visit my dad mainly on the weekends, he would try to turn me against my mom. I could recall my conversation with my dad and what he told me with 98-99% accuracy when my mom asked me what he said or to elaborate on something he said. You think people with a true superior autographical memory would be millionaires and billionaires since they would be able to recall everything or at least be good at betting on sports games knowing all of the statistics by heart.