Can We Inherit Memories From Our Ancestors? Is Genetic Memory Real?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 402

  • @KeepOnThinking
    @KeepOnThinking  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Make sure to subscribe for more science!
    See how AI could "recreate" deceased loved ones here - th-cam.com/video/iJAdc8-F6P8/w-d-xo.html

    • @joshuataylor3550
      @joshuataylor3550 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      No

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@joshuataylor3550 Thanks!

    • @soleaguirre100
      @soleaguirre100 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks greetings from Santiago Chile 🇨🇱!

    • @soleaguirre100
      @soleaguirre100 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I feel this is true!

    • @WinoaKaronhiatens
      @WinoaKaronhiatens ปีที่แล้ว

      Believe so and it likely is a survival instinct taught to prevent danger or how to manage situations. Hence why a wolf would avoid humans from humans being threats to be feared for wolves. For humans this could likely create it through trauma like not to trust males even if you are a male. Hence androphobia in males passed down through genetics since maybe you mother and great grandmother went through trauma caused by males.
      On the contrary instead of reversing it can it not be seen as a sign of evolution not a disease and hence even transgender having the desire to be the opposite sex likely be in the evolutionary genes regardless how it's caused. In terms in that fix maybe humans are mentally developing forward to evolve their thinking to advance to create opportunities where they join the opposite sex. In terms tools aren't exempt from the evolutionary process as various animals develop to use them for survival. Transgender is already survival in snails in their ways where males become females as they age and reproduce more snails. Maybe our scientific belief to cure isn't a cure but a lack of acceptance and an attack on something different then themselves.
      Sadly I think this is where our modern thinking process hasn't evolved. We still lack that acceptance and have that fear to create tolerance and opportunities and support them. You can call me a logic monster or whatever by the utmost thought is in what is and the ability to question even what's limiting our own ability to go through and advance as a people and what is intentionally held back due to fear. Personally I don't think this group is ill they just been subject to evolution.

  • @rumpolstilscin
    @rumpolstilscin 2 ปีที่แล้ว +137

    I had a vivid dream as a 12 year old. At 20 something, I found myself standing where I was in my dream. A view that, I found out, was probably seen by my grandfather just before he was shipped to France to take part in WWI

    • @user-zl5gi8sv7u
      @user-zl5gi8sv7u 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      you traveled back in time?

    • @juno_the8774
      @juno_the8774 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@user-zl5gi8sv7u maybe

    • @davidmorgan5581
      @davidmorgan5581 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Dreams are messages from the deep

    • @imdavidbaby
      @imdavidbaby ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Ur past life's memories briefly broke thru
      #Wakeupp 👁

    • @mrunit7261
      @mrunit7261 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      This has happened to me. This "memory" has 'haunted' me for 60 years and just lately has been proven true thru ancestrial tracking. The house that my ancestor built in the late 1700s is still standing. I'm absolutely certain I was in this house in my 'memory'. I remember it as though it was yesterday.

  • @kelphiuspolluxeldanimus6426
    @kelphiuspolluxeldanimus6426 3 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    My instincts KNEW Assassins Creed wasn't lying about genetic memory.

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Sounds like someone is spending too much time within the Animus ;)

    • @kelphiuspolluxeldanimus6426
      @kelphiuspolluxeldanimus6426 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@KeepOnThinking gg😏😎👌
      It makes perfect sense though. Instincts have to come from somewhere. So they come from the memories and genetic "programs" from our ancestors in our genes. I've definitely had dreams of some of my ancestors and parents come up that arent mine.
      Plus there's many people I know with phobias like lightning striking being interpreted as danger/death when they lived on land they whole life. But their ancestors were pacific islanders who had to boat across the sea and thunderstorms on the sea were an actual real sign on danger. It kind of fills in the gaps.

  • @howardcurtis9138
    @howardcurtis9138 2 ปีที่แล้ว +86

    On a city tour of Ketchikan Alaska, our guide explained that salmon return to the spot where their mothers spawned them and spawn the next generation within two feet of the spot where they themselves were spawned. Then she mentioned that after the 1989 Exxon-Valdez Oil Spill, many of the streams where salmon had been spawned were so polluted that the salmon could not return to the spot where they had been spawned and had to go to other streams that had not been polluted. This stimulated my curiosity, and so I asked her when the streams were finally all cleaned up, did the next generation of salmon return to the spot within two feet of where their mothers had spawned them, or did they return to the ancestral spots where their grandmothers had spawned their mothers? She had to check and get back to me: the salmon returned to the ancestral spawning spot, not to where they themselves had been spawned right after the oil spill.

    • @Intoxicanna
      @Intoxicanna ปีที่แล้ว +5

      HOLY COW! Thank you for sharing that! That is AMAZING.

    • @pathosofmine
      @pathosofmine 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Please tell me the name of the touring company so i could look more into this, thanks

    • @Fredericko-k7p
      @Fredericko-k7p หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That is fascinating....

    • @howardcurtis9138
      @howardcurtis9138 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@pathosofmine When I told a friend I was going to take a Princess Cruise to Alaska, she said to look up her friend Mary who was a retired tour guide of the city of Ketchikan. I emailed Mary and she "volunteered" to show the two of us around for a nominal fee. I'm not sure if she still does it, but if you're still interested, I'll email her and ask her. The information about the salmon she got by calling and asking the harbormaster in Ketchikan.

    • @Maxwell-x3g
      @Maxwell-x3g 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Sharp mind. Good question indeed

  • @dm4859
    @dm4859 ปีที่แล้ว +54

    This could explain how a head trauma patient in a coma wakes up speaking a language they don't know, from a place they've never been. I have thought about it for years.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Really?

    • @neilECM
      @neilECM 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@Sun-God2yes bro, I believe him. There are documentaroes about these rare cases.

    • @psalmthyme8192
      @psalmthyme8192 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Seen on tv a Caucasian guy woke up from coma speaking Chinese and he’s never been to China or had any Chinese friends. Also another one, an English speaking female who had a stroke and started speaking Irish (Gaelic).

    • @briannakenan9561
      @briannakenan9561 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@psalmthyme8192I think you mean had an Irish accent. Many people have changed accents, not pick up the entire language.

    • @nataliegist2014
      @nataliegist2014 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Or were they in a different definition while they were in the coma?

  • @BrentNally
    @BrentNally 3 ปีที่แล้ว +117

    This is fascinating information that I’ve been thinking about for many years. Come to think of it, maybe I inherited these thoughts from my ancestors...

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Nice ;)

    • @JKDstocks
      @JKDstocks 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@KeepOnThinking in the old days we knew much more based on observation rather then the scientific fact we depend on today.... the words "the Apple dosent fall far from the tree" means much more then a surface scan... thousands of years bloodlines have been in power... those bloodlines who wish freedom for all and not elite rules have been ended or at least banished from any ruling powers.... my blood is the old "judges" I cry at today's world and how false and disturbing the rulings of law are today

    • @APsGTG
      @APsGTG 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Exactly

    • @APsGTG
      @APsGTG 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Honestly, you probably had very inquisitive ancestors, as did I, hence why we think this way.

    • @BrentNally
      @BrentNally 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@APsGTG lol, maybe so...

  • @p24hrsmith
    @p24hrsmith ปีที่แล้ว +26

    Tracing your family tree can be very eye-opening to Inherit Memories From Our Ancestors. The one that often crops up is finding somewhere you feel really at home at to then find in researching your family tree some 300 years ago your ancestors come from there.

    • @christorres348
      @christorres348 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      This happened to me there is a river about 50 miles from my home where I constsntly go to meditate/escape from the city. There are many other rivers where I live but this one always relaxes me. Found out today my great great great grandfather owned the land nearby and built a turbine for his coffee and sugar crops near that river. Oh, and I randomly was interested in sugar making during the pandemic. That led me to litetally google the phrase Genetic Memory and here I am.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But how can i do this

  • @gumbo2180
    @gumbo2180 2 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    While I find the idea passing down of memories fascinating and even probable, I’m not sold on this being the main reason for increase in mental illness mainly because living with a lot of trauma has been the norm for most people though out history. People don’t realize how poor/dangerous/difficult most of the world was 100/200 yrs ago. Also, farming by hand was incredibly hard work but people from agriculture societies had less mental illness and schizophrenia was almost non existent. So I believe what happens in this lifetime has far greater influence and what happened to our ancestors or in our past lives influence who we are and our fear/ anxiety/abilities, it is definitely more subtle for most people.

    • @JudyLBeres
      @JudyLBeres 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      People didn’t talk about mental illness 100/200 years ago, unless the person with the illness was so debilitated it was not easily covered up. Also, having to dig in the dirt all day to get enough food to eat leaves little time to focus on mental wellness. Anxious, depressed, etc. if you didn’t work hard you didn’t survive so Tammy mentally I’ll people probably died very young.

    • @Number6_
      @Number6_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Nonexistent, I think, not. Just unrecorded and under reported !

    • @martinsandoval9380
      @martinsandoval9380 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All i can say is people back then also had less coping mechanisms and few ways to gain access to vices. Remember it took our ancestors thousands of years of fight, survival, gathering, scavenging of resources, selecting the best mate(s) sometimes by force. All that to get you and me here today.

    • @neilECM
      @neilECM 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Actually the world was much better in the past. This thing we learn are fake narratives taught by the fake Democracies.
      During the Roman Empire they paid only 1% in taxes.
      Before the French revolution people paid only 3% in taxes.
      Today we pay 50% in taxes, all of us are mere enslaves working 24/7 in order to survive.
      They would work 3 months/ year in their harvest and the rest only wait or maybe practice another job to increase their income. A father working alone could provide for his entire family, in the end of the harvest the Monarch would come and get 3% from their production.
      Today you earn 1000 USD and give to the government 1000 USD in taxes, then you buy something they cut 10%, you poop they send you a bill to pay to the local system. 😂

    • @brigittebeltran6701
      @brigittebeltran6701 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I agree. 💯

  • @theobserver9131
    @theobserver9131 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    When I was very little, I remembered people that I knew. My mother told me it was just my imagination, so I forgot about them. I just remember remembering.

  • @mohammadosman1544
    @mohammadosman1544 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    That would explain some people claiming reincarnation but actually they are experiencing the inherited memories.

  • @Taldaran
    @Taldaran 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Watching a duckling freshly hatched from the egg and being able to swim is amazing to watch, but memory storage is by association and linking of different areas of the brain devoted to long-term memory storage.

  • @DoloresJNurss
    @DoloresJNurss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This might explain the Native American predisposition to obesity and diabetes, since so many were forced to starve on reservations before their first crops could be harvested, denied the tools for hunting or the space to gather.

    • @howtubeable
      @howtubeable 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The video says the trauma only gets passed down to the next generation. No further. Native Americans were relocated in the 1800's.

    • @TheJosman
      @TheJosman 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think it has more to do with the fact that sugar wasn't part of the Native diet. Sugarcane is native to Asia, it is relatively new in the Americas. Native Americans haven't had much time to adapt to high sugar consumption compared to other ethnicities.
      However, keep in mind that no people on human history has ever consumed as much sugar as we do nowadays. That's why diabetes is becoming more common regardless of ethnicity, but yeah, Natives and Pacific Islanders are more prone to it.

    • @DoloresJNurss
      @DoloresJNurss 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheJosman Agreed, that this is also a factor. Also, we adapted to a more fiber-rich diet than we now consume.

  • @maud3444
    @maud3444 2 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    That's basicly what instincts are... inherit memories..passed on to the offsping. Great video

  • @allenhonaker4107
    @allenhonaker4107 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This could also the basis for what we call intuition

  • @christinebeames2311
    @christinebeames2311 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Animals 8nherit knowledge of nesting what to eat , and birds instinctively know where to fly home despite never having undergone the journey , so we should not be too suprised

  • @SolvingAging
    @SolvingAging 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I'm going to need some time to process and understand this video. Maybe my future child will understand this video better without me telling him/her about this video!

  • @cyan1616
    @cyan1616 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My father's family, who I take after, have lived in Chicago and the immediate area for about 175 years.
    While bicycling around the city I was irresistibly drawn to a few places that I would have to stop at every time. One was an old church, not very different from other old churches, but every time I stopped I had to touch it or take pictures. Also there was this empty lot near an interesting old building. I had to stop and linger.
    Years later while researching my family tree I found out that it was the site of a since demolished church. My family helped fund the founding of both churches and got married there. These were direct lines from my father's side.
    I also have always had an irrational fear of fire! In further family research in the same line I found out my g-g-grandmother lived through the Chicago fire... while she was 8 1/2 months pregnant! This is the same woman whose family founded one of the churches.
    This has happened to me so much I have started researching the places I am drawn to while doing family research and have never been let down yet. But this seems to happen only with my father's side.
    I do believe there's definitely something to genetic memory.

    • @lorenavaldez869
      @lorenavaldez869 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is really interesting, I bet it's been fun to connect and learn from your family history.

  • @Jayapullani
    @Jayapullani 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    It is only recently I thought we might carry ancestral memories, but years ago I dreamed repeatedly about certain events which felt more as if they were memories of past lives and not dreams. Much later in my life when I did ancestral research, speaking of centuries past I was shocked to find professions cited, similar or the same as my own interests, even if none of my immediate family had none of those specific interests . Also the ancestral searches came up with with source of family roots which I had never known about but related to the dreams I had experienced. Having mentioned lightly about inherited memory some weeks ago was in return laughed at ......... but I feel it makes sense to believe that this in fact might be or account for reincarnation of sorts.

    • @slowfudgeballs9517
      @slowfudgeballs9517 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Listen to Allen Watts then it all makes sense. We're all the same being in the end. Nobody has an individual soul because there is only 1 soul, a single animating force for ALL things alive. Your body limits you and brings out an "individual" from infinity. Christianity tried to say this but screwed it up as humans do.
      Nobody knows where memories are stored. We could be antenna/wet robots like most say but they forget what animates us.

  • @transnaturalperspectivespo6133
    @transnaturalperspectivespo6133 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Really fascinating and fills some gaps in theory I've been working on over here in the world of Outdoor Education and Eco-Social Science research.

  • @MB-tb6jy
    @MB-tb6jy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I accidentally came across this video, whilst looking for answers regarding something else. I got to say, that this was incredibly interesting and quite thought-provoking to say the least. I intend to check out more of your vidos, hopefully and perhaps subscribe. Thank you, for your efforts

  • @infiniteadam7352
    @infiniteadam7352 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I find that I am natural at so much its as if I already knew how, for example I can build anything, I also was a amazing saxophonist after just a few weeks of having one. I do have a high i.q. but I feel like I am being reminded more than learning new things for the first time.

    • @Elsa-yo8pi
      @Elsa-yo8pi 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think I know what you mean. I have sometimes solved a (technical) problem just ‘knowing’ what the solution was. It is clear as day at that moment, even though I know I have never learned this.

    • @DeanSmith-ch1ep
      @DeanSmith-ch1ep ปีที่แล้ว

      Even though I started a carpentry career later in life I picked it up so quick I'm not sure how. My second name means son of a Smith/gaban in Irish which means a skilled man free to work. Both my brothers are also skilled tradesmen.

  • @hermitaku
    @hermitaku ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I once had a dream when I was 19 where I was in a farm but I remember talking to a beautiful woman in a shack outside the barn she had brown hair and dark brown eyes it was during the 17th century it felt vivid and real but I didn’t feel like me if that makes sense.

  • @latinlovur4731
    @latinlovur4731 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    so cool! It's hard to process how cool this is!

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Work hard to do so, and perhaps your children will have increased processing power ;)

  • @ZFlyingVLover
    @ZFlyingVLover 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Ancestral memories do not contribute to mental illness. They're supposed to hone the efficacy of our instincts to deal with life

    • @mm-wm3jd
      @mm-wm3jd 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Exactly!
      It is just that, They like to force everything to mean mental illness.

    • @thatlookscool2
      @thatlookscool2 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Totally disagree.

    • @two2truths
      @two2truths ปีที่แล้ว

      An assertion that just totally flies against actually understanding and studies of mental illness in today's society lol.

    • @dm4859
      @dm4859 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Do not make definitive statements that you cannot prove. Even these theories are presented as questions.

  • @lilykarinda991
    @lilykarinda991 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When watching the 2009 Chinese Mulan, I felt a pang during a scene of where the protagonist lived: a small village in an arid area of China. I couldn't understand it. It was a mixture of happiness to see the place but also of longing and sadness. Fast forward several years later, my mom told me that her side of the family might have come from generations of Chinese descent who married locals. Some people would derogatorily call her family Chinese, whenever they had issues with them. My mom also said that when she was a kid, having never seen them, she had dreams of the images of Buddha and Kwan Im statues separately. She only knew who they were when she became an adult and saw their depictions and names on tv.

  • @victorknezevich7281
    @victorknezevich7281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I think there is some truth in this idea,coming from a rural ,warrior, farming background of ancestry,I am the first of our generation to be brought up in the city and I have never been able to adapt to capitalist,city,consumer life ,my instinct seems to be hunting, gathering , growing ,and fighting my enemys,of course all these instincts are unable to be fully expressed and I think only my intellect has saved me from total madness,its like locking up a wild animal in a cage,cruel to the extreeme,yet govornments,society's do it all the time,and call it civilisation,the truth is capitalist greed has created industrial,business profit making societys,that benefit the few to the detriment of many free spirited feral instinct,human beings,who just want to live close to nature,and defend,with violence if necessary, their freedom to do so.

    • @humansampler8445
      @humansampler8445 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What do you do for a living

    • @victorknezevich7281
      @victorknezevich7281 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@humansampler8445 I live for a living as best I can,and try to be a good righteous person,hence I am a financially poor man, with no social ,economic power or position in society,but I have my integrity and try to walk with the angels,not the devil's.

  • @williebechmeister3190
    @williebechmeister3190 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Most wild animals express an innate fear of humans, even the very young. This explains why.

  • @sparks6189
    @sparks6189 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Imagine finishing a thought your great grandpa had

  • @jamesconsiglio3726
    @jamesconsiglio3726 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Yes I am 66 years of age and have had many experiences of past life memories...I always thought it was part of reincarnation of which I have believed in all my adult life ...my experiences started at a very young age around four or five years of age and still continue...and if the scientists can't figure it out let's see if they can find me I figured it out long ago .

  • @brucelee5576
    @brucelee5576 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It’s all making sense now , my dad fought in Vietnam that’s why spooked when things pop out of bushes.

  • @blu12gaming44
    @blu12gaming44 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's pretty obvious that memories are in some manner inherited, otherwise there would be no such thing as 'instinct'. It's nothing magical or taboo just because we haven't figured out how it works.

  • @heyythere_nadine
    @heyythere_nadine 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Very informative and interesting video, but a word of advice: I understand and appreciate that the narrative is straight forward and matter-of-fact, as this is how any educational video should be, but be careful how you word things in regards to mental illness to avoid hurting your viewers. Even if it’s factual, to hear within the first 45 seconds of your video that people with mental illness are a burden to society and their loved ones is off-putting, to say the very least, and has the potential to be very damaging to someone in a low place.

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Thanks for the comment Nadine. We chose the words carefully to signify that diseases can be a burden - not the afflicted people - but we can continue to work on improving our wording of sensitive topics like this.

    • @anastasiamurawski6179
      @anastasiamurawski6179 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I had the very same thought.

  • @TheTorontonian416
    @TheTorontonian416 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Ancestral memories are passed down through physical attributes or within the DNA first then encoded after in the brain. For example, let's say your great-great-grandfather developed a skill in archery and was a good archer, the physical attributes will be encoded first within the DNA of the body and then will be encoded in the brain. Now, when his great-great-grandson inherits these physical attributes even if no prior memory about archery, his great-great-grandson will still have the same ancestral memory through muscle memory. The brain will coincide with the physical attributes of the body. Let's say the great-great-grandfather has a predisposition of developing a big forearm. Once the great-great-grandson inherits such physical attributes, he too will be predisposed to such skill in sports that requires targeting. It doesn't have to be archery, it could be darts, hockey, football, basketball, etc. Muscle memory kicks in after developing the DNA memory first.

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Indeed it will be very interesting to see just what is the level of information and "memory" that can be passed down in this way.

    • @hmt-0764
      @hmt-0764 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I like the way you speak

    • @heybeautiful8565
      @heybeautiful8565 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Kinda logical tho
      My father is a good architect that attribute has been passed down to me and my sister

    • @johncooper4724
      @johncooper4724 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well said couldn’t have said it better myself

    • @kkwun4969
      @kkwun4969 ปีที่แล้ว

      My great grandfather never ever missed a coin on the ground, he would always pick it up and give it to my greatgrandma. one time i did the same by spotting a coin on the sidewalk and great grandma told me the story.

  • @cherilynnfisher5658
    @cherilynnfisher5658 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    ststw thank you for this incredible video!!! It explains MUCH! This is Gold for my research! THANK YOU!

  • @ivan.tucakov
    @ivan.tucakov 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Let's not get carried away here, the memory hypothesis is still a hypothesis, the conclusion of the video was still the epigenetic functioning that's been known about for decades. The acetone study was cool, but again, we're talking episodic memory here.

  • @angelacoleman6580
    @angelacoleman6580 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I asked my ancestors to help me... Then all Hell broke loose.

  • @nadvga6650
    @nadvga6650 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    our brains are wirelessly connected to the external world like a wifi system. our genetic makeup aids with the constant communication. therefore there is no storage in our brains but get everything like cloud computing does.

  • @ssake1_IAL_Research
    @ssake1_IAL_Research 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    "For memories to be passed down, they first need to be stored as physical structures in the brain. " This is a mistake, based on the uncritically examined assumption that the brain creates consciousness. Memories are stored in the mind, and accessed through the brain as its instrument. The mind takes on a body at birth and dissociates with it at physical death.

    • @terrybaikie2181
      @terrybaikie2181 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      So are u suggesting memories can be stored and inherited in the mind?

  • @robertamurphy1124
    @robertamurphy1124 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    A friend training under Andrew Well performed a past life regression on me. I was a beautiful Asian woman living in a royal palace being taught by nuns. I ended up being killed for my beliefs. Of course I didn't believe it..I'm of Irish French descent..or so I thought. Turns out my DNA test showed I was Han Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese amongst other mitochondrial DNA!! My memory was of a Grandmother between 200BC and 200AD!!

    • @heinmolenaar6750
      @heinmolenaar6750 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It was your own memories of a past life as an asian woman. And it's most likely that you had in that past life an asian grandmother.

    • @yamchathewolf7714
      @yamchathewolf7714 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@heinmolenaar6750 No, she is tapping into her ancestral memories.

  • @hyperkeimeno
    @hyperkeimeno 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Wow! Just wow!

  • @huberthill9327
    @huberthill9327 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What about when the one they inherited from could not even been related to them in any way.Different country, short time between, accurate records of the ones who passed, tee how their relatives jobs, how they died, and on and on. I don't see how that could be.

  • @TrishTruitt
    @TrishTruitt หลายเดือนก่อน

    While the concept of inherited memories may have some validity, I think we can also look at our food supply (pesticides, hyper processing, etc.) as a larger source of cognitive and mental health impacts.

  • @thumperthumper5322
    @thumperthumper5322 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Very cool video. Thanks for the amazing information.

  • @unchargedpickles6372
    @unchargedpickles6372 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I say yes because as a baby I was already terrified of spiders before I could understand danger. How my mom got me to stop breastfeeding...put a rubber spider in her bra, tried 1x once she did, spider fell out on me, I backflipped off her lap and never tried to breastfeed again. (She'd almost miscarried my sister because I was under 1 and still breastfeeding and MD told her my sister could be delivered too early to survive if she didn't stop me immediately so harsh but desperate times needing desperate measures. )

  • @bardmadsen6956
    @bardmadsen6956 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I wrote a book about The Younger Dryas Impacts Theory, the bombardment of our planet just under thirteen thousand years ago, and how it is encoded into universal comparative mythology. When I introduce people to the subject they glaze over and desperately try to change the subject as if a gut feeling overcomes them to not venture into the subject. I'm convinced that the genetic memory of the global event prevents them, via fear and trauma, to acknowledge it and hide in denial and incredulousness.

    • @dragonfox2.058
      @dragonfox2.058 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      yes that is fascinating and, I suspect, the origin of many myths including Revelation in the bible. I know what you mean people don't' knwo any history at all anymore nor do they seem to want to know anything much it's tragic. I couldn't possibly live that way without passionate curiosity

    • @bardmadsen6956
      @bardmadsen6956 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dragonfox2.058 It is really strange, like living in a Twilight Zone episode. Even top Archeologists, Astrophysicists, and Mythologists down to dragon and Halloween genres. It has been seven years and I finally donated it to my central county library as a local author and they gave it back and won't tell me the reason. I've met lots that are just waiting for the next better life, but almost all of them? The whole situation has pushed me into researching denial and other psychological issues, which I'm not so inclined to do, plus the books that I have read don't seem to actually get into it. Or they are so brainwashed by mandatory Carl Jung Philosophy that myths are just made up for the collective mental need instead of a dire warning from space. Freaky stuff in my opinion.

    • @dragonfox2.058
      @dragonfox2.058 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@bardmadsen6956 why they love religion. It's anti anxiety..easy BS. Have you watched Anthony Zamora's channel? he's really into the bombardment proof. the jury's still out on it but he's got some good info

    • @bardmadsen6956
      @bardmadsen6956 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@dragonfox2.058 Antonio Zamora has got it nailed down, yes I watched them all from the get go, he is a prime example of what I'm talking about, look at his subscribers and video views. And Geologists act exactly as if their genetic gut tells them, denial, oh those Carolina Bays and Nebraska Rain Basins are just beavers and their tails or the prevailing winds are making those. The cover of my book is a LIDAR image of the Carolina Bays, email the title at gmail and I'll send you a copy if your in the contiguous states or follow the avatar. Many of those in this genre have a copy, yet they don't say anything as the subject matter is so controversial that it is shunned, even in the group, I don't blame them, except those who have banned me. Check out Prehistory Question Time LIVE! | THURS 17TH MARCH 2022, 20:00 GMT at 37:25 > denying the existence of a ~10'X1' road sign carved in stone at Gobekli Tepe! One would think, that millions would be interested in that practically the whole East coast of the states is covered in craters. Even the space agency advocates such events happened only to the dinosaurs, or on the outside of 100,000 years, and totally deny 13,000 years ago when we almost got wiped out and recorded around the world that is was down to the last man and woman. Don't list to that man he is a pseudoscientist! People don't want to admit that they live in a dream, the next one is promised to be a better, Armageddon is just one more in a cycle as the oldest 'saying' is the Destroyer, Creator, Preserver. We are within the genial climate phase.

    • @dragonfox2.058
      @dragonfox2.058 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@bardmadsen6956 hey thanks dude

  • @brigittebeltran6701
    @brigittebeltran6701 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    All my life I was obsessed with certain people...One was my obsession with Anne Boleyn and Elizabeth I. Although I am an American I was always reading about the Tudors...Now, with Ancestory I have discovered Anne Boleyn's father and my 9x great-grandmother were siblings. Even more bazaar, I have always been strongly attracted to everything Middle Eastern..Odd for an Anglo. But Ancestory has revealed I am descended from an Ottoman Sultan Mehmed...who had an illegitimate child with a European noblewoman. I now understand why I crave Middle Eastern music and Turkish/Persian culture. 🎶 🎵 🤔

  • @DenajM25
    @DenajM25 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ok so yes, it can happen. But not any kind of momory only important (stored) ones, for ex.: memories of trauma, from big life long experiences.

  • @relaxitsnotthatserious7090
    @relaxitsnotthatserious7090 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Yes that’s why I don’t believe in past lives. I believe that memories of a past life are simply memories passed down from the experiences of our ancestors

  • @javascriptkiddie2718
    @javascriptkiddie2718 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is why *we* inherently fear the dark and being alone because that's where our prehistoric ancestors were most likely to be vulnerable to apex predators. When all the predators were hunted or captured the fear was still hard coded and passed down, so we created a new imaginary fear of paranormal predators - why horror movies are so popular.

  • @DinoMan_6
    @DinoMan_6 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Yes. You can also unlock more within lucid dreaming.

  • @jackalbright4599
    @jackalbright4599 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A study should be conducted where "participants in times of conflict" have children before and after the "event". Then compare.

  • @titussteenhuisen8864
    @titussteenhuisen8864 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What about the idea from Stuart Harmhof and Roger Penrose that microtubules have a memory function?
    There is DNA, epigenetic, and microtubules. three forms of memory!

  • @BenThomasAshman97
    @BenThomasAshman97 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I'm always having dreams like I'm from the past, but weird because its like my town where I grew up but 20-40 years prior with old cars and trees and buildings that aren't there anymore, if that makes sense

  • @NevinLeary
    @NevinLeary ปีที่แล้ว

    Great theories that could certainly shed light on the specific genetic mechanisms that trigger a predisposition toward mental health disorders, especially where environmental factors are not at play.
    (Ex: child of alcoholic parents is adopted at birth, raised in a healthy, nurturing environment, yet still develops alcoholism in adolescence or later in life) BUT the film could really do without the
    GIANT AND MASSIVELY DISTRACTING CLOSED CAPTIONING THAT BLOCKS HALF THE VIDEO FRAME...
    [Capitalization used for affect here]

  • @theamer-rican6865
    @theamer-rican6865 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow this is absolutely astounding! I believe THIS is the key to it all….. once they make the connection to the ancestral memories then it all unravels all of our cells knowledge will be abundantly available to us all. The problem is that so will all the trauma, and a good thing would be all the loving memories and happy ones. But we may finally unlock our minds. I just got finished watching Lucy and it’s becoming more apparent to me how important this is this just may be the key to unlocking it all. Imagine where we can go what we can do the scary part is what would happen if we all became almost like a deity, and that goes to show, may be the one, you know God. Was probably the first to be able to use all of their mind. What if he put those roadblocks in the way maybe because of the loss of memory after so many generations, we just forgot all the stories your hear of gods, and goddesses. What if they’re just real people that had access to certain parts of their minds that means maybe we could do the same but we just forgot ha if we could unlock those memories, we could bring it all back and we destroy each other again? What Atlantis fall back into the ocean. It makes me wonder if that was possible why did it end so abruptly, and therefore surroundings have so much to do with it if

  • @alphamom8218
    @alphamom8218 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This is real. I bought my house based on mainly a strong sense of being home. I grew up on the west coast and now live on East coast. I had no relatives here or any known family history of this area. I started looking into my genealogy and discovered my 5x great grandma’s family farm is less than one mile from my home. I also have other relatives buried 3 miles away. There is no other way to explain it than my soul knew it was home.

    • @juno_the8774
      @juno_the8774 ปีที่แล้ว

      Not soul, but influences coded in genetics.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@juno_the8774Could you explain this for me?

    • @juno_the8774
      @juno_the8774 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Sun-God2 you know how most animals such as cats for example, know what to do mere hours after being born? They know how to make sound, walk, etc. They know how to be a cat. The same way humans know how to blink or speak. It’s things we are coded and innately able to do.
      This applies with memory as well, for example how someone can have a very similar personality to say, their father, or grandmother, despite being raised differently and in different circumstances.

  • @rasmokey4
    @rasmokey4 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nails scraping across a blackboard being irritating comes to mind, so Yes!

  • @heinmolenaar6750
    @heinmolenaar6750 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Memories are the result of experiences. Whithout experiences there are no memories. If i remember a past life. And someone says, no those memories are not yours, but the memories of an ancestor. Then i must have lived his life experiences. So, i lived another's life. Which is impossible. And complete insane.

  • @Paul-ou1rx
    @Paul-ou1rx 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I still remember being terrorized by that saber tooth tiger. That must be why I'm allergic to cats.

  • @micheldisclafani2343
    @micheldisclafani2343 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    More than the law of gravity the strength of memory allows the universe to function. Reincarnation is the shadow of memories !

  • @SirusStarTV
    @SirusStarTV 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I wonder where my social anxiety came from, hmm 🤔

  • @richard-li1ll
    @richard-li1ll 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    finally, a video acknowledging lamarck better explained evolution than darwin

  • @Lichenlikenedlich
    @Lichenlikenedlich 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    People's innate fear of spiders and snakes, sure. But I think the widespread mental illness comes from the fact that 190,000 years of human history was nothing like how we live today.

  • @topcatcoast2coast579
    @topcatcoast2coast579 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I believe that it is.

  • @mace3632
    @mace3632 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I disagree with the assessment. Mental disorder comes when the consciousness / ego is in contradiction to the genetic memory. Genetic memory is not the same as epigenetics. Genetic memory is not the same as inheriting specific memories from a specific ancestor.

  • @Maddie9185
    @Maddie9185 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have always believe this. Good to know that I wasn’t the only one

  • @kigman1980
    @kigman1980 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video gave me a thought if the rapid technology we’ve seen in the past 25 years was a massive culture shock to our systems then perhaps the next generation upcoming will be full of adaptation and common sense?

  • @mikerowland1701
    @mikerowland1701 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great info!👍🏻

  • @exploringdimensions4all853
    @exploringdimensions4all853 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I just learned that several of my ancestors were executed under King Henry the VIII. He managed to do away with around 70,000 people in his time on the throne. I don't normally think of English people as an oppressed group, but I guess 70,000 of them were.

  • @dragonfox2.058
    @dragonfox2.058 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    makes more sense than past lives

  • @mikefinn
    @mikefinn 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The underlying mechanism may be the same as what Dr. Stuart Hameroff and Sir Roger Penrose theorize is the basis of consciousness, quantum states and entanglement within the neurons microtubules created by the same molecules mentioned here.

  • @SanjanaRanasingha
    @SanjanaRanasingha 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Is there anyway to send you guys some footage?

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Send it to us as a message on our Facebook page

  • @poopypooppoop1042
    @poopypooppoop1042 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So If we eventually clone humans you can tell the difference if they have genetic memories or not???

    • @sumitthakur1625
      @sumitthakur1625 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      unfortunately doing such experiments on humans and making human clones and stuffs like that is totally illegal in the entire world ....and thats why we a still not able to get very far in human exploration despite having so much advancement in technology ........ :[

  • @patriciahurst3180
    @patriciahurst3180 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Until we take responsibility for our thoughts - we will take on the role of one parents nd marry the other.

  • @CLM2204
    @CLM2204 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    YES
    The Kudalini is the Hotline too our Computer Storage.
    You can see why GoD had to reset our Brains, because the DeviL who Has LiveD - is our Teachers...
    But Once WE Learn What Karma & The Golden Rules Means.- WE Ascend as in Graduation too A Higher level of Freedom, Love & Family
    A University Represents Reverse Engineering That Destroys Brains While Learning about Your Astrology Charts & Transits as a Personal University - is the Key to Graduation as WE become aware of Ascending into Higher Dimensions - with our Past Knowledge.
    There are 144,000 Portals to other Worlds
    As Numerology is the Language of the Universe.
    The Number 21 Represents the Real Universe - While the Number 12 Represents the Reversal of Truth under the English Language for Deceivers
    The Number 12 Represents the Hanged Man Upside Down
    12 Represents the End of Time (The Clock, Map & Training)
    The 12th House of Pisces are two folds
    1. The Successful ending of opening up Manifesting into the Kundalini of Storage of Data (The End of the Circle)
    Or
    2. The Self- Undoings by Not Using both sides of a Brain & being LED by Demons Who Lie
    Life is a Choice & WE All have a Challenge being ME
    Wo & men are just Vehicles, To Learn the Circle ⭕️ That Never Ends.
    Warning, Treat Others the Way You Wish To Be Treated in The Future 🤗

  • @catherinelopez7992
    @catherinelopez7992 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I knew it. This is why mom and I have same dream.

    • @KeepOnThinking
      @KeepOnThinking  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      It is definitely a very interesting topic, and might tie into some psychoanalytical concepts such as Carl Jung's universal unconscious.

  • @totalt6600
    @totalt6600 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Epigenetics. Word of the day.

  • @bipedalbob
    @bipedalbob 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A very interesting line of though. I am quite intrigued with inherited memory.
    Particularly fascinating are Monarch butterflies.
    It can take up to 4 generations to complete one migration. Each generation is born knowing essentially where to go and how to get there.
    So there is no doubt inherited memory is a real phenomena.
    This could explain why certain traits run in familys, such as
    Artistic ability and mechanical aptitude.
    I'm supprised that there isn't more studies looking into this.

    • @cconder19
      @cconder19 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think you can guess why if you tried. Not being a smart @, just being blunt about it.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cconder19 I'd be interested in how you think it happens, I don't think your a smart ass but I don't think you know either, especially since no one does.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This Could explain why i'm so Skinny, like my Father and my Grandfather

  • @eeyoresbutt3747
    @eeyoresbutt3747 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    There is a ‘brain’ in every cell. Every cell has memory.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah. We are Billions of creatures united in one Being

  • @anthonysaffioti9048
    @anthonysaffioti9048 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    So how about behaviour such as nest building and how can such behaviours be passed from parents with different behaviours such that the offsprings behaviour reflects a mixture of both parents.
    Best building for example.
    Surely that constitutes memory of some kind? Regardless of how the memory is coded or stored or transmitted
    It’s all fascinating
    As is the fact that sometimes people can know ,as in feel so strongly about a knowledge, of something that they have never encountered. Yet they seem to know it? Or transferred memory with transplant recipients?
    Hmmm

  • @UFOs_UAPs
    @UFOs_UAPs 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m living proof that genetic memory is real. We are not crazy because we inherited our ancestors genes. Our ancestors are immortalized through us. I accessed my genetic memory at age 7 by praying to know my guardian angel. I asked my mother who is King Pepin the First of Aquitaine? Because he came to me in a dream and introduced himself as such and told me he is my guardian Angel. Turns out he’s also my 37th great grandfather.

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What

  • @ronniechong314
    @ronniechong314 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Apparently some but not all, my father loves to cook but I didn't inherited it, instead I had interests in martial arts maybe from my grandfather, but it seems my daughter inherited the same interests from me.

  • @sonsofthesilentage994
    @sonsofthesilentage994 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Yes!

  • @mankyfranky4348
    @mankyfranky4348 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I can now guess why I remember and know stuffs that I never know🤣🤣

  • @emiliaanton6897
    @emiliaanton6897 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Impossible. We inherit mustard seeds for our imagination. If the circumstances remain the same (and evolution is not that fast) imagination and interpretation can be confused with actual memory. Same as many say you can implant memories into people's minds but, that's not it. You implant patterns of thinking, belief and conviction especially if at the same time you use substances that lead to consciousness blackouts that pass as bouts of amnesia. Totally different from memory. It's in fact confabulation. A misplaced confidence in our story.

  • @winewoman224
    @winewoman224 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I am descended from a signer of the Constitution and we share the same birthday. I have a deep attraction to the constitution and his life, law comes easily to me. I have memories of things that happened to my mother before I was born. I carry her addiction and emotional fears of abandonment.

  • @Leo-nine
    @Leo-nine 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1 in 5 with MI
    Interesting
    Wonder if that has anything to do with 1 in 3 girls and 1 in 10 boys suffering childhood SA….

  • @anadventfollower1181
    @anadventfollower1181 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I believe it to be true. I have encountered way too many monkeys, especially the "special", kind that inhabit our apartment building.

  • @petermsiegel573
    @petermsiegel573 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    So sea slugs and mice get reincarnated across the generations. Does that go across species? That explains my neighbor…

  • @jeanneratterman
    @jeanneratterman 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    If genes mutate to adapt and survive, the reason for the need to adapt is part of how the mutation happens at all, right? It sloughs off the unnecessary and begins a transformation. Traces of the previous incarnation may be as residue, and linger for a generation or 2 or 3? Like a muscle memory, more primal than mind memory. Maybe even captured like a still photo within a gene? There is so much we do not know about ourselves. What sounds impossible today, tomorrow may well be the answer we sought. Impossible is like the word should, limited and suspect.

  • @richardhall5489
    @richardhall5489 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    If you are looking for causes of mental illness in Canada and USA you probably don't need a theory that involves inherited memories.
    I suspect the root of the problem is that modern consumer capilalism is optimised for financial gain / growth at the expense of mental health and well being.
    Consumerism sells you things based on psychological tricks that tell you you are not enough. Politics are mostly based on fear and division not community and consensus.
    Maybe there are good reasons for Americans and Canadians to have fear based cultures. Perhaps it's the result of unresolved intergenerational trauma. This could be trauma of ancestors being displaced from their homes in Europe or taken as slaves from Africa, the knowledge of the violence that was done to the native / Aboriginal population and the exploitation of the land and natural resources.

    • @HumanBeing1974
      @HumanBeing1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Exactly

    • @howtubeable
      @howtubeable 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      On the other hand, the increase of mental illness in Canada and the US could be societal. Since the 1960's, society has been increasingly destabilized by the breakdown of the nuclear family and constant social unrest.

  • @Beanmachine91
    @Beanmachine91 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    why do i feel like a desert nomad?

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Maybe you live in the desert and travel allot.

    • @Beanmachine91
      @Beanmachine91 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@hydrolito i live in kern county california which is deserts and mountains here in the san joaquin valley

  • @someonesomeone9765
    @someonesomeone9765 ปีที่แล้ว

    Genetic memories don't work, genetic preferences patterns work. Eventually microversians can use quantumtracing for memory transfers.

  • @Stinger-rq4gy
    @Stinger-rq4gy ปีที่แล้ว

    Use gamma waves to ionize neurons at micron cubic scales in the gene therapy approach mouse brain at Stanford University to erase specific memories.
    With the gene therapy approach scientist's can see the mouses neurons firing in real time and deduce what part of the arena the mouse is in.
    So memory erasure is possible, if neuroscientists are too lazy to do this experiment then it cannot be done

  • @mamayussuf5885
    @mamayussuf5885 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Science can't even save itself leave alone the world

  • @bettyboop3206
    @bettyboop3206 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    In other wealthy countries they have health care figured out so those people don't lose their homes to medical debt.... They have decent child care. They have maternal and paternal leave. Plus 4 weeks of paid vacation per year. No wonder Americans are more anxious!

  • @saswatisaha5801
    @saswatisaha5801 ปีที่แล้ว

    Accha , can anyone enlighten me about one thing ..that we are basically carrying the ancient ancestral memories.. but what about our own past lives ? It's not genetically connected ..may be subconsciously ..So many questions are confusing my brain.. could anyone explain..

    • @Boris29311
      @Boris29311 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Genetic ancestral memories are stored in the subconscious mind , not in the "self".

    • @Sun-God2
      @Sun-God2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Boris29311i still don't get it, like, this Genetic Memory is in my Subconcious mind, but how can i acess it?

    • @Boris29311
      @Boris29311 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The subconscious stands above the 'self' (you).95% of your decisions(thoughts )are coming from your subconscious.Look at it this way you don't own yourself but you are yourself. Some people have this as part of their worldview, if you don't have this it's kind of hard to understand You don't have access to the genetic memory.
      I have no idea about past lives (not your ancestors) I don't know how this works or if it's true It doesn't make any sense to me.

  • @nataliegist2014
    @nataliegist2014 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If this is true my son has know hope.

  • @bipedalbob
    @bipedalbob 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    1 in 5, I doubt that there is even 1 in 5 that doesn't.

  • @regorflora7915
    @regorflora7915 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Can conscious memories be passed down? No.
    Can physical traits be passed down? Yes.
    Let us not confuse what memory is