Why You Can't Remember Being a Baby

Think back to your very first memory. Chances are, it starts around age three or four. But what happened to the years before that? You learned to walk, you said your first words, you discovered the world, and yet, it’s a complete blank. Most people think babies just "can't" remember, but the truth is actually much weirder. Your baby brain was recording everything; it just chose to destroy the evidence. In this video, we explore the mystery of Infantile Amnesia. We look at the "ribbon" experiments that prove babies have great memories, the 2014 discovery that suggests growing new brain cells actually wipes old ones out, and why you can’t truly remember your life until you have a "self" to anchor those memories to. A few things we dive into: The Neurogenesis Paradox: Why the same process that builds your brain also acts as a "delete" button for your past. The Mirror Test: Why you needed to recognize yourself in a mirror before you could start a permanent diary in your head. Language as a Skeleton: How words give your memories a structure to hang onto (and why some cultures remember back further than others). The Philosophical Question: If your brain rewired itself and deleted your early experiences, is the baby in your old family photos actually "you"? It turns out that the "black hole" at the start of your life isn't a failure of your brain—it's proof of how hard it was working to turn you into the person you are today. If you found this interesting, I'd love to hear what your earliest memory is in the comments. Thanks for watching! ...................................................... Why a seahorse and not a hippo? "Hippocampus" is derived from the Ancient Greek word hippókampos, which translates directly to "horse" (híppos) and "sea monster/sea animal" ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ For business inquiries: [email protected] ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ #psychology #neuroscience #memory #infantileamnesia #brainscience #childhood #science #philosophy #humanbrain