Your past self? It’s built from fuzzy memories and old photos—pieces your brain rewrites over time.
Your future self? Even blurrier, shaped by guesses and hopes. Still, you feel like the same person across time.
Why? Because your brain tells a story—a self-narrative that began in childhood, shaped by the tales you heard and told.
Memory isn’t a recording; it’s a reconstruction. We encode, store, and then rewrite it every time we recall. Emotional moments feel vivid, but they can be just as unreliable.
In the end, your identity is a story—and you’re its lifelong storyteller.
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Aloha with my heart! 🤍 I'm Gabriel, entrepreneur from Bangkok, Thailand. 📝 My stash isn't only a point of view. But what I've learn in everyday life. Kindly following me, if my stash ignites some value for you. 👍🏻 Let's greet and share!
"The Self Delusion" asks a mind-bending questions: What if you from yesterday, today, and tomorrow are actually three different people? It explains how our brains create the illusion of a single, continuous-self, and how we can rewrite that story to shape our future.
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