View Full Version : memory
Niobe<agreenmother
Jun 11th, 2006, 11:38 PM
Has anyone noticed that over the past few, three years to be exact, that memorie of eveyone is becoming faint, this could be all the pill popping, but I was once healthy and now Ill, I went to several doctors, but they ran my blood and I matched gulf war veterans, odd becuase of my age group, I know none, but yet we have the same titers in our blood? Something is in the water I think, that caose fatigue. forgetfullness, & depresion, anyone else out there have these symptoms, feel that way, I am willing to bet we annonymusly send our blood out to a lab you would be surprised what we have in common, no I am not a quack, I studied Medicine prior to this :schizo:
me+three227
Jun 12th, 2006, 3:42 AM
I think it has a lot to do with the pill popping... I use to have the best memory you could imagine and it faded away as soon as I started takeing meds.... but I also think there could be more behind the loss of memory.....It 's like we are not suppose to remember certain things...Example of that it....I knew someone that was murdered and after a couple years after the crime I tried getting a new obituairy and info on her last address from the tax collector and some other info....well they never caught her boyfriend that killed her, and they had no information on her at all... Craziest thing I've ever tried to figure out... Why would they erase her name off everything...there was absolutely nothing on her or her killer.... I wondered if they had to remove the info for investigation purposes...but if they did that there should still be a obituairy on her.... So I do think we are only suppose to remember what they want or need us to....
uki
Jun 18th, 2006, 12:17 PM
pill popping, t.v., media, music, abductions, chemtrails...
Skynet12
Jun 18th, 2006, 12:19 PM
pill popping, t.v., media, music, abductions, chemtrails...
The list is endless!
DarkAce
Jun 18th, 2006, 2:02 PM
We remember what we want to remember. Stripped down to the basic answer, we're not computers, and only keep things in long term memory that is useful to us, or else we usually loose it after awhile.
A simple example is to think of subjects you learned of in school. Years after graduating do you retain the exact knowledge of all the subjects you took in say high school? Hell I can't even remember the formulas for many math equations.
Age and sleep are directly related to memory loss, as well as diet.
It's best to check the basics before making extraodinary claims.
The records on your friend, in many instances, records are only kept for a certain period of time before they're either archived away, (out of range/knowledge of whoever's currently employed there and is either too lazy or doesn't know how to retrieve the information) or thrown away/lost.
Information like that shouldn't of been erased, so it would of been up to you to further investigate for the information as it's most likely you dealt with someone who wasn't doing their job correctly.
Things aren't as organized as you might imagine, just look at the instances in the news lately with companies and banks loosing their employees information.
It's also easy for people to blame problems on everything but themselves. Try examining yourself first to seek the answer to the problem before blaming the media, and whatever else crap you can think of.
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