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The actual research is wild. Every time you push down a feeling, your brain has to choose between suppressing that emotion and recording what’s happening around you. It picks the suppression. The memory doesn’t get saved.
A 2000 Stanford study confirmed this: people told to hide their emotions while watching a film remembered far fewer details than people who just reacted naturally. Suppressing emotions uses up mental energy, and that leaves less brain power for saving new memories.
Brain scans show why. A 2012 study found that suppression quiets the hippocampus (your brain’s memory-recording center) right when it should be saving information. The two brain regions that normally team up to lock in memories stop talking to each other.
Over time it gets worse. Suppression keeps cortisol (the stress hormone) elevated, and cortisol shrinks the hippocampus. Chronically stressed people can lose 10 to 15% of its volume. Just three weeks of high cortisol can shrink the tiny connection points between brain cells by about 20%. The good news: studies show this shrinkage can partially reverse once stress levels drop. Not necessarily permanent.
A Finnish study of 1,137 older adults tracked over roughly a decade found that habitual emotion suppressors had nearly 5x the risk of developing dementia, even after controlling for genetics, smoking, obesity, and education.
There’s a better way to handle emotions that doesn’t cost you your memory. It’s called cognitive reappraisal: instead of bottling the feeling, you reframe what’s causing it. (“This meeting isn’t a threat, it’s practice.”) A 2003 Stanford/UC Berkeley study found reappraisers had more positive emotion, better relationships, and higher wellbeing. Suppressors got the opposite on every measure. And reappraisal carries zero memory cost.
The difference comes down to timing. Suppression kicks in after the emotion has already fired, so your brain is fighting its own response while simultaneously trying to record the moment. Reappraisal changes how you interpret the situation before the emotion fully activates. Same event, same person, but your hippocampus stays free to do its actual job: recording your life.
syl ♡ 𐔌՞. .՞𐦯@sylviapuffs
SUPRESSING YOUR EMOTIONS CAUSES MEMORY LOSS WTF???
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why tf Taeyong felt like 5 years and jaehyun like 2 months
ADORE.@ADORE0214
Jaehyun has completed 90% of his military service! 🥹
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menurut gw titik tertinggi bucin itu ketika lo bisa compromising things. ketika dua orang tetap milih untuk saling ngerti, bahkan di hal-hal kecil, dan agree untuk adjusting biar bisa ketemu di tengah. thats love + maturity, and honestly i'm a sucker for that!!!
アルダちゃん@aldapstsr
menurut gw titik tertinggi bucin itu ketika lo udah bisa sharing makanan kesukaan lo ke dia dan bertukar cerita satu sama lain, mendukung impiannya dan kegemarannya as long as he's happy, dengerin dia yapping sambil liatin wajahnya, mengingat hal2 kecil tentang dia
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