Why is it so hard for us to remember what happened until we were four?

They say that our personalities were formed in our childhood, but how ironic it is that we hardly remember anything from childhood. This phenomenon happens to all people and even has an official-amnesium childhood term. As we grow older, we forget people, events, and even the places we have encountered as children. There is still much research [...]
They say that our personalities were formed in our childhood, but how ironic it is that we hardly remember anything from childhood. This phenomenon happens to all people and even has an official-amnesium childhood term. As we grow older, we forget people, events, and even the places we have encountered as children.
There is still much active research on this subject, but below, you can read some really important information about this phenomenon that you may often have recalled:
What is childhood, and when does it happen?
The childhood amnesia is the inability of adults to recall the details of events or even the full events that happened to them before they were four years old. Some scholars went further and discovered that children before the age of 7 are able to remember 60% or many of their past events. While children eight and nine years old may remember up to 40%. That means that as we go through different stages of our development, the less we remember what has gone through.
Our memories are closely related to our ability to speak
One of the theories, why don't we keep our childhood memories is that we couldn't communicate literally at the time. When we talk about a memory, we use words and we can describe it in a lot of detail. Most babies don't start talking before they're 2 years old, so they're just not able to create a timer memory.
Our parents change history version
Another study shows that our parents are able to change our childhood confession. Consider: When you do not remember something, you tend to ask your mother or father to help you remember. However, they may have different versions of history because they remember it that way. This is confusing to you even more.










