Shekhar Natarajan
๐ค SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So there's the hardware layer.
There's this trained sort of processing of the world.
And then there's the active memory of it.
So if I have to lose the top third or the top half or whatever that is, obviously that is a lot of who I am.
yeah but it's maybe not a hundred percent so what if there was trauma there's depression there's other things would you want to retain those memories well yeah the other question is can you choose which
do you want to heal better if you're like living up to two 50 and cause you have all the wisdom and forget the forget all the bag.
I'll give you this one.
So, uh, you know, at 40 I had a terrible bike accident.
So I had 26 broken bones, punctured lung concussion.
They took me to the hospital and still playing bad.
No, no.
So this was kind of this carpe diem reset for me.
But the point here of this story is that I don't remember any of it.
Like, rough.
But is trauma not like somewhat like burnt in your memory?
Well, so here's the question.
from that.
And, you know, that was a lot of friction.
But maybe that speaks to this innate intelligence of the body-mind of not retaining all of that.
You know, because you said something interesting before about some emotional trauma is actually like a stuck memory, you know, like this guy David Lenson calls it temporal dislocation.