The brain creates memories, but stores these memories in the DNA. Memory then exists at a cellular level.
The sperm and egg you are born from have the memories of your parents stored in your DNA; along with all the other coding. However, the memories get scrambled, and codified in such a way that they end up becoming instincts- response to stimulus/ your personality. BUT, the actually memories are still in the "junk" DNA; and ,every now and then, something can stimulate a response to them- and people actually tap into a really memory from their ancestors.
Now, throw in psychedelic drugs, which might cause epigenetic changes, tapping into these memories. For example, the whole DMT entities and hallucinations are actually memories of the sperm and egg?
Or even remember being born? That always sounded like an alien abduction to me, especially being born in a hospital. Taken up to the bright lights, experimented on by guys in green robes and safety glasses?
Does not have to be drugs either. Trauma, stress, environmental factors.
Does this sound reasonable? Epigenetic changes could stimulate access to "hidden" memories stored in our "junk" DNA?
Am I too high?
The sperm and egg you are born from have the memories of your parents stored in your DNA; along with all the other coding. However, the memories get scrambled, and codified in such a way that they end up becoming instincts- response to stimulus/ your personality. BUT, the actually memories are still in the "junk" DNA; and ,every now and then, something can stimulate a response to them- and people actually tap into a really memory from their ancestors.
Now, throw in psychedelic drugs, which might cause epigenetic changes, tapping into these memories. For example, the whole DMT entities and hallucinations are actually memories of the sperm and egg?
Or even remember being born? That always sounded like an alien abduction to me, especially being born in a hospital. Taken up to the bright lights, experimented on by guys in green robes and safety glasses?
Does not have to be drugs either. Trauma, stress, environmental factors.
Does this sound reasonable? Epigenetic changes could stimulate access to "hidden" memories stored in our "junk" DNA?
Am I too high?