

Your Brain Is Lying to You—And That's Actually Amazing
5 snips Jun 25, 2025
Priya Anand, a neurologist and author of 'The Mind Electric', discusses how our brains craft intricate stories to help us comprehend confusion and illness. She dives into the concept of confabulation and its ties to mental health, showcasing how narratives shape our understanding of neurological experiences. Anand also highlights the enriching cultural role of storytelling, especially in the contexts of amnesia and sleep paralysis, illuminating the intersection of folklore and medicine in our quest for meaning.
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Brain's Storytelling Nature
- Our brains are wired to create stories even when memory fails, as seen in the neurologic symptom called confabulation.
- Patients with amnesia often fill memory gaps with fabricated but vivid life stories, revealing storytelling as a survival mechanism of the mind.
Sleep Paralysis Folklore
- Sleep paralysis causes people to feel frozen and see dreamlike images while awake.
- Different cultures create myths to explain this common phenomenon, like the Japanese kanashibari or the Albanian Muthi.
Medicine as Storytelling
- Medical professionals tell patient stories that are subconsciously shaped by biases and cultural narratives.
- Medicine and folklore similarly attempt to explain mysterious diseases through subjective stories with limited tools.