'Your autobiographical memory is what allows you to form a unique individuality. The four keys to autobiographical memory are: where something happened, when it happened, what happened, and how it felt. In the video clip above, Nehls reviews how the autobiographical memory works.
Of these four memory factors, the emotional association (how you felt) is paramount. If something is exciting or frightening, the memory of where, when and what are cemented into memory, and can easily be dredged back up simply by being reminded of the same feeling.'
Speaking (how you felt) regarding the religion can get one pulled back into 'judicial room' real fast. So one learns to suppress such thoughts as well as 'curiosity'.
'Fear is a proven means of making sure someone will remember something. The hippocampus stores the emotional responses to the time and place (when and where) that the emotionally charged event took place in the dentate gyrus, an area inside the hippocampi, while the details of the event and how you felt (what and how) are stored in the cornu ammonis, another area inside the hippocampi.
Add anxiety and fear into the mix, and you have a perfect recipe for indoctrination as the old memories are not only being overwritten, but the anxiety-filled new narrative is also being efficiently stored in your long-term memory. As noted in Nehls’ book:5'
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2024/06/01/the-indoctrinated-brain.aspx?ui=14a60bbba42a7018b13d4214155675279a8124c039ca81c433d947c5c02272c4&sd=20230322&cid_source=dnl&cid_medium=email&cid_content=art1HL&cid=20240601&foDate=false&mid=DM1581063&rid=36540879
High pitch anxiety and fear were the normal at the Kingdom Hall pre 1975. There was always one theme, 'It's bad out there, and it's getting worse.' One Sunday I thought I was crazy when an Elder's son remarked to another brother, 'If you look around, you can see that things are just falling apart now.' Said to my self, 'Man I must be crazy, as I don't see anything falling apart.'