{"id":129371,"date":"2023-02-26T08:07:25","date_gmt":"2023-02-26T02:37:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imageantra.com\/16-things-people-remember-but-never-happened\/"},"modified":"2023-02-26T08:07:25","modified_gmt":"2023-02-26T02:37:25","slug":"16-things-people-remember-but-never-happened","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imageantra.com\/16-things-people-remember-but-never-happened\/","title":{"rendered":"16 Things People Remember But Never Happened"},"content":{"rendered":"
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We know that stress, work or the life of responsible adults causes us to be a little scattered. That’s why sometimes we have memories of events that didn’t really happen. oh wow! As? Well, maybe it’s not because we’re distracted or inventive, it’s just that we’re being part of the \u201cMandela effect\u201d. Do you know him?<\/p>\n

This effect was coined for the first time on the Internet in 2009, by the blogger Fiona Broome, who attributed it to Nelson Mandela because when he died, in 2013, many people claimed to have the memory that he had already died in 1980 and some even described his funeral. This psychological effect occurs when a large group of people have a confusing memory, idea, or image that never existed. Here are some examples.<\/p>\n

1. It was actually Looney Tunes<\/h2>\n

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2. Kit Kat has never had a script<\/h2>\n

\"kit<\/p>\n

3. in Star Wars <\/em>the actual phrase is “No, I am your father” and not “Luke, I am your father”<\/h2>\n