In the year 2000, a woman in California wrote a letter to a memory researcher
at UC Irvine. She told him she remembered every single day of her life — not
as summaries or impressions, but as lived experience she could not turn off.
If you named any date after 1980, she could tell you what day it was, what
she ate, what the weather was, and exactly how she felt.
She was not describing a gift. She was describing a condition her doctors
would eventually classify as Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory — one
of fewer than one hundred confirmed cases in the world.
Her name was Jill Price. And what her life reveals about memory, identity,
and the surprising value of forgetting will change how you think about your
own mind.
One true story. One strange thing. One lesson that still matters.
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