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Is 'baby brain' real? A neuroscientist explains
Key takeaways
- The fog new parents feel seems to be driven less by motherhood rewiring the brain than exhaustion and the relentless demands of caring for a tiny human.
- If you've recently had a baby, you might blame all this on "baby brain" — that foggy, forgetful feeling so many new mothers describe.
- And if so, how's all this related to how new mothers think?
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
The fog new parents feel seems to be driven less by motherhood rewiring the brain than exhaustion and the relentless demands of caring for a tiny human. (Unsplash: Paul Hanaoka)
Link copied Share Share article You walk into the kitchen and forget why you're there. You put the milk in the pantry and the keys in the fridge. You lose your train of thought halfway through a sentence.
If you've recently had a baby, you might blame all this on "baby brain" — that foggy, forgetful feeling so many new mothers describe.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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