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Taylor Swift fans say they're suffering from 'post-concert amnesia' after getting too excited during the singer's Eras Tour

Taylor Swift is shown onstage during her Eras tours, in the background can be seen the thousands of stadium fans.
Taylor Swift performs onstage during The Eras Tour at MetLife Stadium on May 27, 2023 in East Rutherford, New Jersey.Kevin Mazur/TAS23/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management
  • Taylor Swift fans are reporting "post-concert amnesia" on social media.

  • "I know I was there, but it feels like it was a dream," on Swiftie wrote.

  • Too much excitement may be tricking the brain into thinking it's in trouble, an expert said.

"Hold on to the memories, they will hold on to you," sings Taylor Swift.

But for some Swifties, it's has become difficult to hold on to memories of her Eras Tour. Fans are coming forward to admit that are suffering from"post-concert amnesia."

It was like "an out-of-body experience, as though it didn't really happen to me," Gettysburg fan Nicole Booz, told Time.

"Yet I know it did because my bank account took a $950 hit to cover the ticket," she said.

Others have been taking to Reddit to share their guilt at not being able to recollect crucial moments of Swift's concert, with some saying they felt almost as if they were dissociating from the experience.

"I went to the Arlington show a few weeks back and I honestly cannot remember most of the concert," wrote one Swiftie on Reddit.  "I know I was there, but it feels like it was a dream," added another.

Swift is two months into her blockbuster 52-stop Eras Tour. The singer covers 44 songs from all 10 of her studio albums during a three-hour showcase.

"Post-concert amnesia is real," New Yorker Jenna Tocatlian told Time.

Tocatlian told Time she even forgot one of Swift's "surprise songs" that she had most hoped would come up.

"If I didn't have the 5-minute video that my friend kindly took of me jamming to it, I probably would have told everyone that it didn't happen," Tocatlian said.

Too much excitement may be the culprit

Swift is shown posing for a selfie with fans at a 2019 event.
Taylor Swift is seen with fans during The World Premiere of Cats, presented by Universal Pictures on December 16, 2019 in New York City.Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Universal Pictures

This isn't a Swift-specific event. Social media is littered with accounts of fans being unable to recall specific details of important concerts.

Ewan McNay, an associate professor of psychology at the State University of New York told Time that this state can happen anytime you're faced with a situation highly-charged with emotions.

People often forget their first dance at a wedding, for instance, she said.

This could be the body misinterpreting the signs of excitement. Jumping up and down, screaming, crying can be confused for a fight-or-flight situation.

"You're saying, 'Hey, we're really stressed out: we're running away from the bear, or we're watching Taylor Swift'," McNay said.

Another explanation is that fans are flooding their brains with too many chemicals. Neurons then start firing indiscriminately. making it "really hard" to create new memories, McNay said.

For those who want to be emotionally present for more of the concert, there are strategies to improve memories of the event.

Fans can set out to try to calm themselves during the event, practice conscious meditation to focus on being present, and try to limit their emotional reactions like shouting or jumping up and down, McNay said.

However, whether or not fans can remember the specific details of the concert is slightly missing the point, Robert Kraft, a professor of cognitive psychology at Otterbein University in Westerville, wrote in a post in Psychology Today.

"The broadest reason we forget is that we focus on experiencing the world, not remembering it," he wrote.

For him, outside of specific events that depend on recollecting specific details like exams, brains mostly aren't wired to record memories like a camera.

"For a major musical event, we spend a lot of money on tickets, and have a high level of anticipation," he wrote.

"But if we place too much emphasis on memory, our expectations for remembering will be too high–and we'll be disappointed," he wrote.

Read the original article on Insider