See title. For those who don’t know, the Mandela Effect is a phenomenon where a large group of people remember something differently than how it occurred. It’s named after Nelson Mandela because a significant number of people remembered him dying in prison in the 1980s, even though he actually passed away in 2013.

I’m curious to hear about your personal experiences with this phenomenon. Have you ever remembered an event, fact, or detail that turned out to be different from reality? What was it and how did you react when you found out your memory didn’t align with the facts? Does it happen often?

  • calm.like.a.bomb
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    5311 months ago

    Who the fuck remembers Mandela dying in prison??? The man was resilience itself!

    • Shalakushka
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      3711 months ago

      Like 12 idiots on the Internet who then decided to never shut the fuck up about it.

      • @JCPhoenix@beehaw.org
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        411 months ago

        Yeah, I never understood that either. He was the president of South Africa from 1994-1999. Yes, he kept a lower profile in the 2000s, but I remember even as a kid/teen seeing articles and photos of him in the news. Bizarre.

        Now the Berenstain Bears one, I understand. At the same time, I just chalk that up to spelling. For what reason would I need to know how to spell “Berenstain?”

        • @frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.ml
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          211 months ago

          Now the Berenstain Bears one, I understand. At the same time, I just chalk that up to spelling. For what reason would I need to know how to spell “Berenstain?”

          I had one like this where I was shocked to learn there was never a band called Chumbawumba; they are called Chumbawamba and have been all along.

          • @JCPhoenix@beehaw.org
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            11 months ago

            Next you’re gonna tell me their hit album was called “Tabthamping” instead of “Tubthumping!” Where does it end?!

            Honestly though, I thought the same!

    • essell
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      811 months ago

      Enough people that there’s this effect named after this happening

  • @paddirn@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    The Berenstein Bears one and the Fruit of the Loom not having a horn are the ones that have me questioning reality and my childhood.

    • Jaytreeman
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      611 months ago

      I vaguely remember noticing the fruit of the loom logo change which makes it weirder for me

      • @patman9@lemmy.world
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        511 months ago

        Same here. It had the cornucopia. Then it didn’t. “weird” I thought. Then 5 to 10 years later I was reading the hunger games and needed to look up what a cornucopia actually was. “a horn usually containing fruit - oh - like the fruit of the loom logo” Then 2 years ago learning it never existed at all, and we all hallucinated it, there have even been paradies of it. It’s fucking weird.

      • Dadd Volante
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        111 months ago

        Yeah, that’s definitely the one that I have going on for me. Life is weird.

        • silly goose meekah
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          11 months ago

          Edit: The proof I mentioned is just 2 images of shirts with the cornucopia in the logo. I’m not so sure anymore about what I said previously.

          Its proven that there was a cone in the logo, the company is just acring like that for marketing reasons

            • silly goose meekah
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              211 months ago

              here’s an old article mentioning the cornucopia: https://imgur.com/a/Au42qr8

              but reading some more about it, it seems like my previous comment is actually false. There are also 2 images of shirts with the cornucopia, which convinced me eaelier, but that’s only 2 images against a mountain of evidence.

                • silly goose meekah
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                  211 months ago

                  yeah my dad always used to buy the fruit of the loom sweatpants for us, and I’m pretty sure I saw that cornucopia. but it really seems we are mistaken. brains generally are a pretty shit source of information, after all.

    • @hactar42@lemmy.world
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      611 months ago

      There is a theory that the Fruit of the Loom one is actually a viral marketing thing. Like the company scrubbed it on purpose and is playing into it to build brand recognition.

  • @ExLisper@linux.community
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    11 months ago

    I’m never sure if Castro is dead or not. I was sure for very long time that he died already but it would turn out that he’s still there. I also don’t remember any events specifically related to his death. His brother (?) took over and he kind of fizzled out before he died. Or maybe he’s still there? I’m never quite sure. I mean, it’s 2024 now, he’s definitely dead. Or is he?

    • @Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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      110 months ago

      He is since 2016, at least that’s what they want us to think.

      There were probably a few things that contributed to the confusion. Hugo Chavez was very friendly with Castro and he died of cancer, before Fidel. Fidel was also super old, and his brother Raul took a more prominent role a few years before his death, so there was less visibility.

  • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    1811 months ago

    I remember there was an AskLemmy question on the Mandela effect, but a week later we all realized it was just a dream.

  • @TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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    1511 months ago

    Somehow I had always thought it was Klu Klux Klan instead of Ku Klux Klan. I’m not sure where I got that or if anyone else thought the same thing though.

      • @pmk@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        The romans pronounced it “uike uersa” or “wike wersa” (two syllables for each word). The letter “c” was always a k-sound, and “v” was like our “u”, it was the same letter for a long time. So another example, if you want to say “Veni vidi vici” the historically accurate way would be “Weni widi wiki”.

          • @pmk@lemmy.sdf.org
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            110 months ago

            It’s been thoroughly researched by linguists. The main source is the pronounciation guides written by the romans themselves. They describe how to trill the R’s and how to say diphtongs etc, and compare latin pronounciation with the letters of other languages, mainly greek.

    • @moody
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      711 months ago

      I believe it’s actually Clu Clu Land

  • Annoyed_🦀
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    1311 months ago

    When i got into monster hunter 4 ultimate(the one with a good story) i was told that Deviljho, a voracious monster that will eat anything mid combat to recover its stamina, will eat its own tail if you cut it. Everyone believed it, no one tried to capture it on camera because of the hardware limitation(no “clip that”, no shadowplay).

    Turn out, millions of Monster Hunter fans remembered wrong because it’s a hoax.

  • NotNotMike
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    1211 months ago

    That gen 1 of Pokemon didn’t have compound types (i.e. Pokemon with two types). In reality they did

    • @RampageDon@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Ghost types are only weak to psychic in that game because they are poison types too. Ruined me for generations swearing psychic was super to ghost.

    • @MimicJar@lemmy.world
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      411 months ago

      I’ve never heard that before and find it baffling.

      Bulbasaur comes out of the gate with two types.

      Charmander becomes Charizard with two types.

      The first (or second) non-starter you encounter is Pidgy with two types.

      The required Viridian Forest had Weedle with two types and if you only got a Caterpie, that becomes Butterfree who also has two types.

      The number of two type Pokemon that you can catch at the start of the game is massive. Probably about half?

    • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      411 months ago

      I argued with my partner so hard about this.

      Then we looked it up.

      I was soooo wrong. And I was the one who got Blue and Red when they came out.

  • @xia@links.hackliberty.org
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    911 months ago

    I get the “feeling” of a mandela effect far more frequently than i can solidly know for sure. I guess my first experience was decades ago as a child. I recall staring at a Bernstein bears book, and being oddly transfixed by tye fact that the spelling of the title did not match that of the authors name, literally inches apart on the same page. Later i experienced a schrodenbug or two (which i think is the same phenomenon), and one really solid social ME were a church ceased to exist (or got merged into a neighboring church). After the first few, now I fully admit I am WAY too quick to believe odd circumstance is a ME, and usually find myself reluctantly disproving that to myself with notebook/journal entries… only to later wonder how they might change too.

  • livus
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    811 months ago

    None but I live in New Zealand and have met a lot of strange people online who think our geographic location has changed.

      • @BertramDitore@lemmy.world
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        211 months ago

        Heh yup! That’s part of the effect, a whole generation potentially conflated Shaq’s movie with a movie that was never made. Scroll down the link I posted, they mention it. So bizarre.

      • @BertramDitore@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        Lol I got into a pretty heated argument with a group of friends, half of whom definitely remembered the movie and even started recounting some of the plot. The other half had no idea what the hell we were talking about.

  • @Owljfien@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    511 months ago

    I could’ve sworn sprite didn’t have lime in it in Australia, yet I can find no evidence of it ever being made without lime

  • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    411 months ago

    I just found out that you can’t take someone’s lead in order to behave like they are behaving, you can only follow their lead.

    I thought that taking someone’s lead, “I’m taking their lead”, is an actual expression, while apparently it is not.

    • @twice_twotimes@sh.itjust.works
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      611 months ago

      It may not be the original idiom, but it’s definitely something people say. If the core expressions are “(I) take the lead” and “(you) follow my lead,” that lends itself easily to a merge: you take my lead. It’s not as common as the originals but it’s definitely out there. It will stick around because it’s really easy to unambiguously infer what it means in context.

      • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        211 months ago

        I agree that it’s used, I’m sure that if we looked in movie scripts or novels, we would find examples of that phrase, but I can’t find a single dictionary that agrees that the phrase is a legitimate phrase, and that’s what really boggled my mind.

        Boggled and boondoggled over here.

    • Mechanismatic
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      311 months ago

      Taking someone’s lead sounds like a British saying indicating the opposite of following someone’s lead. It sounds like you’re taking someone’s leash in your hands and directing them where to go.

        • @indun@feddit.uk
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          11 months ago

          “Take the lead” is certainly an expression used in the UK to denote guiding people, as in “I’ll take the lead”. I assume both come from ballroom dancing.

          I’m sure it’s used elsewhere but it may also simply be a conflation of the two.

          • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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            111 months ago

            Yeah, taking the lead I think is a pretty common expression, meaning that you’ll take the initiative, but I’ve used " taking their lead" to mean that another person has taken the lead and someone else is following them.

            Which is apparently not real at all, but I only became aware of this because another Lemmy put up a TIL post that explained how they thought that was an expression and discovered after using it their entire life that it was not in any dictionary.

            Just like me

  • I could’ve sworn Jim Beam whiskey was Jim Bean. A friend of mine had a poster of a whiskey bottle on his wall that I stared at every time I was there. He was a minor at the time and didn’t drink, so I always wondered why he had it up. Years later I saw a Jim Beam bottle and had a Mandela moment. The Berenstein Bears and Mandela dying in jail were things I believed, too, but I think the whiskey one is one I haven’t heard from anybody else, yet.

    • @vladmech@lemmy.world
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      211 months ago

      I had to go look it up to double check you weren’t trying to pull a fast one; I was 100% sure it was Bean.