Ever catch yourself lying in bed at 3 AM, suddenly remembering something you said at a party five years ago, and physically cringing so hard you have to bury your face in your pillow?
You’re not alone. We all have those moments that ambush us out of nowhere – the awkward joke that fell flat, the overly confident presentation that wasn’t quite ready, the time we tried too hard to impress someone and it showed.
But here’s what most people don’t realize: that cringe you’re feeling? It’s actually a sign of something remarkable happening in your brain. It means you’ve grown enough to recognize the gap between who you were and who you’ve become. And that recognition, as uncomfortable as it feels, is a form of emotional intelligence that many people never develop.
The science behind why we cringe at ourselves
According to Ekua Hagan, “Involuntary memories tend to be more negative than voluntary memories.” This isn’t your brain trying to torture you – it’s actually doing exactly what it evolved to do.
Think about it from an evolutionary perspective. Remembering our social missteps helped our ancestors avoid repeating behaviors that might get them excluded from the tribe. In modern terms, your brain is trying to protect you from future embarrassment by making sure you really, really remember what went wrong last time.
But there’s something deeper happening here. When you cringe at a past version of yourself, you’re demonstrating a sophisticated level of self-reflection that goes beyond simple memory recall. You’re not just remembering what happened – you’re evaluating it through the lens of who you are now.
I’ve experienced this myself countless times. There was a period when I’d wrapped too much of my identity in my work and opinions. Looking back at old emails where I argued points with absolute certainty makes me wince now. Not because I was necessarily wrong, but because I can see how closed off I was to other perspectives. That cringe? It’s proof that I’ve learned to value uncertainty over the comfort of being “right.”
Why emotional intelligence makes the cringe worse (and better)
Here’s the paradox: the more emotionally intelligent you become, the more you’ll cringe at your past self. But also, the better equipped you’ll be to handle that discomfort.
Ege Tekgün, who holds a PhD in Experimental Psychology, explains that “Self-awareness in emotional intelligence is essentially the art of understanding your own emotions and how they influence your interactions within the world.”
When you develop this kind of awareness, you start seeing layers in your past behavior that you couldn’t perceive before. You notice not just what you did, but why you did it – the insecurities you were covering up, the validation you were seeking, the fears you were running from.
I remember realizing, with uncomfortable clarity, all the times I’d been condescending without knowing it, especially toward people without my education. The cringe was intense because I could finally see what I’d been blind to before. But that ability to see it? That’s growth.
Your memories aren’t what you think they are
Dr. Rebecca Todd, a Cognitive Neuroscientist, reveals something fascinating: “We don’t remember the past objectively. We reconstruct it through present-day emotions and beliefs.”
This means when you cringe at a memory, you’re not actually experiencing the exact same event. You’re experiencing a reconstruction filtered through everything you’ve learned since then. The teenager who made that awkward comment didn’t have your current understanding of social dynamics. The twenty-something who was overly aggressive in meetings didn’t yet understand the value of listening.
Your cringe is proof that you’re literally not the same person anymore.
The hidden advantages of remembering every awkward moment
If you’re someone who remembers embarrassing moments with crystal clarity, you might actually have some cognitive advantages that nobody talks about. Research suggests that vivid recollection of embarrassing moments suggests advanced emotional processing and social learning abilities.
This makes sense when you think about it. The ability to recall and analyze these moments means your brain is actively engaged in pattern recognition and social learning. You’re not just moving through life on autopilot – you’re constantly processing, evaluating, and adjusting your behavior based on accumulated experience.
Learning to live with your cringe memories
So what do you do with all these cringe-inducing memories that won’t leave you alone?
Clinical psychologist Mary C. Lamia, Ph.D., offers this insight: “We cannot erase emotional memories, although we can be aware of what activates them and the interpretations we make.”
This is crucial. You can’t delete these memories, and honestly, you shouldn’t want to. They’re valuable data points in your personal evolution. Instead, the goal is to change your relationship with them.
When a cringe memory surfaces, try this: instead of immediately pushing it away or spiraling into shame, pause and ask yourself what that memory is teaching you about your growth. What values have you developed since then? What skills have you gained? What wisdom have you earned?
I’ve learned to see my past certainties – those moments when I dismissed views I found too simple – as markers of growth. Yes, it’s uncomfortable to remember how sure I was about everything. But recognizing that discomfort means I’ve developed something more valuable than certainty: intellectual humility.
Why growth feels like shame
Here’s what nobody tells you about personal development: growth often feels terrible in the moment. It feels like shame, regret, embarrassment. But these uncomfortable emotions are actually signals that something profound is happening.
Studies show that self-reflection enhances emotional stability and self-awareness, leading to personal and professional growth. The discomfort you feel when examining your past self isn’t a bug – it’s a feature. It’s your brain’s way of consolidating lessons and ensuring you don’t repeat patterns that no longer serve you.
Think about it this way: if you looked back at yourself from five years ago and felt nothing but satisfaction, what would that mean? It would mean you haven’t grown at all. The cringe is evidence of distance traveled.
The truth about those who never cringe
What about people who never seem to cringe at their past selves? Who look back with nothing but fondness or indifference?
There are a few possibilities here. Some people genuinely might have less to cringe about – maybe they developed emotional intelligence earlier or had better guidance. But more often, the absence of cringe indicates a lack of self-reflection or growth.
Research indicates that cringing at past selves indicates personal growth and maturity, as it reflects increased self-awareness and emotional evolution. Without that cringe, there’s no recognition of growth, no acknowledgment of change.
The bottom line
Those 3 AM cringe attacks? They’re not your brain punishing you. They’re proof that you’ve developed a level of self-awareness and emotional intelligence that allows you to see yourself clearly – past and present.
Every cringe is a small celebration of growth, even when it feels like shame. It means you’ve developed new perspectives, deeper empathy, better judgment. You’ve become someone capable of recognizing the distance between who you were and who you are.
The next time a memory makes you want to disappear into your pillow, remember this: that cringe is your growth making itself known. It’s uncomfortable, yes, but it’s also evidence that you’re doing something right. You’re evolving, learning, becoming.
And that journey of becoming? That’s what makes us human.
As always, I hope you found value in these thoughts. Embrace the cringe – it means you’re alive and growing.

















