The Brain cloning !
“The Neuroscience of Everyday Drama — Why We All Train Each Other’s Brains.”

One chilly January morning in New Jersey, I walked into the kitchen, a milk carton and a cereal box sitting proudly on the kitchen island — like two culprits caught red-handed. My insomniac husband had clearly forgotten to put the milk back in the fridge.
Now, logic should’ve told me, “Relax, it’s peak winter — the milk won’t spoil.”
But no. My inner courtroom lawyer had already started the morning trial.
I began my passionate argument: “How many times have I told you to put it back in the fridge?!”
My poor husband, sleep-deprived and confused, immediately started apologizing for a crime he hadn’t committed. Then I lifted the carton — and realized it was empty.
The real criminal was me.
I froze for a second… then, instead of confessing, I heroically shifted the blame again:
“You don’t even remember the milk was over, and you’re still getting scolded by me? What a pathetic human you are!”
To which my saint of a husband replied,
“Even when you know it’s your mistake, you’ll scold me anyway. My brain’s already tuned to it — you’ve trained me well.”
We both burst out laughing.
Now, five years ago, this exact scene might have led to an argument — or possibly a cold war. But today, it’s comedy. Because both of us have, quite literally, cloned our brains around each other’s patterns.
His cloned brain has learned to accept my early-morning tantrums as a natural phenomenon.
And my cloned brain? It knows that while I can lecture on feminism, freedom, and equality, I’ll conveniently deactivate those features in front of my in-laws.
That’s when it hit me — we all do this.
We don’t just communicate; we replicate. We mold, adapt, and subconsciously rewire our reactions to the people we love, hate, or negotiate with.
That’s when The Brain Cloning was born.
Cloning, in biology, means replicating a cell, tissue, or organism to produce an identical copy.
But let’s be honest — the only thing I’ve successfully cloned so far is my husband’s reaction to my yelling.
That’s when I realized — this book isn’t about cellular cloning. It’s about something far more advanced, far more dangerous, and far more common: the cloning of our brains through communication.
Every conversation we have — every argument, every emotional exchange, every “Fine, whatever” — secretly edits our mental DNA. We’re not just talking; we’re programming one another. Every word becomes a strand of cognitive code that slowly creates a duplicate version of our mind — a cloned brain that learns to respond the way others expect it to.
Over the years, I’ve played many roles — a biology student, a lawyer, a radio jockey, a corporate employee, a teacher, an entrepreneur, and finally, a proud homemaker. Yet the one tool that never left my hand (or mouth) was communication — my constant companion, my weapon, and sometimes my downfall.
It fascinated me how my brain began reacting differently to the same situations. I could face the same chaos, but with an entirely new emotional script. I saw the same shift in others too — friends, family, colleagues — all evolving, editing, upgrading their mental software without even realizing it.
That’s when my theory emerged: The Brain Cloning Process.
Each of us carries two brains — the original and the cloned one.
The original is raw, emotional, instinctive — the one we’re born with.
The cloned is conditioned — sculpted by years of conversations, feedback loops, social expectations, and a touch of drama.
But here’s the tricky part — most cloned brains are malfunctioning prototypes.
They react instead of respond, argue instead of understanding, and panic instead of process. And why? Because they’re built under social pressure — designed by the people we interact with, not by us.
Yet, there’s hope.
We may not be able to control who triggers our cloned brain, but we can train it — give it a proper neural architecture, emotional balance, and self-awareness. We can learn to communicate consciously, rather than accidentally.
This book explores that transformation.
It dissects the funniest, most awkward, and most eye-opening human interactions I’ve encountered — from childhood tantrums to boardroom politics to the fine art of marital negotiation — and connects them with real cognitive science: behavioral mirroring, neuroplasticity, and emotional imprinting.
You’ll laugh, you’ll reflect, and hopefully, you’ll start noticing how your own brain has been quietly replicating itself all along.
So grab a cup of coffee, call your inner scientist to the lab, and let’s begin your first brain cloning experiment.
Are you ready to meet your duplicate?
To be continued … with some funny incidents of miscommunication which i have encountered ! See you on next weekly cloning!
- Agila
About the Creator
Agila
passionate writer



Comments (1)
Haha love it