Oh sure. And since we change our entire body molecular structure every 5 years it's pretty insane to assume the person you have now is the same one as 10 years ago. Things change.
I don't believe that.
Scars, tattoos survive for decades, right?
cells are dying and being replaced all the time
https://www.livescience.com/33179-does-human-body-replace-cells-seven-years.htmlNote: the cells in the brain don't get replaced when they die.
Untrue:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/NeuroplasticityAttention! In my country (central europe) there was a higher radioactive exposure after the radioactive rain on the saturday.
Apparently Russia had the accident again. Amount of radioactivity in my country was doubled but it's still not very high. But if you want to prevent or lower the risk, here are some foods that protects you from the radioactivity.
[...]
What is your country and where can you see the data? As far as I understood the "explosion" was limited in time, and currently there isn't any burning core continuously releasing radiation like in Chernobyl or Fukushima. And the winds seems to have blown most of the radiations into the inner Russia, so I supposed no measure is necessary at all for most of eu (like governments stated), but I can't see live data about radioactive isotopes anywhere....