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Now 48, Man Becomes 140th 'Stolen Grandchild' Tracked In Argentina

Now 48, Man Becomes 140th 'Stolen Grandchild' Tracked In Argentina

Nearly five decades after he was born in a dictatorship-era detention center and snatched from his mother, a Buenos Aires man has become the 140th person identified as one of Argentina's hundreds of "stolen grandchildren."
DNA tests confirmed the birth identity of the 48-year-old introduced by the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo activist group Monday simply as "Grandchild No. 140."
The group has worked for decades to trace the whereabouts of young activist women who were arrested and "disappeared" by Argentina's 1976-1983 military dictatorship, and the now-adult babies they bore in captivity.
Nearly 500 infants are believed to have been taken, many given to childless people close to a dictatorship keen to have them raised as regime loyalists.
The identity of "Grandchild No. 140" was not revealed at a press conference held by the Grandmothers to announce the happy breakthrough.
But among those present was his older sister, Adriana Metz Romero, who works with the Grandmothers and tearfully told reporters she could not wait to meet her sibling in person.
"Now I know where my brother is!" she said, sitting with a black-and-white photo of their parents: Graciela Alicia Romero and Raul Eugenio Metz, left-wing activists snatched by authorities in December 1976.
Romero was 24 years old, mother to a one-year-old daughter, and five months pregnant at the time, according to the Grandmothers.
She gave birth to a son on April 17, 1977 while held at a clandestine detention center known as "La Escuelita" in the port city of Bahia Blanca.
She was tortured there, according to witness testimony. Neither Romero nor Metz was heard from again.
The Grandmothers said Romero's long-lost son was finally found thanks to an anonymous tip.
"We decided to call him to find out if he would agree to a DNA test. He agreed, and it was confirmed that he is my brother," said Metz Romero, who has had initial contact with him via video call.
She was herself raised by her grandparents.
Founded in 1977, the Grandmothers group takes its name from the Plaza de Mayo square in Buenos Aires where women defied the dictatorship to hold protests demanding information on the whereabouts of their loved ones.
Rights groups say about 30,000 people died or disappeared under the brutal rule, though Argentina's current libertarian President Javier Milei has claimed the number was lower.
The Grandmothers have accused Milei of defunding their research in his quest to slash public spending.
In June, the group went to court to demand protections for the National Genetic Data Bank -- which helped in this case but has been left largely "paralyzed" by budget cuts, according to the Grandmothers.
Leader Estela de Carlotto, herself reunited with a lost grandson decades after her pregnant daughter disappeared, made another appeal for support Monday.
"Thanks to perseverance and constant work... they (stolen grandchildren) will continue to appear, but the search cannot be done alone," she said at the "Space for Memory," a former torture center converted into a memorial site in the capital.
"It was the state itself, through state terrorism, that facilitated the abduction of these children, so it must now facilitate the search for them," said the 94-year-old.
"These 300 people who still need to be found are part of our society and must be able to exercise their right to identity," she added. Adriana Metz Romero is the sister or the recently-identified 'Grandchild No. 140', forcibly taken from his mother in 1977 AFP
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7 Subtle Signs You Might Be 'Oversharing,' a Psychologist Warns
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7 Subtle Signs You Might Be 'Oversharing,' a Psychologist Warns

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You feel the need to fill every silence "This often comes from a good place, like a desire to keep the energy up and be an engaging partner," Dr. Shields says. "However, if you always try to fill the silence during conversation, it could be a subtle sign you're an oversharer. You should think of a great chat like a relaxed game of tennis, with the conversational ball passed gently back and forth."Instead of talking the moment nobody is saying anything, Dr. Shields suggests trying this trick."To get back into rhythm, try the 'Three-Beat Pause,'" she says. "To do that, after you finish a thought, simply take one quiet breath and mentally count to three before speaking again."She explains that this "creates the perfect opening" for that person to "return the ball," so to speak. "This simple pause can transform the dynamic from a frantic monologue into a comfortable dialogue, and you'll feel the relief of knowing you don't have to do all the work to keep the game going," she says. 2. You often regret what you said later If you are not sure if you're someone who tends to overshare, this subtle sign could be your red flag to help you know that."The sinking feeling you get when you realize you've accidentally left your emotional front door wide open all afternoon is a subtle sign you said too much," Dr. Shields tells Parade. "It's that moment of regret when you realize you shared a story that was still too raw or personal for the situation, leaving you feeling overexposed."The "Headline Test" is an easy way to stop this from happening, she says."Instead of sharing the whole saga at once, just offer the headline, such as, 'Wow, I had the most embarrassing thing happen to me today,' and then pause," she explains. "Their reaction, whether it's a curious 'Oh no, tell me more!' or a quick nod, is your signal for how much detail to share." This "test" can be a temperature check, to gauge where your audience is at so that you can tailor your story to their attention span or level of interest. It can swap "that feeling of regret for the confidence that comes from building connections thoughtfully, one headline at a time," she says. 3. People don't always reply to your texts after you share something If you've found yourself in this scenario more than once, it might not be because your friend is too busy to reply. It might be because you've shared too much, making them not know how to respond."When you're going through something, it's natural to reach for a trusted friend, and a text can feel like the quickest way to pour your heart out," Dr. Shields explains. "But sending a multi-paragraph text about a heavy topic is like emailing a friend a 50-page attachment when they were expecting a quick note."She shares that the silence after such a heavy message might not be indifference; they're just overwhelmed. 4. You post emotional content online without much filtering or context Revealing too much doesn't just happen in person. Dr. Shields says it can happen on social media and come off in the way you post. So, if this sounds like something you do, it may be a sign that lets you know you're an oversharer."The problem is, posting raw emotions to your social feed is like writing a deeply personal diary entry on a public billboard for all to see and is another sign of oversharing," she points out. "It may be a common impulse of yours, but it exposes your private feelings to a mixed audience of close friends, coworkers and old classmates." So how do you discern whether something is too much to share online? She tells Parade that you should "perform a quick audience check" before hitting "Post.""Ask yourself: 'Who is this thought truly for?' If the answer is one or two specific people, you've just identified that this isn't a public post, it's a private text waiting to be sent," she 7 Things You Should Never, Ever Post Online, According to Psychologists 5. You ask 'Is that too much?' but keep going According to Dr. Shields, if this is something you find yourself asking a lot, that's a subtle sign you should take note of. It probably means you're revealing too much about something."Consider this to be like a warning light flashing on the dashboard," she explains. "While asking, 'Am I sharing too much?' shows you're a considerate person trying to check in. The tricky part is when you ask it without pausing for a real answer, turning a good question into just a speed bump while you continue to tell your story, exposing that you're an oversharer."Basically, if you do ask this question, make sure to actually wait for and listen to the answer. 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Because you disclosed a lot of information, they're on "energy-saver mode," she explains. Don't worry, though. She tells Parade that even if you are an oversharer, you can turn things around. "Next time you notice this, 'pass the baton," she suggests. "Try to immediately shift the focus back to them with a simple question totally unrelated to your story, like, 'Anyway, enough about my drama! What's been the highlight of your week?' This quick pivot gives your friend's social battery a chance to recharge and shows you're a perceptive conversationalist, helping you build stronger connections by proving the chat is a shared space, not just a stage for one person's story."Related: 7. You have a history of relationships that burn out fast If your relationships with friends or romantic partners tend not to last long, it might be a sign you're excessively sharing. This is because, sometimes, opening up too much too quickly can make it hard for a bond to have time to grow naturally."When someone has a habit of sharing their biggest, heaviest 'logs,' or their deepest vulnerabilities with someone they just met—when a friendship or relationship is fresh—before there's a steady bed of coals built from shared time and trust, it can cause those connection to fizzle out quickly," Dr. Shields tells Parade."To counter this, focus first on the small stuff," she suggests. "Shared jokes, common interests and simply spending time together before oversharing vulnerable things you're dealing with."Up Next:Source: Dr. Jenny Shields, a licensed clinical psychologist and National Certified Healthcare Ethics Consultant. 7 Subtle Signs You Might Be 'Oversharing,' a Psychologist Warns first appeared on Parade on Aug 12, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 12, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

AI start-up Perplexity makes $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
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AI start-up Perplexity makes $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome

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