I could swear I'd just seen this video.
Memory is a recollection of things that we have experienced. I've experienced events that I have "precalled" before it actually occurred. I witnessed a traffic accident in actual time that I "witnessed" days earlier.
I beg to differ. Most of the psychology community agree, deja vu never truly happens... and people only feel like they've dreamt of a particular setting or experience. I know this to be wrong. I have had several instances of deja vu, with clear and sometimes precise memory of when I had the dream. I have also shared deja vu with a someone on more than on occasion. Growing up, I had several dreams of a car accident... in all but one of those dreams, I was killed in the accident. In the summer of 2000, I was in the wreck. Shortly after the wreck, the driver looked at me and said "It's you!". I looked at him with a knowing grin, and said "you too?". We both shared with each other our numerous dreams of the accident throughout the years, and the strangeness of our survival... including the female voice I credit with saving my life (there was no female in the car).
Once, I was in a conversation with three other people. As we were talking, I knew exactly what would happen be said immediately before it was said. I was so dumbfounded that I couldn’t react. This has never happened before or since. But it moved me profoundly.
There's a scene in my life, I feel like I've lived it at least 3 times already. Last time it happened, I knew I had already lived this deja vu at least once before. That was weird, the deja vu of a deja vu.
I get deja vu quite often. With many of the instances, I can generally remember events that happen immediately during or after the deja vu session. Many times, I figure I had the deja vu event in my dreams at some point, where I've had other seemingly premonition-based things occur, and then I'm remembering them later. I can suss out things people say next through this method, or sounds, events, things I see next after the deja vu starts, so there's something it. Sometimes, I figure it's faulty memory things, especially when I can figure out whats going to happen next. I'm not religious, nor am I a mega-believer in the paranormal, but when you have dreams like your mom dying of a brain aneurysm in fifth grade, but don't know what the word "aneurysm" is and have to ask the librarian the next day, then it's a little weird, to say the least. Especially, when it turns out your mom DOES have one (hers is "dormant" but there). Took me like eight years of pestering her after that dream for her to get checked, finally. There's so much we don't know about our brains and how we connect with the universe.
Two different types of deja vu: the neurological type (the one mentioned in this short) and the psychic type - the psychic type being different in the sense that the feeling you get is the same as the previous type, however the main difference is that you DO have a memory of what is about to happen (eventhough it hasn't happened yet), and you can accurately tell, in advance, what is about to occur and in what order. As in, you don't just feel this situation happened, but know what is about to happen before it does.
Nice idea but not what the experience is. Example:once in a small town in northern Greece I turned a corner into a small square of blooming yellow tulips. The flower beds were marked off with four inch in diameter pipes painted yellow that were bent into an arch at each end where the pipe was inserted into the ground. I had strong feeling of seeing that before though I never had and had no idea that small town existed . It’s such a small place that most Greeks in the south never heard of it. Yet there it was. I walked around the paths between the flower beds then went home as I lived there at the time but had never been to that part of town. I had a feeling that I had dreamed that place years before in Canada and of course as it was out of context in the dream I had no idea where it was. I had no idea of the significance of that experience except that yellow tulips are my favourite flower. A year earlier in Brisbane, Australia, I woukd go to the Greek part of town when I felt homesick and feel better though I couldn’t read anything on the shops as it was all in Greek. Of course now I can after going to Greece a year later for 8 years. That’s what ideja vu is really like.
The second theory is easily disproven. The earliest instance of deja vu I remember is when i was a kid and was on a big ship looking at an another ship in the distance. At the time i was sure that was a memory, cause I had no knowledge of deja vu. But a few years later when I was talking with my parents about that, they assured me that we hadn't been on a ship ever before that time, so there is no way I could have ever experienced anything similar to that moment, and therefore that can't be a discarded memory
It often enough seems to happen as if my active and retrieving memory are playing at the same time. It feels like every thing that's happening happening in exactly the same sequence at some point in the past, ends up feeling bizzare for a moment before I remember it's a defect. Other times I just had a very similar experience.
I've experienced deja vu most of my life, but I've also experienced precognitive deja vu. I've had the sensation of deja vu, known that it wasn't something I'd experienced before, but that it would happen later and then I've been able to tie the actual deja vu to the precognitive moment.
I've had a couple of times where I know where saw it before. Exactly the same thing. It was when I zoned out and experienced about 5 or 10 seconds of something. Then at some point later the exact same thing happens. The people, situation, words, tones of voice. Not sure what that is, but it definitely happens
Ive gotten really strong, very specific deja vu in a place i had never been to in my entire life, nor had i ever been to a similar place before. I think we will never fully understand it.
I'm not sure.. i had deja vu a few times when i was in my teens and twenties.. havent had any since. You would think if it's forgotten memories it would increase with age
Déjà Vu is a glitch in the Matrix. 😂😂😂 Yes, I’m a movie buff. 😉
I used to get deja vu because I’d dream about the future. Turns out it’s a lot less useful than you’d expect. Nobody cares if you’re all sitting around talking about pizza.
A few years ago, i had a deja vu and told my friend to stop talking for a second. Then I told him what he was about to say. It was like seeing the future.
My way of dealing with deja vu is remembering myself something i got only days ago or weeks. Forcing my brain to accept that current situation could NOT happen before.
I have it all the time. It Terrifies Me!! Always a sense of doom or failure.
@romanzelgatas