hmmm l'm sure l answered this question before ...... ;-)
2006-12-05 10:37:14
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Having travelled to a foreign city many hundreds of miles from my home, I was walking along a street and suddenly knew exactly what I would see around the next corner, although I had never visited this place before.
I walked up the street, turned the corner and, sure enough, recognised everything.
The delay between knowing and seeing was minutes.
I have experienced several similar DejaVu events, none of which can be explained by the preceding answers.
2006-12-05 19:06:30
·
answer #2
·
answered by Davy Crockett 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Keep a dream journal. I did and was able to prove that I had dreamed these things before they occurred. This also made it easier to trust the deja vu that occurred without a written dream occurrence.
Personally, I think it is a sign that I am on the right path, as if I have researched my path ahead of time.
Even if it isn't that, it can be fun and the curiosity factor is cool!
2006-12-05 19:36:00
·
answer #3
·
answered by Batty 6
·
1⤊
0⤋
I believe, I am not a scientist, that it is a wishful thinking process aided by brain lag. Brain lag is explained as see something and your brain not fully registering or classifying it immmediately. This can lead you to believe that you have seen or done something before. The trouble is that it is usually not reported for a long time after it happens. Then it is embellished to a small degree and the original event is enlarged. What the heck dejavu is fun, isn't it?
2006-12-05 18:39:48
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes, I have Deja vu every once and a while, it feels like a dream I had, Like a scene that replays in my mind as its happening, I always think I remember how its going to play out but then something changes.
2006-12-05 18:41:00
·
answer #5
·
answered by Lanie 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
What if you lived a life with one foot in both worlds, what if you
understood that there is no fundamental thing as objective reality,
sure we have a shared consciousness but it is only shared by each of
us subjectively. What then if you lived your life walking in both the
spirit worlds and the material world, working as a healer, a
clairvoyant, a spiritual hypnotherapist working with past lifes,
future lifes, parallel lifes and life between lives. What if you chose
to experience the Divine (its dream the universe) the planet and all
beings spirit and material (human, animal, plant, the land) as one
being experiencing itself as all that there is. This is the world I
live in. If you chose to experience time, space and spirit as I do
would deja vu really be strange to understand. Surely communication
from another part of yourself (past life, spirit, the universe, the
divine) is only difficult to except if you choose cynicism, the idea
of total separation and seeing yourself in the smallest possible way.
If we choose to see ourselves ultimately as all one being experiencing
all that it is in a multiplicity of unique ways, deja vu makes
absolute sense.
Blessings
2006-12-08 19:15:36
·
answer #6
·
answered by steve w 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Deja Vu is a simple memory malfunction. The normal path to create a memory is as follows:
1. Brain receives input from senses.
2. Input is stored into "short term memory".
3. Input is analyzed to see if it's important enough to be stored into "long term memory".
4. If information is important enough, it is pushed to "long term memory", otherwise, it is allowed to fade.
Deja Vu works like this:
1. Brain receives input from senses.
2. Input is stored directly into "long term memory".
That's the malfunction, so as the memory is being created, it also feels as if it's old, or that you have done it before, because that's how things in "long term memory" feel.
2006-12-05 19:04:23
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
' Deja Vu '. No you aren't going crazy. It has to do with the oxygen supply going to the brain. That's how exquisitely balanced we are, how precise, and how little we know about the world. Wierd connotations are always attached but this is purely biological. Wish I had a hard copy to share with you. Hey! Try this:
www.howstuffworks.com
2006-12-05 18:37:32
·
answer #8
·
answered by vanamont7 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
De javu!your brain is like a PC!Everything you do, did and will,your brain stored in his hard disc!billions of billions files have been stored in your brain!something new,changed to old in 2 second!Sometimes a function happens and your brain don't read the new as new,but as an old file,and try to open it,and you see it second time in a few moments!
2006-12-05 18:53:44
·
answer #9
·
answered by xariskapa 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Definitely. One specific time, I was in South Carolina--Charleston, to be exact. I KNEW I was there before, I actually could describe the planatation before I went through the house, and felt as if I had stood there many years previously...maybe in another life.
2006-12-05 18:38:53
·
answer #10
·
answered by dp61450 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Happens all the time, like this question. Probably to do with the movie. After you check out the answers this time round, look it up in the Answers archive for more answers.
2006-12-05 18:39:23
·
answer #11
·
answered by mince42 4
·
0⤊
0⤋