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is it deja vu to think i've figured something out before i actually have? it will be like really quick, like too quick to really know what i'm thinking. i already know why deja vu happens (have heard a couple theories on that in yahoo boards already) but are there reasons it would happen more to a certain person or at a certain time? like, in literature it happens a lot during a trauma - is this because traumas are so difficult to integrate, so a you need to percieve it twice, as it were? and is it related to dissociation?

2007-03-04 12:40:17 · 9 answers · asked by redundantredundancy 3 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

9 answers

try reliving your brain growth from adolensce again.

2007-03-04 12:43:26 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Think every thought as if it were etched in fire across the sky, for everyone to see. As it is true. i don't have the quote exact (Merdot) but maybe you get the idea. Thoughts are ephemeral energy. Thought energy is hard to pin down, but some of us are better receivers than others. Sounds like you're fairly well tuned in. Deja Vu is just another example of receiving thought energy that's available to all of us. Dreams might be another example. Sometimes, especially in emergencies, you just instinctively act without pondering over it. That would be intuition. If you meditate regularly, you will find that your "psychic" abilities will improve.

2007-03-04 12:50:22 · answer #2 · answered by TN Seeker 5 · 1 0

Well, there's certainly an experience of having to "learn" or realize a difficult concept several times before it sticks -- you "get it" then lose it, then get it again.

But then you start talking about something else, which isn't clear to me.

Neither seems like deja vu.

But then, deja vu ain't what it used to be.

;-)

2007-03-04 15:02:50 · answer #3 · answered by tehabwa 7 · 1 0

Trained logical process needs not conscious attention, only a cue for action. I have had the experience of worrying in my sleep about something I have done already and gone to bed. I guess resetting my alarm clock cued my mind for work worry.

2007-03-04 13:44:02 · answer #4 · answered by Psyengine 7 · 0 0

It seems like you are describing more of a premonition then deja vu.

2007-03-04 12:48:37 · answer #5 · answered by kmv 5 · 0 0

"he's a touch dorky yet i visit continually replace him a touch." isn't that area of what makes him, him? you shouldn't opt for to regulate someone in case you want them. Like them for who they're. your friends will continually have your decrease back and attempt to inform you whats accurate for you, yet thats whats accurate for you of their evaluations. extremely in case you want this guy bypass for it. If he finally ends up being a weirdo, split. And tell your friends they were accurate, whats the large deal?

2016-11-27 21:52:25 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you see it happening very frequently, there may be a serotonin imbalance. See your doctor.

2007-03-04 13:07:53 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

And exactly how did you come up with the nickname?

2007-03-04 12:48:24 · answer #8 · answered by tim b 4 · 4 0

didn't you ask this yesterday ?

2007-03-04 12:44:35 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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