does this sound familiar to you???
have u experience it before?
or u have no idea what am I talking about...0.o?
lolz...
*ahem*
let me have a brief explanation about this phenomena....
Déjà vu is something that happen in your dream...
is also can be called future sight for some people...
because in your dream,u experience something then in future,that event happens again...
something like repeating itself but u haven't done it yet.....
sounds weird eh?
ok,for example:u have watched a movie that is not in release....u don't remember about it
but,later in future u watched the movie in the exact same spot in the same situation above....
sounds fishy eh??
well,is the truth....
even myself have experience it quite a number of times(5 to 6 times i guess)
my dejavu is kinda funny
there's once i dejavu-ed about myself visited an fish exibition(sort of) then i'm standing in front of a big fish tank......inside there was a very large fish called Arapaima,then i was like woah!
and the funny thing is,i had this dejavu 3 times(three!!!!!......sounds cool eh?) and i don't
remember having it till i went to the real zoo negara and have the same situation above.....
wow....
maybe there's a spiritual energy between the fish and me...LOLZ
well,if ur interested feel free to read the article below(is from a website)
or u can also tell me about ur Déjà vuuuuu experience....
ok~
got to go for now....
and don't tell me that u Déjà vu-ed about reading my blog about this article......LOL
that would superb....XD
http://science.howstuffworks.com/deja-vu.htm
Have you ever visited a store for the first time and had it feel eerily familiar? Or maybe you're
deep in conversation with a friend and you suddenly get the feeling that you've had the exact
conversation before, even though you know that you haven't. If you've ever found yourself in
either of these situations, you've experienced déjà vu. Sixty to 70 percent of us admit to getting
this feeling at least once in our lives. The sight, sound, taste or even smell of something makes us
think that we've experienced it before, although we know that we couldn't have.
There are more than 40 theories as to what déjà vu is and what causes it, and they range from
reincarnation to glitches in our memory processes. In this article, we'll explore a few of those
theories to shed some light on this little understood phenomenon.
Déjà vu is a French term that literally means "already seen" and has several variations,
including déjà vécu, already experienced; déjà senti, already thought; and déjà visité,
already visited. French scientist Emile Boirac, one of the first to study this strange phenomenon,
gave the subject its name in 1876.
There are often references to déjà vu that aren't true déjà vu. Researchers have their own
definitions, but generally déjà vu is described as the feeling that you've seen or experienced
something before when you know you haven't. The most common misuse of the term déjà vu
seems to be with precognitive experiences -- experiences where someone gets a feeling that
they know exactly what's going to happen next, and it does. An important distinction is that déjà
vu is experienced during an event, not before. Precognitive experiences -- if they are real --
show things that will happen in the future, not things that you've already experienced.
(However, one theory about déjà vu deals with precognitive dreams that give us a "déjà vu
feeling" afterwards. See the Déjà Vu and Precognitive Dreams section.)
Hallucinations that are brought on by illness or drugs sometimes bring a heightened awareness
and are confused with déjà vu. False memories that are brought on by schizophrenia can be
confused with déjà vu as well. Unlike true déjà vu, which typically lasts from 10 to 30 seconds,
these false memories or hallucinations can last much longer.
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