Déjà vu - Forgotten Worlds

Have you ever felt

a sudden, unexpected sense of familiarity? A view that you can swear you've seen before, but can't figure out when. A sudden rapport towards a place or a person that brings back nostalgic memories that you can't quite remember. 

Picture by me from Pixel 2 XL.

There is this theory

that there are many world lines, and our world is just one of them. In nearby world lines, we have nearly identical lives, but with a few distinct differences. In faraway world lines, we are living completely different lives. Many like to entertain this theory because it gives them hope, hopes that life will not be limited by present problems and hope that life can be changed for the better. 

Some dismiss deja vu as simply memory failure. Others take deja vu as evidence for the multi-world line theory. They say deja vu comprises of fragments of your memory from nearby world lines.

I take it as a fanciful perspective. 

Life feels like a grind sometimes, and it may be more fun to ponder a wishful fancy that may not be realistic. After all, emotions are fabrications of neuron circuitry with the purpose of survival and reproduction. Isn't this what dreams, wishes, hopes, faith, and all those expecting words are? 

Picture by me from Pixel 2 XL.

Fabrication with a purpose. 

They say deja vu most commonly occurs in people between ages of 15 to 25. Perhaps, before our brains fully conform to a set architecture, we are gifted with the magical ideals of youth. Whether they are experiences from another world lines, fate, or signs, they are there for a reason: to spur thinking and reflection.

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