+493 What if Deja Vu meant you lost a life and you are starting back off at your last checkpoint, that is pretty intense, amirite?

by Anonymous 12 years ago

O.O

by Anonymous 12 years ago

... im not sleeping tonight

by Anonymous 12 years ago

That would mean I die a lot.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

You just raped my mind a little.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Im not a very good player of this life game

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I've thought about this once. Crazy.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I die like once a week then, at least.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Mind fuck.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

That's so crazy, it's basically the sequel to Inception.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

:O this will make me go a little crazy every time I have déjà vu now..

by Anonymous 12 years ago

The last time I had deja vu I was eating fries. If this were true, I want to lose a life more often.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I have some fucked up checkpoints then.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I have made this post a sucesess, but why is it anonymous :(

by Anonymous 12 years ago

deja vu is when your brain processes what you're seeing a fraction of a second later. so basically it's your brain being slower than your eyes

by Anonymous 12 years ago

way to ruin the moment

by Anonymous 12 years ago

The most likely explanation of déjà vu is not that it is an act of "precognition" or "prophecy", but rather that it is an anomaly of memory, giving the false impression that an experience is "being recalled". This explanation is supported by the fact that the sense of "recollection" at the time is strong in most cases, but that the circumstances of the "previous" experience (when, where, and how the earlier experience occurred) are quite uncertain or believed to be impossible. Likewise, as time passes, subjects can exhibit a strong recollection of having the "unsettling" experience of déjà vu itself, but little or no recollection of the specifics of the event(s) or circumstance(s) they were "remembering" when they had the déjà vu experience. In particular, this may result from an overlap between the neurological systems responsible for short-term memory and those responsible for long-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the past). The events would be stored into memory before the conscious part of the brain even receives the information and processes it.

by Anonymous 12 years ago