Glitch in reality?

iNotorious

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Anyways haven't you experienced that you dream about a situation or place and then it happens in real life after a certain of time and you react like "didn't this happened before?" I have experienced couple of times every year.
 
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YellowFang

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That's an interesting phenomenon, I've read somewhere...

That... while asleep, our soul departs from our physical body and wander around through different dimensions sometimes going ahead in time and sometimes back... and returns with all knowledge in the subconscious...

And some times you might also take long to wake up and later told that everyone was trying to wake you up but you didn't even budged... That's when your soul hadn't arrived in time...


You can search it up, I forgot even the name of this phenomenon...:sweat:


Edit: It happens to be known as Astral Projection or OBE(out of body experience)...
But I don't think it's same as your case...
 
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Shanks

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Yes !! I feel Omnipotent in these situation . Feeling of Situation has already been experienced or waiting to happen .

Hope we are not in Matrix under some Artificial AI !! XD
 
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YowYan

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We're all a little psychic Lol

A glitch of reality is me being pulled by my arm. Being pulled by something intangible yet I actually got yanked. And then seeing the face turn towards me as I moved my arm passing through it. That's a worse glitch

@yellowfang; it's called astral projection and I have some screenshots of my gf describing how she triggers it and all the sensations that come along with entering the astral plane. I came to that point of leaving my body on many occasions but, to me, it's scary so I fight the awakening
 
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1Told

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déja vu, precognition and stuff like that?
yep very often, pay attention but stay with an open mind and it will increase a lot :mew:
 

Wolves

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Can I get get a link of wiki explaining it? I'm on my phone so it's kind of difficult to do some research. I thought it was called differently.


Déjà vu, ( [SUP] [/SUP] ; French pronunciation: ​ ) from , literally "already seen", is the of having the strong sensation that an event or experience currently being experienced has been experienced in the past, regardless of whether it has actually happened. The psychologist in his book A Textbook of Psychology (1928), explained déjà vu as caused by a person having a brief glimpse of an object or situation, before the brain has completed "constructing" a full conscious perception of the experience. Such a "partial perception" then results in a false sense of familiarity.[SUP] [/SUP] Scientific approaches reject the explanation of déjà vu as " " or " ", but rather explain it as an anomaly of memory, which creates a distinct impression that an experience is "being recalled".[SUP] [/SUP][SUP] [/SUP] 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 uncertain or believed to be impossible.
As time passes, subjects may 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) which were the subject of the déjà vu experience itself (the events that were being "remembered"). This may result from an "overlap" between the neurological systems responsible for and those responsible for , resulting in (memories of) recent events erroneously being perceived as being in the more distant past. One theory is the events are stored into memory before the conscious part of the brain even receives the information and processes it.[SUP] [/SUP] However, this explanation has been criticized that the brain would not be able to store information without a sensory input first. Another theory suggests the brain may process sensory input (perhaps all sensory input) as a "memory-in-progress", and that therefore during the event itself one believes it to be a past memory. In a survey, Brown had concluded that approximately two-thirds of the population have had déjà vu experiences.[SUP] [/SUP] Other studies confirm that déjà vu is a common experience in healthy individuals, with between 31% and 96% of individuals reporting it. Déjà vu experiences that are unusually prolonged or frequent, or in association with other symptoms such as hallucinations, may be an indicator of neurological or psychiatric illness.[SUP] [/SUP]
 

straightup

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This link should answer some of your questions, or atleast add to your questioning. (It's a call of duty video but he doesn't talk about call of duty) super interesting stuff right here
 

silmarill

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I think this happens to everyone from time to time. it's pretty interesting.
In the past I sometimes had a dream and than like half a year later I had exactly the same dream (tho I'm not sure if this is some sort of Deja vu or if it's really possible to have the same dream twice)

Does anyone actually remember their deja'vu's? Cause I know for a fact I have had plenty but I can't seem to recall what they were about lol
 
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