- Jun 17, 2009
- 34
- 10
First off, I want to start by saying, I personally don't believe this theory, but it's an idea I had and I just wanted to share it.
Anyway, everyone experiences dÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu, correct?
And doesn't everyone have little past mistakes that they want to correct? Like you want to go back in time so badly, that you wish and wish that you had asecond chance to do things differently.
Well (excluding a 'god' or higher power that grants this wish, because I don't want to bring religion into this discussion), what if your wish weregranted by some miracle act. And for an instance you are back to the point you want to fix (just don't think how it happened, rather just accept the factthat you went back in time). It seems very familiar to you. The problem is, you don't remember where you have seen this before. DÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu. Your wish wasgranted, you are set in the exact time, place, and situation where you have to revise your decision. The only catch is you have to remember what you wished forand wanted to go back to fix. But people most likely never remember and therefore it's a wasted wish. But for the lucky few that were able to remember,congratulations you have experienced time travel.
To sum it up in a different way, why do people always think that if they had the option to go back in time via a time machine or anything, that they wouldstill remember what they were going back in the past for? I mean, if time travel were really possible wouldn't it be so easy to just go back in time andbuy everything you wanted, help all the people you can, etc. There should be a challenge, and that obstacle is actually holding on to your thought of what youwere sent back in time for. Hence dÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu.
Yeh, I know. This is reaching, but it was just an idea. Thoughts?
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Anyway, everyone experiences dÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu, correct?
And doesn't everyone have little past mistakes that they want to correct? Like you want to go back in time so badly, that you wish and wish that you had asecond chance to do things differently.
Well (excluding a 'god' or higher power that grants this wish, because I don't want to bring religion into this discussion), what if your wish weregranted by some miracle act. And for an instance you are back to the point you want to fix (just don't think how it happened, rather just accept the factthat you went back in time). It seems very familiar to you. The problem is, you don't remember where you have seen this before. DÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu. Your wish wasgranted, you are set in the exact time, place, and situation where you have to revise your decision. The only catch is you have to remember what you wished forand wanted to go back to fix. But people most likely never remember and therefore it's a wasted wish. But for the lucky few that were able to remember,congratulations you have experienced time travel.
To sum it up in a different way, why do people always think that if they had the option to go back in time via a time machine or anything, that they wouldstill remember what they were going back in the past for? I mean, if time travel were really possible wouldn't it be so easy to just go back in time andbuy everything you wanted, help all the people you can, etc. There should be a challenge, and that obstacle is actually holding on to your thought of what youwere sent back in time for. Hence dÃ[emoji]169[/emoji]jà vu.
Yeh, I know. This is reaching, but it was just an idea. Thoughts?
[h1]
[/h1]