Miles: And so after that night I calmed down after about an hour but there was a weird thing that happened afterwards now I had chronic deja vu. So I would try to like flip my hand really fast, but wait a second I remember doing this with uh last time I was in this loop, and then I remembered remembering remembering, and this lasted for about an entire hour and it was the worst experience of my life.Īmna: Miles was 24 years old when this happened It was like I was living in an infinite loop and it's all going to come back to this exact moment in time and that's going to happen again and again and again for all eternity, and this panic set in on me and I started to freak out and so I started to try to like break out of the loop I start to be like OK what would be something that I would do that's like unexpected. Miles: So I was at a party with some friends, and I decided hey you know what I'm gonna I'm gonna smoke some weed and I took three rips from a bong, not a whole lot and I sat down on a couch… and the best way I can describe it is like TV static came over my head and it was like the most intense deja vu that I could ever describe just came over me. For most of us Deja vu is a fun curious experience, but for Miles, deja vu was far from that. We’re going to explore how deja Vu can shed light on the mysterious ways our memory works and what those malfunctions can teach us about who we are. Maybe you were able to put a word to it, or maybe it was just an odd feeling that you couldn’t really put your finger on. In this weeks episode we will be making sense of the elusive phenomenon you may or may not have experienced, deja vu. Amna: This is Amna Hyder and you are listening to tethered minds.
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