We get déjà vu when our brain thinks it’s seeing something new, but actually remembers it from before, like a familiar song playing in a strange place.
Imagine you’re eating your favorite snack, and suddenly you feel like you’ve already eaten this snack today. That’s déjà vu! It happens because two parts of your brain are working at the same time: one is taking in new information (like what you're seeing or hearing), and another is trying to remember something from earlier. Sometimes, these two parts get confused, the memory part thinks it already saw that snack, even though it just did.
How It Feels Like a Time Machine
Think of your brain like a toy box. When you play with a new toy, you’re using one hand (your new information). But sometimes, your other hand grabs a similar toy from earlier (your memory), and that’s why it feels like you’ve already seen this moment before, like time travel in your head!
Even though it feels magical, it's just your brain mixing up two different moments.
Examples
- Feeling like you’ve already seen a new restaurant before you even step inside.
- Recognizing your friend’s voice as if you had met them yesterday.
- Thinking you’ve lived this exact day before, even though it's Monday.
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See also
- What causes deja vu and how does our brain process it?
- What causes déjà vu and why does it happen?
- What causes déjà vu and why does it feel so familiar?
- Why do people experience déjà vu?
- Why do humans experience deja vu, and what causes it?